I shot some transparency film last week. (and that ends the news bulletin for today)
Seriously, while it is unusual for me to shoot 120 tran commercially these days, that's not the news. I went to the lab to collect the film and I was editing over their lightbox when the e6 manager wandered through reception. Surprise surprise, he didn't look busy. I've known him for years and we chatted.
I asked if the amount of film they were seeing was still declining, or if it had flattened out. He said that it had largely stabilized, at perhaps 20% of what was processed 5-6 years ago. His is one of very few state of the art, high volume, Refrema machines left in Australia.
Even though the time for installing these expensive machines has passed forever, he was confident that for them, having the machine paid off, and because e-6 was only a small part of their business, they could afford to run it for many years.
But he suggested that the biggest danger to the future of film products, lay in developments in the motion picture industry.
Not in the shooting of movie film in camera, but in the showing of the finished products. After all, when a blockbuster is released each screen, in each movie house has to have a print of that film.
(I'll show my ignorance here, but) I'm guessing a full length feature must use about 10,000 feet of film, multiplied by the number of screens it shows at around the world. That's a lot of film.
Production companies are pushing for theaters to move to digital projection so they can save money on printing film, then loading heavy cannisters and physically shipping them all over. Movie houses are slow to change because the new projectors are expensive, and film technology works just fine thankyou.
But when digital projection takes over, Kodak et-al will take a huge hit and the fall-out will likely have a direct effect on stills shooters like us.
now, this was just idle chat over a lightbox, but I was interested to hear his thoughts...