Oscar
Winners Shot on Kodak
Film for 80th Year in a Row
NEW
YORK --(BW)-- For the 80th consecutive year – ever since
the inception of the Academy Awards – the Oscar for Best
Picture will go to a movie produced on Kodak film. The feature
films nominated in 2008 for an Academy Award for Best Picture
are Atonement, Juno, Michael Clayton, No Country for Old Men,
and There
Will Be Blood.
The
five cinematographers nominated for Oscars this year also chose
to use Kodak color negative films to help
bring their stories
to the screen. Contenders in this year’s Cinematography category
are: Roger Deakins, ASC, BSC (The Assassination of Jesse James
By the Coward Robert Ford and No Country for Old Men), Robert Elswit,
ASC (There Will Be Blood), Janusz Kaminski (The Diving Bell and
the Butterfly) and Seamus McGarvey, BSC (Atonement).
 |
Scene from Oscar nominated film "The Diving Bell and the
Butterfly" shot on Kodak film.
© Miramax
Films and Pathe Renn Productions, et al |
"We congratulate
all of this year’s nominees for their extraordinary achievements,” said
Mary Jane Hellyar, President of Kodak’s Film, Photofinishing
and Entertainment Group and Executive Vice President, Eastman Kodak
Company. “We take great pride in their loyalty to the Kodak
films that help bring their visions to the screen more faithfully,
more efficiently and at the highest levels of performance.” Hellyar also noted that Kodak continues to provide cinematographers
with a broad palette of films, and is committed to ongoing investment
and innovation across its full motion picture portfolio.
The
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will recognize Kodak’s
commitment to innovation this year with an Oscar statuette for
the development of photographic emulsion
technologies
incorporated into the Kodak VISION2 family of color negative films.
This is the ninth Oscar that Kodak has earned for scientific and
technical excellence and service to the motion picture industry.
“The VISION2 film platform and our recently-launched VISION3
films, are the benchmark in the motion picture industry for image
capture efficiency,” said Hellyar.
“It is a real testament to the experience and skills of
our scientists, and to ongoing feedback from our customers, that
every year the majority of movies nominated for Academy Awards – in
almost every category – originate on Kodak film.”
Kodak’s
initial connection to the motion picture industry was made in 1889,
during the dawn of the industry,
when Thomas
Edison asked Kodak Founder George Eastman if he could provide film
for his experimental motion picture camera and projector. Kodak
continues to work with customers worldwide to help them bring their
stories to life.
The 80th Annual Academy Awards will be held on February 24 at
Kodak Theatre, which is now home to the annual Academy Awards ceremonies. |