A motion picture industry complex / Remon Joseph M. Remulla

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Manila : National University, 2002Description: [unnumbered leaves ] : illustrations, maps ; 29 cmSubject(s): LOC classification:
  • UGT COA BSArch .R46 2002
Contents:
Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Methodology -- Chapter 3. Terms of references -- Chapter 4. Design framework -- Chapter 5. Analysis -- Chapter 6. Conclusion and recommendations.
Summary: Since the 1980's, the film and TV industries have grown even more independent; many films are made for immediate showing on broadcast and cable TV. The televising of recently release theatrical films is an invitation to home viewers to make an videotaped copy, the video store, like the videocassette and laser disc media on which people watch movies, they now have a range of choice as rich as that available to the patrons of a library, unfortunately, film on video are visually inferior electronic versions of the originals, a loss no video technology can restore, few films are being made in black and white these days, because television demands color-even color as artificial as the kind produced by colorization, a computerized process that adds electronic colors to black and white films, along with the cropping of the films image to make it fit the TV screen colorization is considered by many to be a violation of the original film creator's intentions and rights.
Item type: Thesis
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Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Thesis Thesis National University - Manila LRC - Architecture Thesis Architecture UGT COA BSArch .R46 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) c.1 Available UGTHE000000780

Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Methodology -- Chapter 3. Terms of references -- Chapter 4. Design framework -- Chapter 5. Analysis -- Chapter 6. Conclusion and recommendations.

Since the 1980's, the film and TV industries have grown even more independent; many films are made for immediate showing on broadcast and cable TV. The televising of recently release theatrical films is an invitation to home viewers to make an videotaped copy, the video store, like the videocassette and laser disc media on which people watch movies, they now have a range of choice as rich as that available to the patrons of a library, unfortunately, film on video are visually inferior electronic versions of the originals, a loss no video technology can restore, few films are being made in black and white these days, because television demands color-even color as artificial as the kind produced by colorization, a computerized process that adds electronic colors to black and white films, along with the cropping of the films image to make it fit the TV screen colorization is considered by many to be a violation of the original film creator's intentions and rights.

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