All Topics  
Panavision

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Panavision



 
 
Panavision is a motion picture equipment company specializing in camera
Camera

A camera is a device that records images, either as a still photograph or as moving images known as videos or movies. The term comes from the camera obscura , an early mechanism of projecting images where an entire room functioned as a real-time imaging system; the modern camera evolved from the camera obscura....
s and lenses
Photographic lens

A photographic lens is an optics lens or assembly of lenses used in conjunction with a camera body and mechanism to make images of objects either on photographic film or on other media capable of storing an image chemically or electronically....
, based in Woodland Hills, California
Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California

Woodland Hills is a district in the City of Los Angeles, California, California, United States.It is located in the southwestern area of the San Fernando Valley, northeast of Calabasas, California and west of Tarzana, Los Angeles, California....
. Formed by Robert Gottschalk
Robert Gottschalk

Robert Gottschalk was a camera technician and founder of Panavision.His father specialized in building movie theatres, which left the family well-off financially and influenced Gottschalk's interest in film....
 as a small partnership to create anamorphic projection lenses during the widescreen
Widescreen

A widescreen image is a film, computer or television image with a wider and shorter aspect ratio than the standard Academy frame developed during the classical Hollywood cinema era....
 boom in the 1950s, Panavision expanded its product lines to meet the demands of modern filmmakers. The company introduced its first products in 1954. Originally a provider of CinemaScope
CinemaScope

CinemaScope was a widescreen movie format used from 1953 to 1967. Anamorphices allowed the process to project film up to a 2.66:1 Aspect ratio , almost twice as wide as the conventional format of 1.37:1....
 accessories, the company's line of anamorphic widescreen lenses soon became the industry leader.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Panavision'
Start a new discussion about 'Panavision'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Panavision is a motion picture equipment company specializing in camera
Camera

A camera is a device that records images, either as a still photograph or as moving images known as videos or movies. The term comes from the camera obscura , an early mechanism of projecting images where an entire room functioned as a real-time imaging system; the modern camera evolved from the camera obscura....
s and lenses
Photographic lens

A photographic lens is an optics lens or assembly of lenses used in conjunction with a camera body and mechanism to make images of objects either on photographic film or on other media capable of storing an image chemically or electronically....
, based in Woodland Hills, California
Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California

Woodland Hills is a district in the City of Los Angeles, California, California, United States.It is located in the southwestern area of the San Fernando Valley, northeast of Calabasas, California and west of Tarzana, Los Angeles, California....
. Formed by Robert Gottschalk
Robert Gottschalk

Robert Gottschalk was a camera technician and founder of Panavision.His father specialized in building movie theatres, which left the family well-off financially and influenced Gottschalk's interest in film....
 as a small partnership to create anamorphic projection lenses during the widescreen
Widescreen

A widescreen image is a film, computer or television image with a wider and shorter aspect ratio than the standard Academy frame developed during the classical Hollywood cinema era....
 boom in the 1950s, Panavision expanded its product lines to meet the demands of modern filmmakers. The company introduced its first products in 1954. Originally a provider of CinemaScope
CinemaScope

CinemaScope was a widescreen movie format used from 1953 to 1967. Anamorphices allowed the process to project film up to a 2.66:1 Aspect ratio , almost twice as wide as the conventional format of 1.37:1....
 accessories, the company's line of anamorphic widescreen lenses soon became the industry leader. In 1972, Panavision helped revolutionize filmmaking with the lightweight Panaflex 35 mm
35 mm film

35 mm film is the basic film gauge most commonly used for both still photography and motion pictures, and remains relatively unchanged since its introduction in 1892 by William Dickson and Thomas Edison, using film stock supplied by George Eastman....
 movie camera
Movie camera

The movie camera is a type of photography camera which takes a rapid sequence of photographs on strips of photographic film. In contrast to a still camera, which captures a single snapshot at a time, the movie camera takes a series of images, each called a "frame"....
. The company has introduced other groundbreaking cameras such as the Millennium XL (1999) and the digital video Genesis (2004).

Panavision operates exclusively as a rental facility — the company owns its entire inventory, unlike most of its competitors. This allows investment in research and development, and the integration of high-quality manufacturing, without concern for the end retail value. Maintaining its entire inventory also allows Panavision to regularly update all of its equipment, rather than just the newest models.

Early history

Robert Gottschalk
Robert Gottschalk

Robert Gottschalk was a camera technician and founder of Panavision.His father specialized in building movie theatres, which left the family well-off financially and influenced Gottschalk's interest in film....
 founded Panavision in late 1953, in partnership with Richard Moore, Meredith Nicholson
Meredith Merle Nicholson

Meredith Merle ?Nick? Nicholson was an United States cinematographer. He worked behind the camera on low-budget films of the 1950s, hit television series in the 1960s, and comedies, dramas, and made-for-TV movies in the 1970s and 1980s....
, Harry Eller, Walter Wallin, and William Mann
William Mann

William Mann can refer to:*William Hodges Mann , American politician*William Mann , English cricketer*William Julius Mann , U.S. Lutheran theologian and author...
; the company was formally incorporated in 1954. Panavision was established principally for the manufacture of anamorphic projection
Movie projector

A movie projector is an optics-mechanics device for displaying Film by projecting them on a movie screen. Most of the optical and mechanical elements, except for the illumination and sound devices, are present in movie cameras....
 lenses to meet the growing demands of theaters showing CinemaScope
CinemaScope

CinemaScope was a widescreen movie format used from 1953 to 1967. Anamorphices allowed the process to project film up to a 2.66:1 Aspect ratio , almost twice as wide as the conventional format of 1.37:1....
 films. At the time of Panavision's formation, Gottschalk owned a camera shop in Westwood Village, California, where many of his customers were cinematographer
Cinematographer

A cinematographer is one photography with a motion picture camera . The title is generally equivalent to director of photography , used to designate a chief over the camera and lighting film crews working on a film, responsible for achieving artistic and technical decisions related to the image....
s. A few years earlier, he and Moore—who worked with him in the camera shop—were experimenting with underwater photography
Underwater photography

Underwater photography is the process of taking photographs while under water. It is usually done while scuba diving, but can be done while snorkeling or swimming....
; Gottschalk became interested in the technology of anamorphic lenses, which allowed him to get a wider field of view from his underwater camera housing. The technology was created during World War I to increase the field of view on tank periscopes; the periscope image was horizontally "squeezed" by the anamorphic lens. After it was unsqueezed by a complementary anamorphic optical
Optics

Optics is the study of the behavior and properties of light including its optical phenomena with matter and its imaging by optical instruments....
 element, the tank operator could see double the horizontal field of view without significant distortion. Gottschalk and Moore bought some of these lenses from C. P. Goerz, a New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
 optics company, for use in their underwater photography. As widescreen
Widescreen

A widescreen image is a film, computer or television image with a wider and shorter aspect ratio than the standard Academy frame developed during the classical Hollywood cinema era....
 filmmaking became popular, Gottschalk saw an opportunity to provide anamorphic lenses to the film industry—first for projector
Movie projector

A movie projector is an optics-mechanics device for displaying Film by projecting them on a movie screen. Most of the optical and mechanical elements, except for the illumination and sound devices, are present in movie cameras....
s, and then for cameras. Nicholson, a friend of Moore, started working as a cameraman on early tests of anamorphic photography.

In the 1950s, the motion picture industry was threatened by the advent of television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
—TV kept moviegoers at home, reducing box office revenues. Film studios sought to lure audiences to theaters with attractions that television could not provide. These included a revival of color film
Color photography

Color photography is photography that uses media capable of representing colors which are produced chemically during the Photographic processes phase....
s, three-dimensional films
3-D film

In film, the term 3-D is used to describe any visual presentation system that attempts to maintain or recreate moving images of the third dimension, the optical illusion of depth as seen by the viewer....
, stereophonic sound
Stereophonic sound

Stereophonic sound, commonly called stereo, is the reproduction of sound, using two or more independent Sound recording and reproduction channels, through a symmetrical configuration of loudspeakers, in such a way as to create a pleasant and natural impression of sound heard from various directions, as in natural hearing....
, and widescreen movies. Cinerama
Cinerama

Cinerama is the trademarked name for a widescreen process which works by simultaneously projecting images from three synchronized 35 mm projectors onto a huge, deeply-curved screen, subtending 146? of arc....
 was one of the first widescreen movie processes of the era. In its initial conception, the cumbersome system required three cameras for shooting and three synchronized projectors to display a picture on one wide, curved screen. Along with the logistical and financial challenges of tripling equipment usage and cost, the process led to distracting vertical lines between the three projected images. Looking for a high-impact method of widescreen filmmaking that was cheaper, simpler, and less visually distracting, 20th Century Fox
20th Century Fox

Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation , also known as 20th Century Fox, Fox 2000 Pictures, or simply Fox, is one of the six Worldwide major film studios....
 acquired the rights to a process it branded CinemaScope
CinemaScope

CinemaScope was a widescreen movie format used from 1953 to 1967. Anamorphices allowed the process to project film up to a 2.66:1 Aspect ratio , almost twice as wide as the conventional format of 1.37:1....
: in this system, the film was shot with anamorphic lenses. The film was then exhibited with a complementary anamorphic lens on the projector that expanded the image, creating a projected aspect ratio
Aspect ratio (image)

The aspect ratio of an is its width divided by its height.Aspect ratios are mathematically expressed as x :y and x?y . The most common aspect ratios used today in the presentation of films in movie theaters are 1.85:1 and 2.39:1....
 (the ratio of the image's width to its height) twice that of the image area on the physical frame of film. By the time the first CinemaScope movie—The Robe
The Robe (film)

The Robe is a 1953 in film Bible epic film that tells the story of a Roman Empire military tribune who commands the unit that crucifies Jesus....
 (1953)—was announced for production, Gottschalk, Moore and Nicholson had a demo reel of work with their anamorphic underwater system.

Gottschalk learned from one of his vendors that Bausch & Lomb
Bausch & Lomb

Bausch & Lomb is an United States company based in Rochester, Monroe County, New York, is one of the world's leading suppliers of eye health products, such as contact lenses and lens care products today....
, whom Fox had contracted to manufacture CinemaScope lenses, were having difficulty filling the lens orders for theatrical anamorphic projection. He teamed up with William Mann, who provided optical manufacturing capability, and Walter Wallin, an acquaintance of Mann's who had studied optics. With Wallin's input, the anamorphic lens design they selected was prismatic
Prism (optics)

In optics, a prism is a transparent optical element with flat, polished surfaces that refraction light. The exact angles between the surfaces depend on the application....
 rather than the cylindrical
Cylinder (geometry)

A cylinder is one of the most curvilinear basic geometric shapes: the surface formed by the points at a fixed distance from a given straight line, the axis of the cylinder....
 design of the Bausch & Lomb CinemaScope lens. This design meant the anamorphic lens extension factor—how much the image is horizontally unsqueezed—could be manually shifted, useful for projectionists switching between nonanamorphic ("flat" or "spherical") trailers
Trailer (film)

Trailers or previews are film advertisements for feature films that will be exhibited in the future at a Movie theater, on whose screen they are shown....
 and an anamorphic feature
Feature film

In the film industry, a feature film is a film made for initial Film distributor in Movie theater and being the "main attraction" of the screening ....
.

Entering the market

Panavision's first product—the Super Panatar projection lens—debuted in March 1954. Priced at $1,100, it captured the market. The Super Panatar was a rectangular box that attached to the existing projection lens with a special bracket. Its variable prismatic system allowed a range of film formats to be shown from the same projector with a simple adjustment of the lens. Panavision improved on the Super Panatar with the Ultra Panatar, a lighter cylindrical design that could be screwed directly to the front of the projection lens. Panavision lenses gradually replaced CinemaScope as the leading anamorphic system for theatrical projection.

In December 1954, the company created a specialized lens for film laboratories—the Micro Panatar. When fitted to an optical printer
Optical printer

An optical printer is a device consisting of one or more film projectors machine linked to a movie camera. It allows filmmakers to re-photograph one or more strips of film....
, the Micro Panatar could create "flat" (nonanamorphic) prints from anamorphic negatives. This allowed films to be distributed to theaters that did not have an anamorphic system installed. To accomplish this dual platform release strategy before the Micro Panatar, studios would sometimes shoot films with one anamorphic and one spherical camera, allowing nonwidescreen theaters to exhibit the film. The cost savings of eliminating the second camera and making flat prints in post-production
Post-production

Post-production occurs in the making of film, television program, radio programs, videos, sound recording and reproduction, photography and digital art....
 with the Micro Panatar were enormous.

Another innovation of the era secured Panavision's leading position: the Auto Panatar camera lens for 35 mm anamorphic productions. Early CinemaScope camera lenses were notoriously problematic in close-up
Close-up

In film, television, and still photography a close-up tightly Film frame a person or an object. Close-ups are one of the standard shots used regularly with medium shots and long shots....
s with an optical aberration that was commonly known as "the mumps": a widening of the face due to a loss of anamorphic power as a subject approaches the lens. Because of the novelty of the new anamorphic process, early CinemaScope productions compensated for this aberration by avoiding tightly framed shots. As the anamorphic process became more popular, it became more problematic. Panavision invented a solution: adding a rotating lens element that moved in mechanical sync with the focus
Focus (optics)

In geometrical optics, a focus, also called an image point, is the point where light rays originating from a point on the object converge ....
 ring. This eliminated the distortion and allowed for natural close-up anamorphic photography. The Auto Panatar, released in 1958, was rapidly adopted, eventually making CinemaScope lenses obsolete. This innovation earned Panavision the first of its 15 Academy Awards
Academy Awards

The Academy Awards, popularly known as the Oscars, are presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize excellence of professionals in the film industry, including directors, actors, and writers....
 for technical achievement.

Since 1954, Panavision had been working on a new widescreen process commissioned by MGM. The resulting system used a 65 mm film camera in conjunction with the APO Panatar lens, which was an integrated anamorphic lens (as opposed to a standard prime lens
Prime lens

In film and photography, a prime lens is either a photographic lens whose focal length is fixed, as opposed to a zoom lens, or it is the primary lens in a combination lens system....
 with an anamorphoser mounted on it). This created a 1.25x anamorphic squeeze factor. Movies using the process had an astounding potential aspect ratio of 2.76:1 when exhibited with 70 mm anamorphic projection prints. Introduced as MGM Camera 65, the system was used on just a few films, the first of which was Raintree County
Raintree County (film)

Raintree County is a 182 minute 1957 in film drama film about the American Civil War. It was directed by Edward Dmytryk.It was adapted from the novel of the Raintree County by Ross Lockridge, Jr....
 (1956). However, the film was released only in 35 mm anamorphic prints because the circuit of 70 mm theaters was booked with Around the World in Eighty Days
Around the World in Eighty Days (1956 film)

Around the World in 80 Days is a 1956 in film adventure film produced by the Michael Todd Company and released by United Artists. It was directed by Michael Anderson ....
 (1956), shot with the competing, nonanamorphic Todd-AO
Todd-AO

Todd-AO is an extremely high definition widescreen film format developed in the mid 1950s. It was co-developed by Mike Todd, a Broadway theatre producer, with American Optical Company in Buffalo, New York....
 system. The first film to be presented in 70 mm anamorphic—Ben-Hur
Ben-Hur (1959 film)

Ben-Hur is a 1959 in film movie directed by William Wyler, and is the third film version of Lew Wallace's novel Ben-Hur . It premiered at Loews Cineplex Entertainment in New York City on November 18, 1959....
—was released by MGM in 1959. Panavision also developed a nonanamorphic widescreen process called Super Panavision 70
Super Panavision 70

Super Panavision 70 was the marketing brand name used to identify movies photographed with Panavision 70 mm film spherical optics between 1959 and 1983....
, which was essentially identical to Todd-AO. Super Panavision made its screen debut in 1959 with The Big Fisherman
The Big Fisherman

The Big Fisherman is a 1959 in film United States film directed by Frank Borzage about the later life of Saint Peter, one of the closest disciples of Jesus....
, released by Disney's Buena Vista
Buena Vista Distribution

Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures is a motion picture and television feature distribution company owned by The Walt Disney Company. Buena Vista International was the international distribution arm, and Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment was the firm's video and DVD distribution arm....
 division.

A move into cameras

By 1962, four of Panavision's founders had left the company to pursue private careers. That year, MGM's Camera 65 production of Mutiny on the Bounty
Mutiny on the Bounty (1962 film)

Mutiny on the Bounty is a 1962 in film film starring Marlon Brando, based on the novel Mutiny on the Bounty by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall....
 went so far over budget that the studio liquidated assets to cover its costs. As a result of this liquidation, Panavision acquired MGM's camera equipment division, as well as the rights to the Camera 65 system it had developed for MGM; the technology was renamed Ultra Panavision
Ultra Panavision 70

Ultra Panavision 70 and MGM Camera 65 were the photographic marketing brands ? ca. 1957 to 1966 ? that identified movies photographed with Panavision-brand 65mm and 70mm anamorphic lenses....
. Only six more features were made with the system: It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is a 1963 in film American film comedy film directed by Stanley Kramer about the madcap pursuit of $350,000 of stolen cash by a diverse and colorful group of strangers....
 (1963), The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964), Battle of the Bulge
Battle of the Bulge

The Ardennes Offensive was a major German offensive launched towards the end of World War II through the forested Ardennes of Belgium , France and Luxembourg on the Western Front ....
 (1965), The Greatest Story Ever Told
The Greatest Story Ever Told

The Greatest Story Ever Told is a 1965 in film U.S. motion picture epic film produced and directed by George Stevens and distributed by United Artists....
 (1965), The Hallelujah Trail
The Hallelujah Trail

The Hallelujah Trail is a 1965 Western spoof directed by John Sturges and starring Burt Lancaster, Lee Remick, Brian Keith, Donald Pleasence, and Martin Landau, amongst others....
 (1965), and Khartoum
Khartoum (film)

Khartoum is a 1966 in film film written by Robert Ardrey and directed by Basil Dearden.The film stars Charlton Heston as Charles George Gordon, with Laurence Olivier as the Mahdi , and is based on Gordon's defence of the Sudanese city of Khartoum from the forces of the Mahdist army during the Battle of Khartoum....
 (1966). As 1.25x anamorphosers for 70 mm projectors have become rare, most of the 70 mm prints of these films still in circulation are designed for projection with nonanamorphic, spherical lenses. The result is a 2.20:1 aspect ratio, rather than the broader ratio originally intended.

Although Fox insisted on maintaining CinemaScope for a time, some actors disliked the system. For Fox's 1965 production Von Ryan's Express
Von Ryan's Express

Von Ryan's Express is a 1965 in film World War II adventure film produced and directed by Mark Robson, starring Frank Sinatra and Trevor Howard....
, Frank Sinatra
Frank Sinatra

Francis Albert "Frank" Sinatra was an United States singer and actor.Beginning his musical career in the swing era with Harry James and Tommy Dorsey, Sinatra became a solo artist with great success in the early to mid-1940s, being the idol of the "bobby soxers"....
 reputedly demanded that Auto Panatar lenses be used. Such pressures led Fox to completely abandon CinemaScope for Auto Panatars that year; Von Ryan's Express was the studio's first picture with Panavision lenses. To meet the extraordinary demand for Panavision projection lenses, Gottschalk had Bausch & Lomb CinemaScope lenses retrofitted into Panavision housings with a new astigmatic attachment, improving them greatly. This was revealed many years after Gottschalk's death; a lead designer from Bausch & Lomb, who had been involved with the original CinemaScope project, came to work as a designer for Panavision and—after opening some of the older lenses—figured out the secret.

Panalogosm
In the mid-1960s, Gottschalk altered Panavision's business model. The company now maintained its full inventory, making its lenses and the cameras it had acquired from MGM available only by rental. This meant that equipment could be maintained, modified, and regularly updated by the company. When Panavision eventually brought its own camera designs to market, it was relatively unconstrained by retrofitting and manufacturing costs, as it was not directly competing on sales price. This allowed Panavision to build cameras to new standards of durability.

The new business model required additional capital. To this end, the company was sold to Banner Productions in 1965, with Gottschalk remaining as president. Panavision would soon expanded into markets beyond Hollywood, eventually including New York, Europe, Australia, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia. Kinney National Service bought out Banner in 1968 and took over Warner Brothers the following year, eventually renaming itself Warner Communications
Warner Communications

Warner Communications was established in 1972 when Kinney National Company spun off its non-entertainment assets, due to a financial scandal over its parking operations and changed its name....
. Kinney/Warner's financial resources made possible a massive expansion in Panavision's inventory, as well as substantial leaps in research and development.

During this period, the company's R&D department focused on retrofitting the industry standard 35 mm camera, the Mitchell BNC. The effort to develop a lighter, quieter camera with a reflex viewfinder
Reflex finder

A reflex finder is a viewfinder system with a mirror placed behind a lens . The light passing through the lens is reflected by the mirror to a ground glass....
 led to the introduction of the Panavision Silent Reflex (PSR) in 1967. The camera could provide a shutter angle
Rotary disc shutter

A rotary disc shutter is a type of shutter. It is notably used in motion picture cameras.Rotary disc are semicircular mirrors which rotate in front of the film gate, and thus expose the film....
 of up to 200 degrees. Many refinements were made to the PSR during the first few years after its introduction, and it soon became one of the most popular studio cameras in the world. Panavision also began manufacturing spherical lenses for 1.85:1 photography, garnering a significant share of the market.

In 1968, Panavision released a handheld 65 mm camera. By that time, however, the much cheaper process of blowing up 35 mm anamorphic films to 70 mm—introduced with The Cardinal
The Cardinal

The Cardinal is a 1963 in film film which was produced independently and directed by Otto Preminger, and distributed by Columbia Pictures. The screenplay was written by Robert Dozier, based on the novel by Henry Morton Robinson....
 (1964)—had made 65 mm production virtually obsolete. In 1970, the last two feature films shot entirely with Super Panavision were released: Song of Norway
Song of Norway

Song of Norway is an operetta written in 1944 by Robert Wright and George Forrest , adapted from the music of Edvard Grieg and the book by Milton Lazarus....
 and Ryan's Daughter
Ryan's Daughter

Ryan's Daughter is David Lean's 1970 film which is set in 1916 and tells the story of an Ireland girl who has an affair with a United Kingdom officer during World War I, despite opposition from her nationalist neighbours....
. In the decades since, only a handful of films have been shot in 65 mm.

Panaflex is born

Albert Mayer led the next major project: the creation of a lightweight reflex camera adaptable to either handheld or studio conditions. After four years of development, the Panaflex debuted in 1972. A revolutionary camera that operated quietly, the Panaflex eliminated the need for a cumbersome sound blimp
Sound blimp

A Sound Blimp is a housing attached to a camera which reduces the sound caused by the Shutter click, particularly SLRs. It is primarily used in film still photography, so as not to interfere with the shooting of principal photography, and also in other situations where sound is distracting: theatrical photography, surveillance, and wildlife...
, and could synchronize handheld work. The Panaflex also included a digital electronic tachometer
Tachometer

A tachometer is an instrument that measures the rotation speed of a shaft or disk, as in a motor or other machine. The device usually displays the revolutions per minute on a calibrated analog dial, but digital displays are increasingly common....
 and magazine
Camera magazine

A camera magazine is a light-tight chamber or pair of chambers designed to hold and move motion picture film stock before and after it has been exposed in the camera....
 motors for the take-up reel. Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg

Steven Allan Spielberg, KBE is an American film director, screenwriter and film producer. Forbes magazine places Spielberg's net worth at $3.1 billion....
's The Sugarland Express
The Sugarland Express

The Sugarland Express is a 1974 American drama film starring Goldie Hawn and William Atherton. It is the first theatrical feature film directed by Steven Spielberg....
 (1974) was the first motion picture filmed with the Panaflex.

During the 1970s, the Panaflex line was updated and marketed in new incarnations: the Panaflex X, Panaflex Lightweight (for steadicam
Steadicam

A steadicam is a stabilizing mount for a motion picture camera, which mechanically isolates the operator's movement from the camera, allowing a very smooth shot even when the operator is moving quickly over an uneven surface....
), the high-speed Panastar, Panaflex Gold, and Panaflex G2. Panavision came out with a direct competitor to Tiffen
Tiffen

Tiffen Manufacturing Corporation is a company in Hauppauge, New York, New York, U.S.A. which manufactures Filter for photography, and other professional film and photography-related products....
's Steadicam stabilizer, the Panaglide harness. The Panacam, a video camera
Video camera

File:Sonyhdrfx1.jpgA video camera is a camera used for electronic motion picture acquisition, initially developed by the television industry but now common in other applications as well....
, was also brought out, though the company largely left the video field to others.

Robert Gottschalk died in 1982 at the age of 64. After Gottschalk's death, Kinney National sold the company to a consortium headed by Ted Field
Ted Field

Frederick W. "Ted" Field is an American media mogul and entrepreneur. Field was born in Chicago, and is the heir to the Marshall Field fortune....
, John Farrand, and Alan Hirschfield, and backed by Chicago newspaper and department store heir Frederick Field. With new ownership came sweeping changes to the company, which had stagnated. Optics testing was computerized and, in 1986, the new Platinum model camera was introduced. The next year—responding to a perceived demand for the resurrection of the 65 mm camera—development began on a new model. The company was sold to Lee International PLC for $100 million in 1987, but financing was overextended and ownership reverted to the investment firm Warburg Pincus
Warburg Pincus

Warburg Pincus is a private equity firm with offices in the United States, Europe, and Asia. It has been a private equity investor since 1971. The firm currently has approximately $35 1,000,000,000 under management and invests in a range of industries including Information technology, financial services, healthcare, leveraged buyouts and spe...
 two years later.

In 1989, the company brought out Primo, a new line of lenses. Designed with a consistent color match between all the different focal-length
Focal length

The focal length of an optics system is a measure of how strongly it converges or diverges light. A system with a shorter focal length has greater optical power than one with a long focal length....
 instruments in the line, these were also the sharpest lenses yet manufactured by Panavision. Six years later, Oscars were awarded to the company and to three of its employees for their work on the Primo 3:1 zoom lens
Zoom lens

A zoom lens is a mechanical assembly of lens with the ability to vary its focal length , as opposed to a fixed focal length lens . They are commonly used with still camera, video camera, motion picture camera cameras, projectors, some binoculars, microscopes, telescopes, telescopic sights, and other optical instruments....
: Iain Neil for the optical design, Rick Gelbard for the mechanical design, and Eric Dubberke for the lens's engineering. According to the AMPAS
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is a professional honorary organization dedicated to the advancement of the arts and sciences of motion pictures....
 citation, "The high contrast and absence of flare, along with its ability to provide close focusing and to maintain constant image size while changing focus, make the Primo 3:1 Zoom Lens truly unique." In 1991, the company released its new 65 mm technology, System 65, though Arri
Arri

The Arri Group has been the largest world wide supplier of high quality motion picture film equipment since 1917. Arri, named after founders August Arnold and Robert Richter, is the largest manufacturer of professional motion picture equipment, film cameras and cinematic lighting equipment in the world....
 had beaten it to market by two years with the Arriflex 765. The gauge was not widely readopted, and only two major Hollywood films were shot with the new 65 mm Panavision process: Far and Away
Far and Away

Far and Away is a 1992 in film adventure film-drama film-romance film directed by Ron Howard from a script by Howard and Bob Dolman, and stars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman....
 (1992) and Kenneth Branagh
Kenneth Branagh

Kenneth Charles Branagh is an Emmy Award-winning, Academy Award-nominated actor and film director from Northern Ireland....
's Hamlet
Hamlet (1996 film)

Hamlet is a 1996 in film Shakespeare on screen of William Shakespeare's Hamlet, adapted and directed by Kenneth Branagh, who also stars in the title role as Prince Hamlet....
 (1996), the last known feature film to be shot entirely on 65 mm.

In 1992, Panavision launched a project to develop a camera that involved rethinking every aspect of the company's existing 35 mm system. Nolan Murdock and Albert Mayer Sr. headed up the design team. The new Millennium camera, replacing the Platinum as the company's flagship, was introduced in 1997. The Millennium XL came to the market in 1999 and was led by Al Mayer, Jr. It soon established itself as Panavision’s new 35mm workhorse. The XL was the first product in Panavision history to win both an Academy Award and a Primetime Emmy Award with in the first year of official release. The update to the XL, the XL2 was initially released in 2004.[26] . The first feature films to use these latter two systems were, respectively, The Perfect Storm
The Perfect Storm (film)

The Perfect Storm is a 2000 film adapted from the The Perfect Storm by Sebastian Junger. The film was directed by Wolfgang Petersen and features George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, William Fichtner, John C....
 (2000) and Just Like Heaven (2005). The XL series not only had a much smaller camera body—making it suitable for studio, handheld, and steadicam work—but also marked the first significant change to the film transport mechanism in the camera since the Panaflex: two smaller sprocket drums for feed and take-up (a design similar to the Moviecam
Moviecam

Moviecam is a film equipment company specializing in movie camera systems for 35 mm film. Originally started in Vienna, Austria as an in-house project of Fritz Gabriel Bauer and Walter Kindler's Moviegroup film production company in the late 1960's, the amount of research and development needed to create a new and modern motion picture camera...
 and subsequent Arricam
Arricam

Arricam is a 35 mm film movie camera line manufactured by Arri. It is Arri's flagship sync-sound camera line, replacing the Arriflex 535 line. The design was developed by Fritz Gabriel Bauer and Walter Trauninger, and is heavily derivative of the cameras Bauer created for his Moviecam company, which was bought out by Arri in the mid-1990s....
) instead of one large drum to do both. As of 2006, Panavision has no further plans to develop additional film camera models.

Recent restructuring and acquisitions

Ronald Perelman
Ronald Perelman

Ronald Owen Perelman is an American billionaire investor who made his fortune buying beleaguered corporations and re-selling them later for enormous profits....
's solely owned MacAndrews and Forbes Holdings (Mafco) acquired a majority interest in Panavision in 1998, via a Mafco subsidiary. After aborted attempts to create a film-style video camera in the 1970s and 1980s, Panavision joined the digital revolution in July 2000, establishing DHD Ventures in partnership with Sony
Sony

is a multinational corporation list of conglomerates corporation headquartered in Minato, Tokyo, Japan, and one of the world's largest media conglomerates with revenue exceeding US$99.1 billion ....
. The new company's objective was to raise the quality of high definition
High-definition video

High-definition video or HD video generally refers to any video system of higher than Standard-definition_television, most commonly at display resolutions of 1280?720 or 1920?1080 ....
 digital video to the standards of top-level Hollywood motion-picture production. This cooperative venture was established largely at the instigation of George Lucas
George Lucas

George Walton Lucas, Jr. is an Academy Award-nominated United States film director, film producer, screenwriter and chairman of Lucasfilm Ltd. He is best known for being the creator of the Epic film Sci-Fi franchise Star Wars and the archaeologist-adventurer character Indiana Jones....
 to serve his designs for the Star Wars
Star Wars

Star Wars is an epic film space opera Media franchise initially conceived by George Lucas. The first film in the franchise was simply titled Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, but later had the subtitle Episode IV: A New Hope added to distinguish it from its sequels and prequels....
 prequels. The collaboration resulted in the Sony HDW-F900 CineAlta
CineAlta

Sony's CineAlta 24P HD Cameras are a series of professional digital video cameras that offer many of the same features of a 35mm motion picture film camera....
 HDCAM
HDCAM

HDCAM, introduced in 1997, is an High-definition video version of Betacam, using an 8-bit Discrete cosine transform compressed 3:1:1 recording, in 1080i-compatible downsampled resolution of 1440×1080, and adding 24p and 23.976 Progressive segmented Frame modes to later models....
 high definition video camera. Sony produced the electronics and a stand-alone version of the camera; Panavision supplied custom-designed high definition lenses, trademarked Primo Digital, and retrofitted the camera body to incorporate standard film camera accessories, facilitating the equipment's integration into existing crew equipment as a "digital cinema camera." The new system was used in the making of Lucasfilm
Lucasfilm

Lucasfilm Limited is an United States film production company founded by George Lucas in 1971, based in San Francisco, California. Lucas is the company's current chairman, and Micheline Chau is the president and Chief operating officer....
's Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones
Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones

Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones is a 2002 in film space opera film directed by George Lucas and written by Lucas and Jonathan Hales....
 (2002), described as "the first digital major feature film."

The next step in the evolution of the digital cinema camera also involved collaboration between Sony and Panavision; this time, Panavision participated in all stages of development. The aim was to create a system that could use the entire range of the company's 35 mm spherical lenses. This led to the 2004 introduction of the Genesis HD—a full bandwidth (4:4:4)
Chroma subsampling

Chroma subsampling is the practice of encoding images by implementing less resolution for Chrominance information than for luma information. It is used in many video encoding schemes?both analog and digital?and also in JPEG encoding....
 HD SDI
Serial Digital Interface

Serial digital interface refers to a family of video interfaces standardized by SMPTE. For example, ITU-R BT.656 and SMPTE 259M define digital video interfaces used for Broadcasting-grade video....
 camera with improved colorimetry
Colorimetry

Colorimetrycan refer to:* the quantitative study of color perception. It is similar to spectrophotometry, but may be distinguished by its interest in reducing spectra to tristimulus values, from which the perception of color derives....
- and sensitometry
Sensitometry

Sensitometry is the scientific study of light-sensitive materials, especially photographic film. The study has its origins in the work by Ferdinand Hurter and Vero Charles Driffield with early black-and-white emulsions....
-related specs. Its Super 35 mm film
Super 35 mm film

Super 35 is a motion picture film format that uses exactly the same film stock as standard 35 mm film, but puts a larger image frame on that stock by using the negative space normally reserved for the optical analog sound track....
–sized recording area made it focally compatible with regular 35 mm lenses, giving it a true 35 mm depth of field
Depth of field

In optics, particularly as it relates to film and photography, the depth of field is the portion of a scene that appears sharp in the image. Although a lens can precisely focus at only one distance, the decrease in sharpness is gradual on either side of the focused distance, so that within the DOF, the unsharpness is imperceptible under nor...
. The camera's electronics—including its CCD (charge-coupled device
Charge-coupled device

A charge-coupled device is an analog signal shift register that enables the transportation of analog signals through successive stages , controlled by a clock signal....
) image sensor
Image sensor

An image sensor is a device that converts an optical image to an electric signal. It is used mostly in digital cameras and other imaging devices....
—and HDCAM SR record deck
Video tape recorder

A video tape recorder , is a tape recorder that can record video material. The video cassette recorder , where the videotape is enclosed in a Usability videocassette shell, is the most familiar type of VTR known to consumers....
 were manufactured by Sony. The chassis
Chassis

A chassis consists of a Frame that supports an inanimate object, analogous to an animal's skeleton, for example in a motor vehicle or a firearm....
 and mechanics were designed by a Panavision team led by Albert Mayer Jr., son of the Panaflex designer. The Genesis was first used on Flyboys
Flyboys

Flyboys is a 2006 in film USA drama film film set during World War I, starring James Franco, Martin Henderson, Jean Reno, Jennifer Decker, David Ellison, Abdul Salis, Philip Winchester and Tyler Labine....
 (2006); Scary Movie 4
Scary Movie 4

Scary Movie 4 is the fourth and last film of the Scary Movie franchise and is film director by David Zucker, screenwriter by Jim Abrahams, Craig Mazin and Pat Proft, and film producer by Craig Mazin and Robert K....
 (2006), shot afterward, went into general release first because of the extensive visual effects work needed to complete Flyboys. Subsequent to the completion of major design work on the Genesis, Panavision bought out Sony's 49 percent share of DHD Ventures and fully consolidated it in September 2004.

During the same period, Panavision began acquiring related motion picture companies, including eFilm
EFilm

EFilm is a post-production house in Hollywood that specializes in the digital Intermediate process and other digital motion picture technologies....
 (acquired 2001; sold to Deluxe in full by 2004), Technovision France (2004), the motion picture camera rental arm of Canadian rental house William F. White International (2005), digital camera rental company Plus8Digital (2006), international lighting and equipment company AFM (2006), and UK camera companies One8Six (2006) and JDC (2007). On July 28, 2006, Mafco announced it was acquiring the remaining Panavision stock and returning the company to private status. A $345 million credit line from Bear Stearns
Bear Stearns

The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. based in New York City, was one of the largest global investment banks and security trading and stock broker firms prior to its sudden collapse and distress sale to JPMorgan Chase in March 2008....
 and Credit Suisse
Credit Suisse

The Credit Suisse Group is a financial services company, headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland. Credit Suisse was founded by Alfred Escher in 1856 under the name Schweizerische Kreditanstalt ....
 was secured to finance the company's debt as well as to facilitate "global acquisitions." That same year, Mafco acquired Deluxe Entertainment Services Group.

See also

  • Panavision cameras
    Panavision cameras

    This article is intended for specific information for Panavision's various camera systems. For information on Panavision itself, please see Panavision....
  • List of motion picture film formats
    List of film formats

    This list of film formats catalogues formats developed for shooting or viewing motion pictures, ranging from the Chronophotographe format from 1888, to mid-20th century formats such as the 1953 CinemaScope format, to more recent formats such as the 1992 IMAX#IMAX_HD format....
  • PV mount
    PV mount

    A PV mount is a lens mount developed by Panavision for use with both 16 mm and 35 mm movie cameras. It is the only mount offered with Panavision cameras and Panavision-designed lenses, and since the company only rents its equipment, this is likely to remain an exclusive arrangement for the time being....


External links