• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Malachi Throne in The Cage -- pitched up from the beginning?

When I was a child I saw a few movies in theaters in color.

And I watch B & W tv including many movies on b & w tv. I eventually learned that there were color televisions and even saw some programs on one once in the hospital.

So it was a big surprise to see to finally see Star Trek in color instead of greyscale. And to eventually see 1950s science ficiton movies that I assumed were black and white in color.

I liked the The Addams Family more than The Munsters, for various reasons. For one thing, I had a desire to live in the Addams mansion. If you could livie in the Addams mansion, would you prefer that it was in grayscale or in color?

It probably would have looked cheap in color. You can cheat a lot in monochrome.

On the other hand, it would have been funny if it looked exactly the same in color as in black and white!
 

The caption writer there complains about the color choices, but I guess they're unaware that colors for black-and-white film were often chosen based on how they registered in monochrome rather than what they really were. For instance, George Reeves's Superman costume in the B&W first season of his show was brown and gray rather than red and blue. (It looks more like a Batman costume without the cowl.) And in Frankenstein, Boris Karloff wore green makeup because it registered as sallow, corpse-like skin, not because it was actually meant to be green (something The Munsters' makeup artists apparently didn't realize or chose to ignore).
 
In the B&W era a piece of special yellowish glass was often used to view things through because it made everything monochromatic so you could get a better sense of how things would appear on B&W film. They used such glass when designing and lighting The Nightmare Before Christmas to try to get the contrast values you'd get in a B&W horror movie or German expressionist film. In more recent times to make B&W look better on old SD video cameras you'd shoot through red or orange filters to heighten the contrast, then kill the chroma in post.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top