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You know this scene from The Wizard of Oz.
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It happens just after Dorothy croons in sepia-toned Kansas,
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Toto wags his tail, and the house gets caught in a tornado.
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She travels from a faded film strip to a Technicolor world.
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But there are three things about this scene you might get wrong.
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And each one helps show the real history of Technicolor.
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These misconceptions explain what the “Technicolor triumph” really was, from
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the technical aspects that made it work, to exactly why it took over the movies, to the
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way in which the technology shaped the look of the 20th century.
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Lie #1 - Wizard of Oz is not the first Technicolor movie.
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Not even close.
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You might know that, but a lot of people don't.
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Come on Maryland Science Center, you're better than this.
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Historian Barbara Flueckiger has an exhaustive timeline of color in film, from
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hand-painted film to the first movie filmed in “kinemacolor,”
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A Visit to the Seaside.
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But Technicolor stood out, and even it has a history that long predates The Wizard of
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Oz.
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Herbert Kalmus, Daniel Frost Comstock, and W. Burton Wescott founded the company in 1914,
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with the “Tech” referring to MIT, where Kalmus and Comstock met.
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It started by merging red and green - into a new image that roughly looked like this.
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You can see the look in this range of movies from the late 1920s and early 30s.
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It could do passably well with skin tones, but
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there's no blue in these dresses for a reason.
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Blue came into the mix in 1932, when Technicolor added the key third strip.
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They showed off the process in Walt Disney's Flowers and Trees, a gorgeous animated feature
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that was a botanist's nightmare.
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You know, there are evil trees in Wizard of Oz, too.
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“What do you think you're doing?”
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Anyway, in order to get Technicolor to work, it was an insanely difficult process.
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Technicolor distributed guides like these
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and we can make a reasonable simulation digitally, with a scene like this.
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So here's a scene of some Lego people who are apparently worshipping Lawrence of Arabia?
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Not sure what's going on here, but it's our starting image.
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A technicolor camera would typically take that picture and shoot it through a prism
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that split the light into red, blue, and green negatives for the picture.
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Those negatives were then flipped into positive “matrices,”
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which eventually got soaked with dyes of the complementary colors.
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So the red matrix turned cyan, the green one magenta, and the blue one yellow.
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Then the dye was transferred — this was called a “dye transfer process” to create
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a final gorgeous Technicolor image.
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So if you're anything like me, that explanation might make you feel like the scarecrow.
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“Oh I'm a failure because I haven't got a brain.”
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So let's try it again, but only look at that red channel.
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So keep your eye on the View-Master, the red in the Rubik's cube, or maybe the Lego guy's
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hat.
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It is all kind of dark now, because that's just the red color in the negative.
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Now flipped in the matrix, that red is really bright, which means that when it's dyed,
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it won't get a lot of cyan.
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And that makes sense.
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Cyan is the complementary color — it's the anti-red.
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So where you want a lot of red, you do not want a lot of cyan.
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That way, when it comes together, you get a ton of magenta and some yellow.
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You don't have a lot of cyan, because the cyan cancels out the red.
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In the earlier days of Technicolor, they also had to amp up the contrast.
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The company would add a black and white layer underneath the matrices to serve as something
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called "the key."
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You can see the results early, in films like 1934's La Cucaracha,
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The Trail of the Lonesome Pine, and Robin Hood, all of which came out well
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before the Wizard of Oz.
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It's easy enough to roughly copy the technology that “Technicolored” the Wizard of Oz.
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RGB split, color bath, mesh, repeat.
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But the film strip processes are just part of the story.
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Lie #2: this scene?
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It's not going from a black and white world to a color one.
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The set was actually painted sepia-tone so the same Technicolor process could be used
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for the bright Oz reveal.
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Today, it's much easier.
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I can draw a box with my hand and with a click, black and white and color play together.
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They even had techniques to do stuff like this in the Oz days.
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But the fact that they built a sepia house shows how Technicolor's technical limitations
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shaped all color movies.
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“This is one of the cameras that was used to film
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The Wizard of Oz.”
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“It weighs 4 to 500 pounds, and these cameras were bigger than ordinary motion picture cameras
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because they had to run three strips of film through them at any given time.”
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So remember — this scene?
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That had to be done with this beast of a camera.
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Those three strips didn't just require more space, they needed tons of light.
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That set had to be blazingly overlit to get enough light through to these three strips
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of film.
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The set was reportedly 100 degrees Fahrenheit at times.
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Sound was an issue, too.
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“It's so loud when you're running three strips of film through a camera, so they had
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to build this blimp around it.
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It's filled with soundproofing material so when you're making a sound film you don't
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get all the sound from the camera throughout the studio there.”
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Technicolor's advantages outweighed its limitations.
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It's main advantage was the way in which it could capture the tone of a scene.
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Two movies made in the same year could have a different look, not just because of the
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choices made in front of the camera.
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Technicolor consultants and directors tweaked the palette of the film by adjusting the cyan,
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magenta and yellow dyes.
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The complicated dye transfer process gave Singin' in the Rain some of its magenta-hued
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skin and deep saturated colors.
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The film and technology weren't the only things that gave Technicolor movies their
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distinctive look.
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It also shaped the world that they chose to film.
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Lie #3: This isn't the real Dorothy.
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It's Judy Garland's body double.
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She wore specially designed clothes and makeup to match the sepia world, so Judy Garland
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could swoop in, in the same shot and a blue dress, to join Technicolor Oz.
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These movies, and Oz, were shaped around Technicolor's abilities, from head to toe.
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“The second page that you see here is the part of the script that shows the ruby slippers
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being unveiled, but what it shows is that they were still silver shoes at this point,
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but the producers of the film really wanted to show off that Technicolor that they were
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paying for, so they wanted them to be sparkly ruby slippers that would look good against
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the yellow brick road.
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So they changed it at the middle of production to ruby slippers.”
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Today, the shoes are kept under low light to preserve them, but during the shoot they
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were blasted with light to accommodate the camera and make those sequins sparkle.
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These weren't just on-set decisions — Technicolor was always pulling strings behind the curtains.
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Look at the credits for Wizard of Oz,
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and The Trail of the Lonesome Pine, and A Star is Born, and so on and so on.
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You'll see one name over and over.
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Natalie Kalmus.
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Once married to Technicolor cofounder Herb Kalmus, she ruled with an iron fist over
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Technicolor productions for many of the early years.
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Kalmus had over 300 film credits where she gave Technicolor advice — and sometimes
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told directors what to do.
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This is the IMDB page for a woman born in 1882.
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In documents like “Color Consciousness,”
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she extended her reach into art — the essay includes aesthetic color theory.
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“Red: danger, blood, life, heat.
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Green: Nature, outdoors, freedom, freshness.”
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Kalmus's influence was significant, but it's as important as a reflection of Technicolor's
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power.
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Technicolor had its own processing facilities, and its own camera crew that continued Natalie
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Kalmus' work after she left the company.
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The technology and the production process gave Technicolor a significant competitive
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advantage to alternatives being used.
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Despite all those alternatives shown on Barbara Flueckiger's website, studios stuck with
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Technicolor for a long time.
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It had a reliable system and could be shown in any theatre in splendid
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color, without requiring special equipment.
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Technicolor eventually fell to cheaper processes through the 1950s, like Eastman Color, that
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used a single strip.
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The Godfather, Part II was one of the final major releases to use the Technicolor we recognize.
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But old prints remain surprisingly vibrant today due to the dye transfer process used.
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Today, I can snap my fingers and be in The Matrix or in Stranger Things' Upside
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Down.
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Ok.
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What are all these dust particles?
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Is this asbestos?
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Am I covered in asbestos right now?
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Technicolor was never just a click — the look was formed by the camera's strengths
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and weaknesses, the artistic choices made for color, and the Technicolor company's
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infrastructure and supervision.
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In that key scene from the Wizard of Oz, you might not have known the trivia about Dorothy's
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double, or the sepia doorway, or even that it wasn't Technicolor's debut.
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But one thing is easy to understand, intuitively.
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The movie is all about it.
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Technicolor wasn't a switch or a doorway.
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It was a whole world, just waiting on the other side.
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You can nerd out a lot more on Technicolor by checking out Barbara Flueckiger's website,
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or Eastman House, which was really generous with their time and a lot of the images that
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you saw in this video.
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I've linked both of those below.
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You can see the director's commentary for this video in an additional video that we've
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made where I share some behind-the-scenes info and a few of the details that couldn't
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quite fit in.