Why is it b+w if it's from the 80's?
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TaylorTC — 16 years ago(December 29, 2009 11:47 AM)
It is in black and white because this was the choice of the filmmakers. As the previous poster stated, feature-length color films had existed since 1935 - yet black and white films continued to flourish. Even in modern times the occasional black and white film still comes about, though it's obviously far less common these days.
There are numerous reasons that filmmakers chose to shoot in black and white over the years. One good example is the classic western film The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. John Ford had shot numerous color films in the past, but chose to do this one in black and white since Jimmy Stewart was in his 50s or so at the time, and supposed to be portraying a young lawyer type in his 20s! Obviously, B and W made it easier to hide his real age.
"Why do movie stars think we want to watch them play poker?" -Hank Hill -
craigballantyne2006 — 15 years ago(March 23, 2011 05:07 PM)
you're wrong. toll of the sea was the first colour feature made in 1922 (in two-strip colour, but it's still colour) you can get it on youtube and on it's imdb page it says in the trivia bit that it was the seventh colour feature.
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illhoosierbird — 16 years ago(January 22, 2010 01:39 PM)
totally unrelated to this movie
Nobel Prizes are NOT awarded posthumously in any category.
Most significant snubs in this respect:- Mahatma Gandhi for leadership in non-violent revolution
- Rosalind Franklin for discoveries on the shape of DNA (along with Watson, Crick, and Wilkins)
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ChrisB13 — 10 years ago(June 19, 2015 11:45 AM)
There is one posthumous Nobel Peace Prize, to Dag Hammarskjld in 1961. From 1974, the Statutes of the Nobel Foundation stipulate that a Prize cannot be awarded posthumously, unless death has occurred after the announcement of the Nobel Prize. Before 1974, the Nobel Prize was also awarded posthumously to Erik Axel Karlfeldt (Nobel Prize in Literature 1931). Credit for information contained in this post goes to: nobelprize.org
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DeclanCochran — 12 years ago(April 05, 2013 01:56 PM)
It existed far before that, they used colour in the original Phantom of the Opera, admittedly through painting each film cell, but still.
"A man who does not spend time with his family can never be a real man." -
billy51482 — 16 years ago(December 04, 2009 06:34 PM)
I thought movies were always in color. You mean they used to make movies in black in white once? Woooowww!!!
Are people so dense? Hasn't this person heard of style, mood, atmosphere? It's a modern film shot in black & white to help enhance the reality of the film's period. Plus it looks like a David Lean picture or something.