Talk:Internegative

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In B/W movies?[edit]

According to the King Kong (1933 film) article, the film was recently restored from an internegative, but this article seems to suggest that internegatives exist only for color films. Can you clear this up? -- 77.7.173.177 (talk) 01:30, 29 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

"Composited camera negative"?[edit]

I've just removed the word "composited" from that phrase as it appears in the "DeLuxe Color" article (context: "made directly from the composited camera negative", referring to an EK "Showprint"), where it seemed to imply that the soundtrack is on the camera negative, as was actually the case with early Fox Movietone newsreel footage and other such historical oddities. If my edit there was in error, no harm done, as the soundtrack is really beside the point. But I see that the phrase appears several times in this article. Modern film industry lingo is not my strong suit. Is this exact phrase, meaning the usual separate soundtrack element composited with or using the camera negative, really standard among industry pros? AVarchaeologist (talk) 00:02, 17 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]


Merge 'Interpositive' and 'Answer Print' with this page, rename it 'Cinematic Duplication'[edit]

Looks like a description of how films used to be duplicated is fading from search engines. I came here and had to gather a sequence from three articles. I suggest merging Interpositive (a stub) and Answer_print (another stub) with this one (start class) to describe the process as a whole. What do you think? RubyJester (talk) 10:36, 2 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]