Everything about The Prizma totally explained
The
Prizma Color system was a technique of color
motion picture photography, invented in 1913 by
William Van Doren Kelley. Initially, it was a two-color additive system, similar to its predecessor,
Kinemacolor. However, Kelly eventually transformed Prizma into a two-color subtractive system that itself became the predecessor for future color processes such as
Multicolor and
Cinecolor.
Prizma I (additive)
The first system of Prizma was similar to Kinemacolor in that the camera took alternating frames of red-orange and blue-green colors through color filters placed within the camera's shutter. Projection involved running a colored disc again in synchronization with the black and white color record film, and through
persistence of vision, the two frames combined on the screen to form a color image.
The first film shown in Prizma color on
23 December 1917 was the feature,
Our Navy at the 44th Street Theatre in
New York City. General reception to the system was positive, but the rotating filter wheel technique proved impractical. To counteract the issue of having a special projector with a filter wheel, Kelley began
tinting alternate frames of his film red and green. However, fringing, flicker, and light loss were major issues which plagued not only Prizma, but also all of the other additive systems of the Kinemacolor nature.
In counteracting this, Kelley had filed a patent in February of 1917 which proved to be the beginnings of Prizma's second color system.
Prizma II (subtractive)
On
28 December 1918, Kelley announced that Prizma would release a color film (usually a short) every week, a film which would be projectable on any standard projector. Kelley's idea was two years in the making, but was a valid one which became the springboard for all future color systems to follow — two films were filmed simultaneously with a camera of his own design. One strip was sensitive to red-orange, the other to blue-green (
cyan). Both negatives were processed and printed on
duplitized film, and then each emulsion was
toned its
complementary color, red or blue. The final result was a color image that was subtractive in nature — no flicker and a bright projection. But as a result of the way the camera was designed, a constant fringe was apparent, as the strips were being recorded side-by-side.
In January 1919, this new process was premiered at the Rivoli Theatre in New York City with the short
Everywhere With Prizma. Kelley, based in
Jersey City, New Jersey, was a friend of the Rivoli's manager and music director Hugo Riesenfeld (1879-1939) and so did business with
Samuel Roxy Rothafel's Roxy Theaters chain, which the Rivoli was part of.
In February 1921, another Prizma film,
Bali the Unknown was premiered at Roxy's Capitol Theatre in New York. The four-reel feature garnered lukewarm reviews, but enough positive audience response that more films were produced in the system.
The Prizma process only took off in 1922, when
J. Stuart Blackton of
Vitagraph Studios shot his feature film
The Glorious Adventure in Prizma. The film, starring
Diana Manners and
Victor McLaglen, premiered in April 1922 to lukewarm success in the US, but much appeal in the UK. With the prestige of a Vitagraph production, Prizma was considered the apex of color photography at that point in motion picture producer's minds.
Prizma sued the
Technicolor Corporation in September 1922 on the grounds that Technicolor was infringing upon Prizma's patents, but lost.
In April 1923,
Robert Flaherty took a both a black-and-white camera and a Prizma color camera to
Samoa, hoping to film part of his
documentary film Moana (1925) in that process, but the Prizma camera malfunctioned and no color footage was shot. (
Moana became famous as the first feature film shot using
panchromatic black-and-white film rather than
orthochromatic.)
With William K. Fairall and Robert F. Elder's 3-D feature,
The Power of Love opening 27 September 1922 in
Los Angeles and the December 1922 unveiling of
Laurens Hammond's
Teleview system in
New York City, Kelley used his Prizma camera for
stereoscopic purposes. As his camera took side-by-side pictures, Kelley mounted a set of prisms on his rig, thus expanding his
point of convergence, and utilized his red/blue color system to make an
anaglyphic print of his product. His final product was the first of
Kelley's Plasticon Pictures entitled
Movies of the Future, which was premiered at the Rivoli on
24 December 1922. The film consisted largely of shots of
New York City, including
Times Square,
the New York Public Library, and
Luna Park.
Based on the success of
Movies of the Future, Kelley had his chief photographer, William T. Crispinel, shoot another short film entitled
Through the Trees — Washington D.C. during the Spring of 1923. The film wasn't shot with the Prizma rig — which was being used by Flaherty in Samoa — but by one designed by Frederick E. Ives, a technician that specialized in
3-D photography. Although the short was technically shot better, Riesenfeld rejected it because it didn't have the 3-D gimmicks that the recent films of that nature included.
The last few years of Prizma were somewhat fruitful.
Samuel Goldwyn produced
Vanity Fair (1923) in Prizma, and
D.W. Griffith utilized the process in a couple of his films, including a scene in
Way Down East (1920).
Flames of Passion (1922), directed by
Graham Cutts and starring
Mae Marsh and
C. Aubrey Smith;
The Virgin Queen (1923), directed by J. Stuart Blackton; and
I Pagliacci (1923), co-starring
Lillian Hall-Davis, were all U.K. productions with one reel filmed in Prizma.
One of the last films using Prizma was
Venus of the South Seas (1924), starring
Annette Kellerman, where Prizma was used for one reel of a 55-minute film.
Venus was restored by the
Library of Congress in 2004.
In 1928, Prizma was bought by
Consolidated Film Industries and was reintroduced as Magnacolor (and later
Trucolor). Kelley, who held many patents in color photography, sold his patents and equipment to
Cinecolor, which benefited from Kelley's advanced printing techniques. Ironically, Cinecolor was co-founded by Kelley's former photographer, William T. Crispinel.
List of Films Made in Prizma Color
- An Afternoon With Nanki San (1921)
- Arabian Duet (1922)
- Artist's Paradise (1921)
- Bali the Unknown (1921)
- Beautiful Things (1920)
- Bird Island (1919)
- Broadway Rose (1922)
- Butterflies (1921)
- Canoe and Campfire (1919)
- Capetown (1922)
- Catalonian Pyrenees (1919)
- China (1919)
- Children of the Netherlands (1919)
- Color Sketches (1922)
- Color-Land Review (1919)
- The Cost of Carelessness (1920)
- Danse Arabe (1922)
- Dawning (1921)
- Everywhere With Prizma (1919)
- Fashion Hints (1922)
- Flames of Passion (1922)
- Florida Sports (1919)
- From the Land of the Incas (1920)
- Gardens of Normandy (1921)
- The Gilded Lily (1921)
- Glacier Park (1919)
- The Glorious Adventure (1922)
- Hagopian the Rug Maker (1920)
- Hawaii (1919)
- Hawaiian Islands (1920)
- Heart of the Sky Mountains (1920)
- Heidi (Heidi of the Alps) (1920)
- Here and There (1919)
- The Heritage of the Red Man (1922)
- I Pagliacci (1923)
- Ice Fields, Glaciers, and the Birth of Bergs (1919)
- The Impi (1922)
- In Nippon (1920)
- In School Days (1920)
- An Indian Summer (1921)
- Japan (1921)
- Japanese Fishing Village (1920)
- Kilauea-The Hawaiian Volcano (1918)
- The Land of the Great Spirit (1919)
- Lest We Forget (1922)
- A Little Love Nest (1922)
- Lure of Alaska (1919)
- Magic Gems (1921)
- Marimba Land (1920)
- May Days (1920)
- Memories (1919)
- The Message of the Flowers (1921)
- Mining in Alaska (1919)
- The Mirror (1923)
- Model Girls (1919)
- Moonlight Sonata (1922)
- Neighbor Nelly (1921)
- Oahu (1919)
- Old Faithful (1919)
- Our Navy (Our Invincible Navy) (1918)
- Out of the Sea (1919)
- Picturesque Japan (1919)
- A Prizma Color Visit to Catalina (1919)
- The Refreshing Riviera (1920)
- Rheims (1921)
- The Sacred City of the Desert (1921)
- The Sno-Birds (1921)
- So This Is London (1922)
- Sunbeams (1923)
- Sunshine Gatherers (1921)
- Swaziland South Africa (1920)
- Teddy in Glacier Land (1922)
- Vanity Fair (1923)
- Venus of the South Seas (1924)
- The Virgin Queen (1923)
- La Voix du Rossignol (France, 1924)
- Way Up Yonder (1920)
- Where Poppies Bloom (1923)
- Wonderful Water (1922)
- Way Down East (1920)
Further Information
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