Film Developing Tank
Film Developing Tank
![]() |
![]() Bakelite ENVOY 3 1 2 x 2 1 2 Plate Cut film developing Tank US $47.41
|
![]() VINTAGE PERPLEX ADJUSTABLE FILM DEVELOPING TANK 2224 US $9.81
|
Why most Canadian films TANK at the box office…
…and how to turn this situation around.
The first time I ever set foot on a movie set was back in 2001 (working as a boom operator on a Sarah Polley short film). Since that day my passion for making movies has only grown and intensified. But one underlining question that continues to run through my mind is…why do most (95% or more) Canadian films tank at the box office.
Ask any Canadian filmmaker this question and you’re sure to start up a very long and never-ending conversation that might leave you wonder what made you want to open that can of worms. Well, I’m going to open the can of worms…just for this article. I’m so proud to be Canadian and our industry produces world-class movies year after year, however, these films just don’t seem to make any money (profit).
I found a great article by Canadian actor, writer and producer, James O’Regan that explores this matter in further detail:
Over the last year or so, a great teeth-gnashing has broken out within the Canadian Movie industry. Producers and their public sector confreres at Telefilm Canada sat down to wonder why no-one saw Canadian movies in the theatres. And now Telefilm has unveiled new money to throw at the problem.
In case you don’t know, Telefilm Canada is an arms length crown agency that has no public accountability via a “value for money” audit unless its own board of directors thinks it needs one – wow, get me on that gravy train, quick! It has generated, over the last 30 years, an industry wholly ignorant of Canadian theatrical film markets and wholly dependent on cultural welfare in the mistaken belief that you just can’t make any dough here a mare usque… I and every American film distribution company on the planet know different. I know because I’ve made money in the Canadian box office, in fact more money on one film than all Telefilm films on average. My short comedy, Edsville – about an innocent young couple that stumbles upon a town of Ed Sullivan impersonators – has a recoupment rate of 20% while the average recoupment rate published in Telefilm’s annual report, year after year, hovers at 2%-ish. I’ve also observed what our Yankee cousins actually do. All you have to do is ask them and they’ll actually tell you – hey, who knew?
So let’s see what it takes to make money and sell movies in Canadian moviedom. Here’s the top 12 for anyone who wants to make $8M on a movie in three weeks in Canada:
Rule # 1: No one knows what sells
Rule # 2: See Rule # 1, no, seriously, memorize Rule #1. I’m not saying this only to make the list apostolic, really. I could make something else up.
Rule # 3: Anything that helps sell is good
Rule # 4: The public will pay to see things or people they really like
Rule #5: Exploit people or things that the public likes
Rule #6: The Canadian Public doesn’t care who directs, writes or produces movies
Rule #7: The Canadian Public pays to see “people” on the screen. Actors are the Product
Rule # 8: The Canadian Public loves Stars
Rule # 9: Make sure you have a story
Rule #10: Comedy Sells (Canadians are masters of comedy)
Rule #11: Do everything you can to ensure the Canadian Public knows about the movie
Rule #12: To the risk taker goes the reward. All else is bunk.
To manufacture and market a Canadian movie to the Canadian market, you have to invest $3.5M. Making the movie costs CDN $2.5M. Marketing the movie for a 100 screen three week release costs CDN $1M.
Let’s take a look at how much money you can make. A 100-screen release can generate up to $16M in revenue. If you control the marketing with your $1M, you get $8M back from your $3.5M investment. Isn’t math for fun and profit great?
If you don’t spend that $1M, you are guaranteed to make nothing at the Canadian box office. Telefilm Canada and its producers don’t spend the money and the results are predictable. Movies funded by Telefilm Canada don’t earn a profit from Canadian box office; they don’t even recoup. Telefilm Canada data shows that Canadian distributors have an average marketing budget per Canadian film of $30,000 – about $970K short of what they need; that this average results from a blend of a majority of films released with an actual budget of less than $10,000. Hoo boy, why aren’t these films making the big bucks, eh?
Let’s say it again for the benefit of Telefilm and its Canadian producers, you must spend $1M regardless of a movie’s budget to have a chance at success.
Had the recent Egoyan opus, The Sweet Hereafter, received $1M in Canadian marketing highlighting the divine Sarah Polley, it might have made some bucks. After all, Polley has a following in Canada – more of a following than Egoyan. Yet it was Egoyan that the producers tried to market, not Polley. The little money that was spent was spent foolishly – see rule #6.
Even a American B movie like Nurse Betty gets the full $1M marketing treatment. Learn the lesson from American distributors who know better; who do spend $1M for each film they release in Canada.
Here’s the best part about making sacks of cash in Canada. Manufacturing, distribution and marketing infrastructure are all 100% in place. All you have to do is come up with a movie to market and some cash to market it with. Hey, pinch me!
Why isn’t it working now? Why is Telefilm’s record so dismal? Public policy has intervened in the movie business only at the level of manufacturing – dolling out wallops of cash to make movies. The new funds maintain that approach. This is simply bad policy and we have bank vaults full of unseen films to prove it.
The only successful public policy intervention on the books are Canadian Content (CanCon) rules for the Canadian music industry. There, public policy told the radio stations (the exhibitors) that they had to play a percentage of Canadian music or else they would be shut down. Today, we have a thriving music industry with big Canadian stars.
Before CanCon in the music industry, Canadian Radio stations played about 3% of Canadian content. After CanCon, it became 30%. Can-con drove the business of the Canadian music industry. It supported the early market-driven development of Canadian music stars. It allowed financial and artistic success in the small Canadian market. Remember there was no success before Can-con rules for the music industry. That Canadian-based market success worked as a springboard to world success for many Canadian performers. It took a while to work but work it did.
Marketing is simple. It just costs money. With its new infusion of funds, it appears that Telefilm will try to mystify the process per usual, read the entrails and divvy up the dough without recognizing rule # 1 – no one knows what sells. That is the mystery and joy of movie selling – ya just don’t know and no-one can give you the magic bullet, i.e. previous box office records, e.g. think how many major studios have hit rock bottom with a series of losers only to bounce back “unexpectedly.”
If public policy is going to intervene, it should get out of movie production and into the marketplace with CanCon for Canadian cinemas. Set a quota, step out of the way and voilà: in five years, we will have a thriving movie business with big Canadian stars. Movie producers are much better at making movies than cultural bureaucrats. I know, call me crazy, but it’s true.
CanCon rules for the Canadian movie business are one means of helping create movies and movie stars without spending a lot of tax dollars. That’s all they do. Canadian movies don’t need it to succeed but if government is to intervene to help reward risk, then that’s the best way and means of intervention, and cheaper too.
For public policy, how bad could it be to issue an “initiative” to exhibitors across the country, insisting that 10%, 20%, 30%, 40% of product viewed in Canadian cinemas must be indigenous Canadian product over a period of years. Then stand aside and let the industry do what it does best: sell movies.
Hey, it ain’t that hard. After all, no one, not even Hollywood, knows what sells. Remember rule #1?
How to turn this situation around?
Now, it’s time for me to add in my two cents worth. We (the Canadian film industry) need more film studios here in Canada. I’m not talking about some glorified soundstage like Filmport but a full-fledged independent movie studio that has 100% control of the financing, development, production and worldwide distribution of their movies. These Canadian movie studios should have only two objectives:
1) To make movies that will entertain millions of people around the world. Focus on giving moviegoers what they want and according to the current all-time North American box office stats…people want to see movies with Action, Animation and Special effects. Success leaves clues.
2) To maximize profits.
That’s it. When that day happens, then we’ll definitely see a lot more Canadian films reaching the #1 spot at the box office. Both domestically and overseas.
Ian Agard
Filmmaker & Author of "Stop Waiting and Make Your Movie"
http://www.ianagard.com
P.S. Get info about my new ebook at:
http://www.ianagard.com/how-to-finance-your-movie
About the Author
Ian Agard is film producer,screenwriter and director living in Toronto. Go to http://www.ianagard.com where Ian reveals more useful tips to boost your filmmaking career.
|
|
Tank Film $59.99 Tank Film - Wall Decal |
|
|
The Film Developing Cookbook $33.99 The Film Developing Cookbook is an up-to-date manual for modern film development techniques. While the original Darkroom Cookbook focused entirely on photographic chemicals and formulae, this book concentrates on films, their characteristics, and the developers each requires for maximum control of the resulting image. The Film Developing Cookbook specifically addresses the difficult subject of T-grain film development. It includes rarely found information on film development and the nature of film developers. The authors take bold and controversial stances on many widely accepted film developing dogmas. They tackle many of the widely accepted "myths" of film development. They reject the trend toward scientific evaluation' of films and developers in favor of the photographer developing a personal aesthetic without relying exclusively on densitometry or H&D curves. Steve Anchell is a contributing editor to Outdoor Photographer and PhotoWork magazines. He has written columns, feature articles, and interviews for Camera & Darkroom, View Camera, PIC, Shutterbug, Photo Shopper, and PhotoPro magazines. His previous two books with Focal Press, The Darkroom Cookbook and The Variable Contrast Printing Manual are photography best-sellers. Steve's photographs have been exhibited in galleries and are shown in private collections. He photographs and prints both color and black-and-white with 35mm, 21/4 and large-format ccameras. He has conducted over 80 photographic and darkroom workshops since 1979. Steve is currently the program director for the Photographer's Formulary Workshops in Condon, Montana. In early 1998, the first collection of his personal work, entitled The Nude at Big Sur, will be published by Whitefish Editions. Bill Troop is a highly respected independent photochemist. - Contains the most current material available on film developing - Filled with relevant, hard to find information - A companion volume to the bestselling The Darkroom Cookbook |
|
|
X-Ray Film Developing Solution, 2/cs $88.77 Features of the X-Ray Film Developing Solution: Premium, high-activity developer formulated for all general and specialized radiographic films. Meets or exceeds film manufacturers' recommendations for speed, contrast and base + fog. Clean-working developer with excellent resistance to aerial oxidation; unequalled for sensitometric stability. Works with all R & F Ultrasound, Angio and Laser Films. Compatible with AGFA, CEA, DuPont, Fuji, Kodak, Konica and 3M films. For automatic developing. Case contains two (1.25 Gallon) unibottles which makes 10 gallons of mixture. |
|
|
FSU Film School Tank Top Film Jr. Spaghetti Tank by CafePress $22.5 Are you a film major, or just into anything film at all?? Try this one on for size, and show the world your passion Film Jr. Spaghetti Tank Our spaghetti tank from American Apparel will keep you in style year round. Made of soft 100% superfine combed cotton baby rib, this tank provides the perfect silhouette.5.8 oz. 100% Ultra-fine combed ring spun 1x1 baby rib cotton. Size up |
|
|
Developing Animals $75 Pictures of animals are now ubiquitous, but the ability to capture animals on film was a significant challenge in the early era of photography. In Developing Animals, Matthew Brower takes us back to the time when Americans started taking pictures of the animal kingdom, at the beginning of the twentieth century, the moment when photography became a mass medium and wildlife photography an increasingly popular genre. Developing Animals compellingly investigates the way photography changed our perception of animals. Brower analyzes how photographers created new ideas about animals as they moved from taking pictures of taxidermic specimens in so-called natural settings to the emergence of practices such as camera hunting, which made it possible to capture images of creatures in the wild. By combining approaches in visual cultural studies and the history of photography, Developing Animals goes further to argue that photography has been essential not only to the understanding of wildlife but also to the conceptual separation of humans and animals. |
|
|
The Film Developing Cookbook By Anchell, Stephen G./ Troop, Bill $46.41 Author: Anchell, Stephen G./ Troop, Bill Subtitle: Advanced Techniques for Film Developing Publication Date: 1998/12/21 Number of Pages: 163 Binding Type: Spiral Language: English Depth: 0.50 Width: 7.50 Height: 10.00 |
|
|
Film Women's Tank Top by CafePress $22 And that, I think, was the handle - that sense of inevitable victory over the forces of old and evil. Not in any mean or military sense; we didn't need that. Our energy would simply prevail. We had al Film Women's Tank Top Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o |
|
|
Film Jr. Spaghetti Tank by CafePress $22.5 Only 3 women directors have ever been nominated for an Oscar. Show the world that you are well on your way to changing that with this stylish tee. We Can Still Do It Film Jr. Spaghetti Tank Our spaghetti tank from American Apparel will keep you in style year round. Made of soft 100% superfine combed cotton baby rib, this tank provides the perfect silhouette.5.8 oz. 100% Ultra-fine combed ring spun 1x1 baby rib cotton. Size up |
|
|
Instant Film $98.77 Instant film is a type of photographic film first introduced by Polaroid that is designed to be used in an instant camera (and, with accessory hardware, with many professional film cameras). The film contains the chemicals needed for developing and fixing the photo, and the instant camera exposes and initiates the developing process after a photograph has been taken. In earlier Polaroid instant cameras the film is pulled through rollers which breaks open a pod containing a reagent that is spread between the exposed negative and receiving positive sheet. This film sandwich develops for a predetermined time, depending on film type and ambient temperature, after which the positive sheet is peeled away from the negative to reveal the developed photo. In 1972, Polaroid introduced integral film, which incorporated timing and receiving layers to automatically develop and fix the photo without any intervention from the photographer. Instant film is available in sizes from 24 mm x 36 mm (similar to 135 film) up to 20 x 24 size, with the most popular film sizes for consumer snapshots being approximately 31/4 x 41/4 (the image itself is smaller as it is surrounded by a bord Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 132 Publication Date: 2010/10/31 Language: English Dimensions: 9.02 x 5.98 x 0.31 inches |
|
|
Independent film Jr. Spaghetti Tank by CafePress $22.5 Suppport the SLFF with this summery tank top Like it's SOOOO in this year Independent film Jr. Spaghetti Tank Our spaghetti tank from American Apparel will keep you in style year round. Made of soft 100% superfine combed cotton baby rib, this tank provides the perfect silhouette.5.8 oz. 100% Ultra-fine combed ring spun 1x1 baby rib cotton. Size up |
|
|
Filmmaker Film Women's Tank Top by CafePress $22 Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o Film Women's Tank Top Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o |
|
|
LFS Film Women's Tank Top by CafePress $22 Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o Film Women's Tank Top Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o |
|
|
The Film $6.99 The Film |
|
|
This is Not a Film $13.99 This is Not a Film |
|
|
Film $12.49 Film |
|
|
Photographer photography camera Photography Women's Tank Top by CafePress $22 Gifts for those into aperture, exposure, zooming, framing, light meters, tripods film developing. Photography Women's Tank Top Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o |
|
|
Pirandello and Film $5.11 Italian playwright Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936) is one of the preeminent figures of the modern European theater. His masterpiece, "Six Characters in Search of an Author," set loose a riot during its first performance in Rome in 1921. This play about six unfortunate characters abandoned by their author in the middle of a tawdry drama, is an unsettling, supremely self-conscious work that is ultimately about theatrical artifice and artistic creation itself. "Pirandello and Film" examines Pirandello's many efforts--none of them finally successful--to transform Six Characters into a movie. The authors examine Pirandello's views on film and its relation to theater, his varying approaches to creating a film adaptation of "Six Characters," and the efforts of directors and film moguls in Germany and Hollywood to fashion a cinematic version of the play. The book also presents an array of important documents, including some that have never before appeared in English: a Prologue (or prose sketch) for a 1926 film; a Scenario (a more detailed prose sketch) prepared by Pirandello and Adolph Lantz in the late 1920s for a German film version of "Six Characters"; an English-language film sketch written in 1935 by Pirandello and Saul Colin; and a letter from Max Reinhardt and the German emigre Hollywood film director Joseph von Sternberg to Saul Colin regarding the proposed film treatment of the play. These documents, together with the authors' critical text, provide a detailed portrait of Pirandello's developing view of film as an appropriate medium for his revolutionary dramatic innovations. |
|
|
Vancouver Film School Women's Tank Top by CafePress $22 Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o Women's Tank Top Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o |
|
|
The Art of Black and White Developing $37.36 35 years in the making and constantly kept up to date with the latest and very best techniques, this book will allow you to discover the true art of black and white developing. Discover techniques that will polish your skills in the darkroom. Use this book with all black and white 35mm, medium format and large format photography and attain the ultimate potential of your film and papers. This unique and practical book is the result of over 35 years of darkroom work and has become a trusted guide and inspiration for many photographers across the world. In these pages John will show you innovative, practical as well as advanced ways to really improve your development work with films and paper and produce consistent and beautiful photographs every time. Using the very latest developers, from FX-55 to 510-Pyro. From PMK to Pyrocat, this book is a must have for any photographer. |
|
|
Women's Tank Shoot Film Not People Women's Tank Top by CafePress $22 Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o Women's Tank Top Sporty and sexy, wear our women's tank top to beat the summer heat or workout in cool comfort. Our tank top is made of 100% combed ring spun cotton, and cut for a close, fashionable fit. Neck and armhole are carefully shaped to conceal a bra.6.1 o |
|
|
Developing a Defensive Game Plan with Todd Nichols (DVD) $35.82 Developing a Defensive Game Plan presents an overview of the philosophy, organizational structure, and components that go into developing a defensive game plan. The DVD is designed to provide a template for any coach who wants to develop a systematic approach to game planning an opponent. Among the topics covered: Creating the physical environment, electronic hardware and software concerns, scouting breakdown and organization, game-week organization, film cut-up and breakdown, film analysis and study, game plan structure, practicing the game plan, and position film study/game preparation. |
|
|
Godzilla (2012 Film Project) $44.51 Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. American film studio Legendary Pictures is developing a new feature film with the famous movie monster Godzilla. Godzilla has previously appeared in a long-running franchise of films produced by the Japanese film studio Toho, most recently in 2004's Godzilla: Final Wars. This would be the second American film production to use the Godzilla character, the first was the 1998 film Godzilla. Legendary has indicated that their film would be a reboot of the franchise. |
|
|
The Routledge Companion to Religion and Film $55 The Routledge Companion to Religion and Film brings together a lively and experienced team of contributors to introduce students to the key topics in religion and film and to investigate the ways in which the exciting subject of religion and film is developing for more experienced scholars. Divided into four parts, the Companion :.:.; analyses the history of the interaction of religion and film, through periods of censorship as well as appreciation of the medium.; studies religion-in-film, examining how the world’s major religions, as well as Postcolonial, Japanese and New Religions, are depicted by and within films.; uses diverse methodologies to explore religion and film, such as psychoanalytical, theological and feminist approaches, and audience reception.; analyses religious themes in film, including Redemption, the Demonic, Jesus or Christ Figures, Heroes and Superheroes.; considers films as diverse as The Passion of the Christ , The Matrix , Star Wars and Groundhog Day. This definitive Handbook provides an accessible resource to this emerging field and is an indispensable guide to religion and film for students of Religion, Film Studies, and beyond. |
|
|
Developing an Effective Screen Package (DVD) $35.82 Developing an Effective Screen Package presents a detailed overview of how coaches can effectively employ screens in their team’s offensive game plans. Appropriate for coaches and teams at all competitive levels, the DVD uses game film cut-ups to explain and demonstrate the fundamentals and techniques involved in four commonly run screen plays. Among the topics covered: screen play basics, tightside slow screen, splitside slow screen, boundary tunnel screen, and boundary quick screen. |
|
|
Braer Tank Disaster, a Seal Struggles in the Oily Film Oil in Water Ship Accident, January 1993 $24.99 Braer Tank Disaster, a Seal Struggles in the Oily Film Oil in Water Ship Accident, January 1993 - Photographic Print |
|
|
Film & Video Marketing $3.95 This is a comprehensive insider's guide to the marketing of both film and video. From the inception of the project through to the final sale to an audience, the author presents clear, step-by-step strategies that should address the needs of almost any independent film or video producer. Among the topics covered: Developing hit ideas; Market research; Marketing and promotion; Packaging and key art; Publicity and advertising; and more. |
|
|
Film Scriptwriting: A Practical Manual $3.94 This second edition of the widely acclaimed Film Scriptwriting is a truly practical manual for the working writer. It provides all the clear, step-by-step guidance you need to script both fact and feature film and video - from getting and developing ideas to the writing of master scene or shooting script. Featured in this new edition are annotated excerpts from some of today's most successful films, selected to point up principles and techniques discussed. Interviews with working film specialists reveal the things professional directors, producers, story editor, and analysts look for in appraising the scripts that come across their desks. |
|
|
Transnational Cinema, the Film Reader $250.12 Transnational Cinema: The Film Reader provides an overview of the key concepts and debates within the developing field of transnational cinema. Bringing together seminal essays from a wide range of sources, this volume engages with films that fashion their narrative and aesthetic dynamics in relation to more than one national or cultural community. The reader is divided into four sections: From National to Transnational Cinema Global Cinema in the Digital Age Motion Pictures: Film, Migration and Diaspora Tourists and Terrorists. Author: Ezra, Elizabeth/ Rowden, Terry Series Title: In FocusRoutledge Film Readers Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 213 Publication Date: 2006/03/06 Language: English Dimensions: 9.26 x 6.36 x 0.69 inches |
|
|
Wolf X-Ray Glass Thermometer for Developing Tanks $12.6 Features of the Wolf X-Ray Glass Thermometer: The glass thermometer floats in the developing tank. The black top projects out of the liquid making it easy to remove and read (the loop in the top also allows for convenient hanging). The glass thermometer is calibrated from 20° - 120°F, the perfect developing temperature control instrument for the small, but busy department. |
|
|
When Women Call the Shots : The Developing Power and Influence of Women in Television and Film $21.4 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
Fujifilm Instax Wide Twin Pack Film $24.99 Instax Instant Color Film is professional grade and provides superior performance. Instax Film Features Super-Fine grain Vivid, sharp images Fast developing Household , Electronics , Cameras & Camcorders |


US $38.82
























































































