We have a fairly "rough" studio release print of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in our future. Screens on Saturday. The decision was already made to show it anyway, nostalgia reasons I guess. Not my call. Advice?
Inspection had enough "worry" areas, (due to length and age of prior booth repairs), that I ran a full screen test last night after hours. Indeed it has some running issues. And I'm wanting 2nd opinions on my best options to improve it's chances for the screening.
in R1 and R3, in a couple places near the beginning it missed (or tore) two sprockets and required reframing. R1 did it twice and eventually slacked the audio tension and I had to pause playback to rebuild the lower loop and set tension again. I have not re-inspected yet to see what if anything changed in those areas.
Some of these are perf repairs accomplished by long sections of full splices. The tape is quite old and has accumulated lots of dirt on the adhesive residues. I'm not really set up to do proper perf repairs with perf tape, is my best option just to re-do these repairs with fresh tape, despite it being overkill for perf repair only? Or should I get precise with splice tape and scissors and attempt to just repair the perf areas?
There is no SRD, DTS, or SDDS track, so I could even use narrow kapton tape, which I do have in various widths (I know that is not standard but it is what is sized correctly already).
Fold tape over the edge or not? etc. I assume not is the preference cause folding it over increases the width that has to make it through the gate and guides.
Just re-inspect it and run it again, but be prepared to re-frame or pause the film, doing minimal to "fix" it?
Beyond those running trouble spots, it has oscillating emulsion scratches throughout most reels, and no tail on the credits, which seems very brittle, cause that is another area no one has repaired, based on previous markings it seems people just kill the credits early before they get to the several feet of cracked sprockets, if they show them at all. I have a tail I could donate, but that long repair warrants actual perf or edge taping.
Other than obviously the two trouble reels, I expect re-inspecting the whole thing is warranted, we could have easily damaged a few more sprockets even on the reels that made it through in test.
I had our gate tension backed all the way off to improve the long fat splices' chances of making it, but was fairly tight on the shoe tension.
Since both problem reels occurred in one projector, I suppose I also need to compare our lateral studio guide placement against those large repairs, we might be too tight on our guides in that one gate. Alternatively we could attempt running this print without the lateral guides. But I haven't checked our lateral stability in that guideless setup on 35mm.
Inspection had enough "worry" areas, (due to length and age of prior booth repairs), that I ran a full screen test last night after hours. Indeed it has some running issues. And I'm wanting 2nd opinions on my best options to improve it's chances for the screening.
in R1 and R3, in a couple places near the beginning it missed (or tore) two sprockets and required reframing. R1 did it twice and eventually slacked the audio tension and I had to pause playback to rebuild the lower loop and set tension again. I have not re-inspected yet to see what if anything changed in those areas.
Some of these are perf repairs accomplished by long sections of full splices. The tape is quite old and has accumulated lots of dirt on the adhesive residues. I'm not really set up to do proper perf repairs with perf tape, is my best option just to re-do these repairs with fresh tape, despite it being overkill for perf repair only? Or should I get precise with splice tape and scissors and attempt to just repair the perf areas?
There is no SRD, DTS, or SDDS track, so I could even use narrow kapton tape, which I do have in various widths (I know that is not standard but it is what is sized correctly already).
Fold tape over the edge or not? etc. I assume not is the preference cause folding it over increases the width that has to make it through the gate and guides.
Just re-inspect it and run it again, but be prepared to re-frame or pause the film, doing minimal to "fix" it?
Beyond those running trouble spots, it has oscillating emulsion scratches throughout most reels, and no tail on the credits, which seems very brittle, cause that is another area no one has repaired, based on previous markings it seems people just kill the credits early before they get to the several feet of cracked sprockets, if they show them at all. I have a tail I could donate, but that long repair warrants actual perf or edge taping.
Other than obviously the two trouble reels, I expect re-inspecting the whole thing is warranted, we could have easily damaged a few more sprockets even on the reels that made it through in test.
I had our gate tension backed all the way off to improve the long fat splices' chances of making it, but was fairly tight on the shoe tension.
Since both problem reels occurred in one projector, I suppose I also need to compare our lateral studio guide placement against those large repairs, we might be too tight on our guides in that one gate. Alternatively we could attempt running this print without the lateral guides. But I haven't checked our lateral stability in that guideless setup on 35mm.
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