Bipack

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In cinematography, bipacking, or a bipack, is the process of loading two reels of film into a camera, so that they both pass through the camera gate together. It was used both for in-camera effects (effects that are nowadays mainly achieved via optical printing) and as an early subtractive colour process.[1]

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[edit] Use as a colour process

Eastman, Agfa, Gevaert, and DuPont all manufactured bipack film stock for use as a colour process from 1930 onwards. The film stock would be exposed with the emulsion layers in contact with each other, resulting in one of the two negatives being reversed.[1] The most famous version of Technicolor, the full-color three-strip Technicolor Process 4 used from 1934 to 1954, exposed two of the three strips—the blue and red images—in bipack.

[edit] Use as an in-camera effect

[2] To achieve the in-camera effect, a reel would be made up of pre-exposed and developed film, and unexposed raw film, which would then be loaded into the camera. The exposed film would sit in front of the unexposed film, with the emulsion of both films touching each other, causing the images on the exposed film to be contact-printed onto the unexposed stock, along with the image from the camera lens. This method, in conjunction with a static matte placed in front of the camera, could be used to print angry storm clouds into a background on a studio set. The process differs from Optical Printing in that no optical elements (lenses, field lenses, etc) separate the two films. Both films are sandwiched together in the same camera and make use of a phenomenon known as contact printing.

The process had its beginnings in providing a repeatable method of compositing live action and matte paintings, allowing the painted section of the final image to be completed later, and not tying up the set/sound-stage whilst the artist matched the painting to the set. It also alleviated the considerable difficulties caused by matching shadows on the painting to the set on an open-air set. The process worked equally well for matting-in real water to a model, or a model skyline to live action. The process was also referred to as the Held Take process. Perhaps the most famous example of a held take is the long shot of astronauts clambering down into a lunar excavation in 2001: A Space Odyssey. [3]

The technique, if used with a camera not specially designed for contact printing, runs the risk of jamming the camera, due to the double thickness of film in the gate, and damaging both the exposed and unexposed stock. On the other hand, because both strips of film are in contact and are handled by the same film transport mechanism at the same time, registration is kept very precise. Special cameras designed for the process were manufactured by Acme and Oxberry, amongst others, and these usually featured an extremely precise registration mechanism specially designed for the process. These process cameras are usually recognisable by their special film magazines, which look like two standard film magazines on top of each other. The magazines allow the separate loading of exposed and unexposed stock, as opposed to winding the two films onto the same reel.

The bipack process, which is a competing method to optical printing, was used until digital methods of compositing became predominant in the industry. Industrial Light and Magic used a specially-built rig, built for The Empire Strikes Back that utilised the method to create matte painting composites.

[edit] The Dunning Process

Various improvements and extensions of the process followed, the most famous being The Dunning Process, an early method built on the bipacking technique and used for creating travelling mattes. It is described thus:

The foreground action is lighted with yellow light only in front of a uniform, strongly lighted blue backing. Panchromatic negative film is used in the camera as the rear component of a bipack in which the front film is a positive yellow dye image of the background scene. This yellow dye image is exposed on the negative by the blue light from the backing areas, but the yellow light from the foreground passes through it and records an image of the foreground at the same time.[4]

The Dunning Process, often called just "process," was used in many films, most notably King Kong. Its chief limitation was that it could not be used for colour photography, and the process died out with the increasing move toward production of films in colour.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Paul Read and Mark-Paul Meyer (2000-08-28). Restoration of Motion Picture Film. Elsevier, 43, 310. ISBN 0-7506-2793-X. 
  2. ^ Fielding, Raymond Techniques of Special Effects of Cinematography ISBN 0-8038-7031-0
  3. ^ Bizony, Piers 2001:Filming The Future ISBN 1-85410-365-2
  4. ^ Bazin, Andre (1997). Bazin at Work: Major Essays and Reviews from the Forties and Fifties. Routledge (UK). ISBN 0-415-90018-2.  page 76