"Cinema 180" 70-mm Film Projector

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Published 2016-02-19
The Cinema 180 at Rainbow's End in Auckland held the last known 70-mm 180 cinema. Kinoton DP75

All Comments (21)
  • @youngs80s
    golden eras of 60sss70sss80sssss90sss''''....taste of movie n fun''''
  • @crazybobdj
    I ran something like this, back in the Summer of 1976. I remember it was dome shaped theatre on Central Pier in Atlantic City. We used a 70mm Century projector.
  • @Davidjon1946
    We had one of these that my home parks here in Buffalo New York Darien Lake we loved it it was a way to get out of the Heat and it was super exciting and you always look forward to every summer having a new video
  • @Sunsetdrivein
    Here in the USA, all the Cinema 180's I saw had Ballantyne 70mm projectors.
  • I’m glad they are still using the traditional 35mm film and not the digital way
  • За 7 секунд заряжал проектор с закрытыми глазами. 6 лет работы в кино официально только. И до этого работал заменяя отца.
  • @bertbearOz
    Hi. I'd like to find the owner / film maker who shot this clip for possible inclusion in a documentary feature film but I cant see how to trace it back any further than the KinotehnikNet group. Can anyone help?
  • @alexabadi7458
    I learned something today, I always thought that 35mm was the larger movie film size.
  • @suresha19751975
    What kind of lens this projector is having ? looks very different compared to other projectors and why full image reflects on the front mirror of the booth ? in normal projector booth the image goes out to the screen like a small square of light frame.
  • @amandabynes1160
    Trabalhei em cinema 30 anos como operador cinematográfico no df
  • would you please send some movies of it to me? please really i wanna to see them .... please
  • @totalrecone
    Oh the dreaded DP75. I hated those things with a passion - and still do to this day. Not Kinoton's finest hour by any stretch. Sprocket pads that would fly open when they felt like it, a lens mount that refused to return to operational position reliably resulting in a VERY blurred image and a gate that was a pain to thread. And to think this machine was the follow up to the legendary DP70 / AAII.
  • If a strobe light was printed and ment to be projected by less/divided from the frame per second... Nevermind... I guess this was the transition into digital editing... Im still curious to know something I dont know how to ask... Ill be back after i figure it out... No need for sarcastic replies. Smh
  • @samuel_richards
    Hi there, it's great you are enthusiasts and are interested in this machine, however, as a documentary film maker by trade, you really should at least give credit when copying and uploading someone else's video. Perhaps I'm just too old school. :-/ That said, thank you for keeping the dreams alive, this machine and ALL her related films and accessories is currently up for private sale.
  • @totalrecone
    Has to be a DP75. Those things sent rubber band sales through the roof, after the projectionist had a heart attack as the sprocket pads flew off the sprockets and thus turning the operator grey prematurely. :) Hated those things with a passion.