Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Ed (film)


  
  Ed (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ed is a 1996 comedy film starring Matt LeBlanc.
It received three Razzie Awards nominations for Worst Picture, Screenplay (David M. Evans), and Screen Couple (for LeBlanc and the mechanical monkey who plays Ed) although it failed to "win".
The film is about a man named Jack "Deuce" Cooper (Matt LeBlanc from Friends) who does magnificent with powerful pitches, but chokes on the big field (which makes people look down upon him.) He later has to pick up a ball player who happens to be a baseball-playing chimpanzee named Ed.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ed_(movie)   (170 words)

  
 Film, Television & Radio, Resource Guide -- PSU Library
Supplementary lists of award-winning films, of film biographies by subject and of movies by the name of the war portrayed.
Annotated, critical bibliography on film and film criticism.
Indexes 85 film periodicals selected for their value to film research and scholarship.
www.lib.pdx.edu /resources/pathfinders/filmandtv.html   (2291 words)

  
 NIKON SUPER COOLSCAN 4000 ED FILM SCANNER REVIEW
If the film has edge to edge curl, and you are scanning the first frame, there is nothing to hold the center of the leading edge of the film strip level with the sides of the strip.
The snap together mounts that actually contact the film on all fours sides with a small amount of pressure may be the best at keeping the film flat.
Another way to check film flatness in 'real-time' is to autofocus on the center of your image, then do another autofocus half way to a corner and then another in a corner area of your image.
www.sphoto.com /techinfo/scs4000.html   (5171 words)

  
 Ed Wood (1994)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Ed Wood, of course, chronicles the Hollywood career of its eponymous subject, truly one screwed up individual; a cross-dresser with a fetish for angora, Wood churned out one horrifically bad film after another, culminating with Plan Nine From Outer Space, before descending into crappy porn films toward the end of his life.
Ed Wood is a rare beast – it's a Tim Burton film that doesn't go overboard, it's a movie about Hollywood (sort of) that isn't self-indulgent, it's a nostalgia trip that manages not to be sappy but is still very warm and caring, and overall it's just a strikingly well-done film.
Ed Wood is nothing less than a tribute to its subject, and in that, as in many other ways, it succeeds marvelously.
www.imdb.com /title/tt0109707   (926 words)

  
 Gothamist Interviews: Ed Halter, Writer/Film Curator   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
But if I had to pick one film from this year's NYUFF that seems poised to break out, I'd definitely say it's Roddy Bogawa's feature I Was Born But..., a beautifully shot, incredibly complex and intelligent film which is about, among many other things, growing up Asian-American and punk.
There are far too many festivals that attempt to offer a watered-down experience, with B-grade films directed by celebrities, or stuff that will be released by major studios anyway, or wannabe indie films that really don't need to be seen by anyone beyond the filmmaker's family.
They think that's all a film festival is, and it lowers the bar of expectation.
www.gothamist.com /interview/archives/2004/05/07/ed_halter_writerfilm_curator.php   (1028 words)

  
 Edtv (1999)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Goofs: Continuity: When Ed and his family are discussing whether or not to do the show, the cap on the 2 liter bottle of Mountain Dew appears and disappears between shots.
Ed takes on the challenge partly because he's pretty broke and partly because he's bored, urged on by his little hoper, small brained, big muscled brother Ray played by Woody Harrelson.
It's not often that these sorts of characters are treated warmly in these sorts of films and then we must ask how our own families would fare under this sort of warts and all scrutiny- probably about as well as Ed's.
us.imdb.com /Title?0131369   (660 words)

  
 Ed (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ed (film), a 1996 film starring Matt LeBlanc
Occasionally a name in its own right, Ed is also a short form of Edward, Edwin or Edmund
This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ed_(disambiguation)   (107 words)

  
 Nikon Coolscan 9000 ED (Film Scanner LS-9000)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Engineered to meet the exacting standards of imaging professionals, the NIKON SUPER COOLSCAN 9000 ED is designed to handle a broad range of film formats such as 35mm, 120/220, 16mm, 6 x 7, 6 x 9 film, electron microscope and more.
The SUPER COOLSCAN 9000 ED scans a great variety of film formats such as medium format (120/220), 16mm, electron microscope and preparates, as well as 35mm (135) format.
The Scanner Nikkor ED has a larger, specially designed diameter which ensures high-resolution reading of medium-format film while delivering unparalleled optical purity to the CCD.
www.jjmehta.com /products/nikoncoolscan9000ed.html   (1219 words)

  
 Digital History
Film at the Intersection of High and Mass Culture.
Film and Reform: John Grierson and the Documentary Film Movement.
Jacobs, Del. Revisioning Film Traditions: The Pseudo-documentary and the Neo-Western.
www.digitalhistory.uh.edu /historyonline/film_genre.cfm   (2839 words)

  
 BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Film | 'Lost' Ed Wood film gets release
Necromania, Wood's last film from 1971, was made for about $7,000 (£3,800) and went missing shortly afterwards.
That film shows the making of Wood's most famous film, Plan 9 From Outer Space from 1956, in which actors mess up their lines and special effects include pie tins for flying saucers.
Necromania was unearthed by Ed Wood enthusiasts Alexander Kogan and Rudolph Grey in a warehouse in Los Angeles after more than 15 years of detective work.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/hi/entertainment/film/3961395.stm   (212 words)

  
 Articles > The "Latham Loop"
Their problem was twofold: first, they wanted to invent a camera that would be able to film an entire fight on one strip of film; and second, they wanted to design a projector that could clearly show that entire fight on a large screen.
This loop was placed in the film just before it reached the camera's gate, thereby allowing the film to be rapidly paused and advanced without pulling directly on the rest of the film on the spool.
With this seemingly simple discovery, the amount of film that could be shot at one time suddenly was limited only by the amount of available film and the size of the film magazine, and in early May, 1895, the Lambda Company filmed an entire eight minute fight without stopping their camera once.
www.pictureshowman.com /articles_technology_latham.cfm   (1361 words)

  
 Digital Film Scanners - Nikon Super Coolscan 4000 ED Film Scanner Review, Information, and Specifications
Since the film grain was fairly evident at that resolution, our feeling was that there was little purpose in going to even higher resolutions, since it seemed all this would do is further emphasize the film grain.
The Super Coolscan 4000 ED comes with three film holders, one for mounted 35mm slides, one for loose 35mm film strips, and a third "clamshell"-style holder for handling badly-curved strips of film via the slide adapter.
We did see slightly less definition in the grain pattern of the film in the lower left and lower right corners, but these areas were also more highly exposed on the negative and so had greater emulsion density and a naturally tighter grain pattern to begin with.
www.imaging-resource.com /PRODS/LS4K/L40A.HTM   (11018 words)

  
 SFU Library - Film Information Resources at SFU Library
Bennett Reference PN 1993.5 C2 The international dictionary of films and filmmakers.
Documentary, art and feature films, DVDs and videos formerly housed at Media Resources in the Learning and Instructional Development Centre are now available in the SFU Bennett Library Media Collection (Room 5101B).
Most of the titles in the film collection are licensed for non-theatrical public performance use at Simon Fraser University and may be booked for classroom viewing by SFU faculty and instructors.
www.lib.sfu.ca /researchhelp/subjectguides/fpa/film.htm   (1666 words)

  
 Nikon Coolscan 5000 ED (Film Scanner LS-5000)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The scanner incorporates Scanner Nikkor ED (Extra-low Dispersion) glass lens elements for superior edge-to-edge sharpness, definition and contrast, as well as outstanding color fidelity.
With fast, easy image transfer thanks to the USB 2.0 interface, the SUPER COOLSCAN 5000 ED is an extremely powerful, extremely fast, extremely efficient desktop film scanner that will augment your productivity and give you scanned images that will take your breath away.
Nikon’s exclusive Scanner Nikkor ED lens elements are superior in edge-to-edge sharpness, definition and contrast, as well as color registration, saturation and accuracy.
www.jjmehta.com /products/nikoncoolscan5000ed.html   (1243 words)

  
 Nikon CoolScan V ED Film Scanner (35 mm) - Find, Compare, and Buy Nikon CoolScan V ED Film Scanner (35 mm) at ...
The new Coolscan V ED has an effective optical resolution of 4000dpi and the 14-bit A/D conversion offer the scanner the possibility to produce high quality scans.
The Coolscan V ED can be used for different applications: scan negatives or slides to print or to send as e-mail attachment or start a digital archive from older or recent negatives or slides or use an image on personal or business web sites.
nikon coolscan v ed, coolscan, nikon coolscan v, nikon coolscan, coolscan v ed, film scanner, nikon film scanner, coolscan v, nikon scanner, coolscan ls 50, nikon v ed, slide, film scanners, slide scanner, nikon scanner coolscan v ed, nikon, scanner, nikon v ls 50 ed, slide projector, canon fs 4000 scanner
www.shopping.com /xGS-22045448~NS-1   (531 words)

  
 Digital Film Scanners - Nikon CoolScan IV ED Film and Slide Scanner Review, Information, and Specifications
The maximum resolution of the Coolscan IV ED is 4000 dpi, resulting in a maximum image size of 3,654 x 5,646 pixels when scanning 35mm film, although the maximum optical resolution (the resolution determined by the number of CCD pixels and scan area) is 2900 dpi.
Underexposed slides or dense negatives are a challenge for any film scanner: With so little light coming through the film, the electronics have a hard time measuring it, and "noise" from the sensor often swamps the signal coming from the image.
The Coolscan IV comes with three film holders, one for mounted 35mm slides, one for loose strips of 35mm film, and a third "clamshell"-style adapter for handling badly-curved strips of film via the slide adapter.
www.imaging-resource.com /SCAN/CSIV/C4A.HTM   (8589 words)

  
 Bona Books - Best Sellers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
You can look up films by nationality and find a history of a given country's contribution to the art.
Technical data is also indexed, so you can read not only about film stock and the apparatus of the camera, but also about the duties of the gaffer, the key grip, and the best boy.
The Film Encyclopedia contains more information than any other single-volume film reference and is also the best written movie guide of its kind.
www.bonabooks.com   (1522 words)

  
 [No title]
Film As Art (University of California Press, 1972) Bordwell, David, and Kristin Thompson.
Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style (Overlook Press, 1979) [or later editions] Sitney, P. Adams.
Documentary: A History of the Non-Fiction Film (Oxford University Press, 1993) Barsam, Richard M. Nonfiction Film: A Critical History, revised ed.
mis15.ncarts.edu /film/miscellaneous/recommended_reading.doc   (1805 words)

  
 ED WOOD unofficial HOME PAGE
Ed Wood’s cult classic has been hailed as the worst film of all time, but it’s one of the most hilariously entertaining movies you’ll ever see.
The film is currently in pre-production and has aroused a lot of interest from Hollywood, including Billy Zane who is set to take the starring role.
I think that Ed Wood hoped that Bunny would get the sex change operation that he was always planning and Ed could finally make the sex change movie that he had wanted Glen or Glenda to be.
garnet.acns.fsu.edu /~lflynn/edwood.html   (3403 words)

  
 Nikon Coolscan IV ED Film Scanner   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The Nikon Coolscan IV ED personal film scanner bridges the gap from film to digital.
The perfect complement to a 35mm SLR camera, this high quality film scanner combines Nikon's Scanner Nikkor ED glass lens with an LED light source for incredible, consistent color and sharpness.
The Coolscan IV ED integrates Digital ICE3 Image Enhancement technology into Nikon Scan 3.0 software, for automatic removal of surface defects, restoration of color, and film grain minimization from scans of 35mm strip or slide film and Advanced Photo System (IX240) film.
www.thebestthings.com /filmcameras/nikon_coolscan4.htm   (550 words)

  
 Chinese Film, Chinese Media, Print Culture 1
[each chapter treats a film and includes introductory material on the film and a scholarly essay (by a variety of film scholars) that treats the film.
The Good Eighth Company campaign shifted the emphasis from Shanghai’s image as a revolutionary bastion to that of a reactionary stronghold, a "big dying vat" that might contaminate the revolutionary forces and that needed to be brought back into the socialist fold.
The films do not offer a single vision of cyberspace, nor do they ascribe to the same filmic aesthetics or genre.
mclc.osu.edu /rc/filmbib.htm   (12369 words)

  
 About James Monaco
James Monaco, an expert on electronic publishing, film, and the media industry, is president of UNET, which he founded in 1992.
Recent HEP titles include Salt of the Earth: The Story of a Film, Jack Newfield's The Life and Crimes of Don King: The Shame of Boxing in America, and Doug Pratt's DVD.
Its subsidiary, New York Zoetrope, was a specialty book-publishing company founded in 1975 which concentrated on titles in film and entertainment.
www.readfilm.com /Monaco.htm   (1028 words)

  
 Nikon Imaging | COOLSCAN V ED (LS-50 ED)
Exclusive Scanner Nikkor ED high-performance lens for reduced color aberration and minimized image distortion
Direct film loading for enhanced ease of use
Specifications are subject to change without any notice or obligation on the part of the manufacturer.
nikonimaging.com /global/products/scanner/coolscan_5   (433 words)

  
 Nikon Super Coolscan 9000 ED (LS-9000 ED) Film Scanner - A&M Photo World
Nikon Super Coolscan 8000 ED Multi Format Scanner has been discontinued from the manufacturer.
Engineered to meet the exacting standards of imaging professionals, the Super Coolscan 9000 ED is designed to handle a broad range of film formats from 35mm to 120/220, 16mm, 6 x 7cm, 6 x 9cm,
Nikon FH-816 16mm Film Holder for Nikon Super Coolscan 8000 ED Scanner
www.amphotoworld.com /product.asp?id=nkcs8000&l=sitemap   (239 words)

  
 UNET 2 Corporation
James Monaco, widely respected expert on electronic publishing, film, and the entertainment industry, is President of UNET and Founder of Baseline and its subsidiary, New York Zoetrope.
He is the author and producer of How To Read a Film: multimedia edition, which won the DVD Association's "DVD Excellence" Award for 2001.
He has served on the boards of The Program for Art on Film and The Carron Trading Company, Inc. He is a member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a Fellow of the Institute of Directors, London.
www.hepdigital.com /Press/Monaco.htm   (534 words)

  
 [No title]
An economical, friendly, high-performance film scanner, the COOLSCAN V ED is designed to be easy to operate, even for first-time scanner users.
A true optical resolution of 4,000 dpi and 14-bit A/D input conversion allow the scanner to produce scans at a level of quality previously only available with higher-priced models.
Further enhancing the value of the COOLSCAN V ED is a lineup of accessories that makes possible the scanning of various film types, including 35mm strips, slide mounts and IX-240 cartridges. High-resolution scanning at 4,000 dpi enables the production of strikingly detailed images.
www.zones.com /cgi-bin/zones/site/product?id=000917821   (243 words)

  
 Nikon Coolscan V ED Film Scanner
New advanced image processing algorithm for color negative film
2-6 frames; strips of 1-6 frames can be scanned with the included Strip Film Holder FH-3
Cartridges of 15, 25, and 40 frames can be scanned with the optional IX240 Film Adapter IA-20(s)
www.helixphoto.com /Digital/nikondigital/nkscanner/coolscanVed.html   (117 words)

  
 Nikon Coolscan V ED 4000 dpi 35mm Film Scanner- LS 50 - abesofmaine.com/dev Cameras and Electronics
Nikon's Coolscan V ED film scanner offers 4,000 dpi true optical resolution and A/D conversion at 14 bits, for superior-quality digital images.
Furthermore, the Coolscan V ED features industry-leading scanning speeds and scans a 35mm image in 38 seconds.
APS (IX240) film: Cartridges of 15, 25, and 40 frames can be scanned with the optional IX240 Film Adapter IA-20(s)
www.abesofmaine.com /viewproduct.asp?id=nkls50&l=Dealtime   (363 words)

  
 Nikon Super Coolscan 9000 ED Film Scanner   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Engineered to meet the exacting standards of imaging professionals, the Nikon Super Coolscan 9000 ED is designed to handle a broad range of film formats, from 120/220 to 6 x 9 film and more.
Its 4,000 dpi optical resolution, world-reknown Nikkor optics, 16-bit A?D conversion of the input signal and 16-bit output combine to deliver brilliant, color-true images at a maximum optical density of 4.8.
Includes: Nikon Super Coolscan 9000 ED, Nikon Scan® 4.0 Software, 35mm Strip Film Adapter FH-835S, 35mm Mounted Film Holder FH-835M, 120/220 Strip Film Holder FH-869S, IEEE-1394 Board, IEEE-1394 Cable (6 pin-6 pin), AC Power cord, and user manual.
www.thebestthings.com /filmcameras/nikon_coolscan_9000.htm   (507 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.