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Video: Howard Anderson Optical Printer (influential in making of Star Wars, and other movies)
cost of making a movie
Image by Robert Scoble
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Not much is known about the Anderson Printer before ILM purchased it from Paramount Pictures in 1975. It had been used for the optical compositing for Cecil B. DeMille’s "The Ten Commandments" in 1956, and shots for Alfred Hitchcock’s "North by Northwest" in 1959. The printer fell out of popularity as use of the VistaVision format waned. VistaVision is a method of shooting a 35mm negative horizontally (8 perforations), double the size of a typical upright negative. In order to project a VistaVision movie, a special projector was necessary; one that lay on its side. The cost of the new equipment and higher costs of processing film made VistaVision an impractical format for film. Though the quality of an 8-perf image was decidedly better than the more popular 35mm, the use of VistaVision decreased in both production and post production. When Panavision introduced superior anamorphic lenses available for rental, Paramount and other studios used the wide screen technology without needing VistaVision.

When George Lucas began planning a high budget science-fiction thriller [Star Wars, 1977], he needed a printer capable of duplicating images time and time again with as little image quality loss as possible. His optical supervisors convinced him to buy the inexpensive VistaVision equipment, including the Anderson, from the Howard Anderson Optical Company on the Paramount Lot. Lucas bought the printer and set it up in his own effects shop in Van Nuys, California. He then used it for compositing many of the famous effects shots in his 1977 blockbuster, Star Wars. The resurrection of the 8-perf format maintained the quality usually lost in special effects production.

With the success of Star Wars, ILM brought the Anderson and other equipment up to Northern California establishing a Bay Area-based production company. ILM acquired five more optical printers to handle the amount of work needed for such films as "The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Who Framed Roger Rabbit," and nearly 100 others. In spite of its age, the well-built printer has remained rock steady; still the only printer at ILM capable of pulling down all 8-perfs at one time.

John Ellis, ILM Optical Supervisor, says, "The Anderson Printer has created elements for nearly every movie since the company’s creation. Literally millions of feet of film have gone through its gates." Among many others, the Anderson Printer has created elements for: Star Wars Episodes IV, V, VI, The Indiana Jones Trilogy, The Back to the Future Trilogy, Four Star Trek films, Dragonslayer, Poltergeist, Captain Eo, Starman, and Death Becomes Her.

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