Archives for 2011

“Super 8” Movie Write-Up in Boston Globe

James Sullivan, Boston Globe’s Correspondent’s article on Steven Spielberg’s new Super 8 Movie that just came out on DVD talked about the Super 8 film transfer business and included a very nice write-up of Play it Again Video in Newton, MA

Here’s an excerpt of his article. You can find the full article here:
http://articles.boston.com/2011-11-27/news/30447866_1_film-footage-dvd-transfers

In “Super 8,’’ just out on DVD, some young teenagers become embroiled in an extraterrestrial mystery while filming their own low-budget zombie movie. The year is 1979.

It turned out to be a pivotal time for the format that gave the movie its name. Introduced in the 1960s as a user-friendly variation on the older 8mm film, Super 8 was quickly embraced by home-movie buffs. But its popularity was fleeting; by the early ’80s, it was already being pushed aside by the emergence of videocassettes. Yet Super 8 film, like movies about E.T.s and zombies, has retained a certain appeal. There are far fewer film labs working with old small-gauge film stock such as Super 8 than there were three decades ago. But those that remain still do considerable business with filmmakers, art students, and walk-ins from the general public who have uncovered troves of family footage. Click here for the full article.

Scanned Old Pictures To Put Up Album For Her Close Friend

Hi I came in today with a very special project to work on. One of my very closest friend from college – and I hate to admit it now but that goes back 40 years – unfortunately is struggling with cancer. She turns 65 in a middle of her chemo and her brother-in-law decided something that would really be nice to help lift her spirits and know how much everyone loves her would be to put together a photo-journalistic-kind of album of all the important people of her life wishing her well and sending her good energy.

I noticed that I don’t have a single photo in digital of her, of us. She and I. But I looked through my photo albums there was a photo from my wedding, less than 40 years ago and then a few photos over the years. So I came in, it was just wonderful, how helpful, how beautifully these old photos were scanned and how sensitive to the project they were.

And now I am going home with a beautiful bunch of photos that I can send of to her brother-in-law and its part of the recovery.

Your video tapes do not last forever

If you have not transferred your aging home videos to digital formats, chances are:

  • you believe that your home video tapes last forever.  You believe that if you take good care of them, put them in a cool, dry place, don’t let the kids bang them around, the tapes will last forever.
  • or you believe these tapes are of times gone by, your VCR player is gone, there’s no way to play those tapes anymore, so you should just toss the tapes out.

The bad news is that your video tapes do not last forever, but the good news is that it’s not too late to digitize your tapes into today’s digital formats so you can watch them again today.

Tape with Mould

Video tapes – which includes VHS, VHS-C, Betamax, VHS, 8mm and mini-DV – degrade with time because the film tape is made of magnetic media. What you see ten, twenty years later is no where as sharp as when the tapes were first created. So, what is the shelf life of a magnetic tape ?

If you ask an audio/video professional that question, the answer you get can range anywhere between 5 to 10 years. This is because it depends a lot on how 1) you handle it, 2) how you store it and 3) how often you play it.   Have you been following these best practices:

How to Handle Your Video Tapes

• Never touch the tape itself. Hold it by the side of the cassette
• Rewind the cassette before storing it.
• Keep away from curious kids, avoid dropping or banging the tapes.
• Keep cassettes away from magnetic fields
• Don’t leave a cassette in the car where it will be exposed to heat and cold
• If using a new cassette and it’s still cold, let it warm up to room temperature first.
• Occasionally fast forward and rewind a tape that’s being stored a long time.

Where to Store Your Video Tapes

The conditions in which magnetic tape is stored and used can extend its shelf life. Observe these video storage tips:

• Store in conditions that are stable, cool and dry.
• Stay away from hot, humid and dusty.
• Store cassettes in the cassette case.
• Store your tapes vertically and not flat (see picture) to distribute the gravity pull equally and stably.

How often you play it?

If you haven’t played your tape since you shot the video, that’s 10-20 years of one section of the tape being stretched at the same spot.  Consider the video on that spot pretty much degraded.  If you’ve been playing it over and over and over again, you won’t encounter “blank fuzzy spots” but the entire tape has been stressed which also affects the shelf-life of your tape.  What’s a person to do?

One answer: Digitize your aging home video movies into today’s digital formats that do not degrade.  Digital formats are composed of 0 and 1 bits that do not inch to 1/2, or 3/4.  A “0” bit, stays “0”.  A “1” bit stays “1”.  That’s as technical as I want to get here.  The bottom line: A digital file today is identical towhat is is 100 years from today.  Now, the media itself, the DVD can get scratched, or broken, but the digital file itself does not change.

Not sure what’s on your tape, but you no longer have a VCR player?  Call us.  Come by our on-site video transfer lab in Newton, MA, and view your old tapes.


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Label Your Film Reels, Tapes, Slides Before You Die

We received a phone call today from one upset woman. She explained her husband had died in May after a sudden illness.

With the holidays approaching, she wanted to do put some of the photos her husband had taken into a music video montage for her kids. “It’s a beautiful way to celebrate his life, the places he was, the vacations he took with them…“, she added

VHS Tapes UnlabelledHere’s the problem: there were 31 carousels of slides that were completely unlabeled. Each slide carousel had 100 to 140 slides, so we’re talking thousands of slides here. Even after I offered her to view her slides at our store – we have viewing stations for these old memory media – going through thousands of slides still seemed very daunting to her. So we decided a different approach. She’ll randomly pick a carousel to go through, view the slides, and pick out the ones that touched her. Then she’ll do another carousel. The minute she finds 50 slides she can use for the video montage, she will stop.

The slides she picks will be from different periods of their family lives, may not even be contiguous periods, but it’ll still be a beautiful video slideshow.

So ladies and gentleman, label your memory media. These days, you’re not recording in 8mm film reels, VHS tapes, Hi8 tapes, it’s all digital. Label your digital file folders. If you backup family photos in hard drives, label the hard drives. Maybe fifty years from now, someone is trying to piece your life together, make it easy for them.

Play it Again, Sam. Who said that?

Today, I learned from a customer that “Play it again, Sam.” is one of the top film misquote. Meaning, never in the film Casablanca, did anyone utter the phrase, “Play it Again, Sam.” “No way”, you say. That was my reaction too. But read it for yourself in the Top 15 Film Misquote.

Play it Again Sam in CasablancaThe phrase is often believed to have been said by Bogart in the movie, Casablanca. In fact, Bogart never said it quite like that. The closest he came to the phrase was: “You played it for her, you can play it for me…If she can stand it, I can. Play it!” How about Ingrid Bergman’s character? What she actually said was “Play it, Sam.” Doesn’t it make you want to watch Casablanca all over again, just to prove this yourself?

We are Play it Again Video. But we answer to Play it Again, Sam too. After all, at least once a week, someone calls and asks, ‘Is this Play it Again Sam? I need to transfer my old home movies to DVD.”

According to Kodak, Everyone Had a Happy Childhood

This guy, Mark, came in with old Super 8mm home movies from his mom’s attic.  He didn’t know what was on it, so he brought the film in to view them on our projector to decide whether he wanted to spend the money to convert the Super 8mm film to DVD or not.  He kept shaking his head when he watched them.  I was puzzled why little happy kids running around on the old home movie should be so objectionable.

Long ago child hoodI understood when Mark commented, “Wow, I  have been going to therapy for the last 10 years trying to undo my childhood.  What do you know, turns out my childhood is not so bad after all.  Here’s the evidence.”  That is precisely why I take a lot of home videos.  So if my children end up in therapy accusing me of total parental neglect, I can whip out these videos and say, “Here’s the evidence, I took you to the zoo, I took you camping, etc.”

Capture your good times, and remember to publicize them, especially to the kids, over and over and over again.  Because according to Kodak, every kid has a happy childhood.

If you can’t remember what your childhood is like, go dig out those old 8mm film reels, or 16mm film reels from the attic and convert those old home movies to DVD so you can watch them again.  It may change what you remember about your childhood.  For the better, I hope.

The Man with the Mysterious Bulge

Rush job today.  Needed it by 4 pm. For a court trial the next morning.

It was a surveillance tape (VHS) that needed to be transferred to DVD ASAP. A company had been missing valuable art pieces from their walls.  Over the years, the business owner had treated himself to expensive work of art to grace the walls of the office he spent so much of his life in.  Mysteriously, pieces of art work were disappearing.  Stolen.  He didn’t have any surveillance camera in his office. After all, he had built a close-knit team that worked so long and so close together, they were like family. Setting up a surveillance camera to monitor their every move was the last thing on his mind.

He consulted the building’s security team to see if he had any ideas. The security officer had an idea.  Though there were no surveillance cameras in his office, there was a surveillance camera in the lobby.  Since the company’s office was on the 23rd floor, most probably, the thief would take the elevator.  Based on the date of the disappearance of the last art piece, the security officer pinpointed the surveillance VHS tape to inspect.

You may wonder, a VHS tape can only store up to 120 minutes, how does it capture a day’s worth of lobby comings and goings.  I learned that surveillance camera records in a funny way.  Something about multiple number of frames per seconds so that when you watch a VHS surveillance tape, the video timecode on the tape goes multiple times faster than real time (the number of seconds that lapse on your watch).  That’s how a whole day’s worth of recordings can fit on a VHS tape.

Enough of technical trivia, I’m sure you want to get to the bottom of the story.

Once the VHS tape was transferred to a DVD, it was much easier to go through the video on the computer and spot the ‘thief’.  How was the thief identified?  He walked out of the elevator with a mysterious bulge around the waist.  Sadly, the business owner identified the thief as one of his regular clients.  When the owner compared records and dates of the client’s visits, they coincided with dates art pieces disappeared off the wall.

artwork
Most of our customer stories are heart-warming touching.  This one is not so heart-warming, I’m sorry to say.

At Play it Again Video, a VHS to DVD transfer lab in Boston, we are not just performing a technical process of turning old VHS/VCR tapes to digital formats. We are protecting precious memories; there is a story behind every film/video transfer job. Other more heart-warming Customer Stories:

A Second 50th Reunion Party

This is a touching story of a High School class of 1960. The class President, Tom*, had moved to Japan, married a Japanese, became a successful executive with Morgan Stanley, in Japan. At the first 50th High School reunion party back in Florida, the Japanese wife met her husband’s high school friends. You know how old school friends are. You meet them after 20 years, and the relationship, the banter, the jokes pick up where they left off. The Japanese wife was so amazed at these close friends of her husband’s she never got to know because they live half the world apart.

High school reunionA few months later, our class President, gets diagnosed with cancer. These old high school friends, one by one, coming from afar, they showed up in the hospital.

When Tom passed away soon after, the Japanese widow had a special request of Tom’s high school friends: Can you throw a party to celebrate my husband’s life, and the wonderful memories he shared with all of you. She did one more thing that made it impossible for Tom’s friends to turn down the request: She sent a $5,000 check for the party.

Thus, the SECOND 50th Reunion Party. One of the friends showed up at Play it Again Video with photos from their high school years, the year book. We scanned the photos, added favorite music from the period, and created a touching video montage that they will show at the party.

* Stories are real, names are changed to protect the innocent.

At Play it Again Video, a video transfer lab in Newton, we are not just performing a technical process of turning old home movies or old photos to digital formats. We are protecting precious memories; there is a story behind every film/video transfer job. Other Customer Stories that cross our path:

Play it Again Video heard in Prague?

Play it Again Video has been around for over 24 years. We serve about 10 customers a day, that’s 3,500 customers a year, that’s about 84,000 customers out there spreading the word.
Still, to be heard as far away as in Prague, Czech Republic. That’s something.

Yet, that’s what this guy said. His friends in Prague told him to come to Play it Again Video to transfer his VHS tapes to DVD.

Are you still hanging on to VHS tapes? VHS tapes are not meant to last forever. The magnetic media that VHS tapes, and other analog tapes: Video 8, 8mm tapes are made of degrade with time even if you keep it in cool, dry, dark condition.

Champions Aren’t Born – They are Trained

Wayne Alpert has successfully trained professional basketball players since 1985.

He came to Play it Again Video to capture highlights of his training program into a video that can be shared publicly. His team of trainers has now expanded their training programs to young aspiring players of all ages, starting at age 10 and above.

Imitating moves is not understanding basket ball. Understanding excellence is.”, says Wayne. And that’s a difference that has made his training so effective.

I love working with Play it Again Video. Their patience and perseverance help me come into the 21st Century. I’m sure we’ll be doing many video projects together.”, adds Wayne.

If your son or daughter is passionate about playing their basketball, you should really contact Wayne. His office is right in Newton and he can be reached at (617) 233 6924.