16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline


All photos are from actual film for sale. Condition: Film is in good condition, has light vinegar odor, see notes below. Film Specs: Sound film comes on a core. This is about 1/2 of an episode of “Home Run Derby”, the short-lived but rather famous 1960s TV show. This particular episode is Season 1, Episode 10, with Hank Aaron and Al Kaline, and was filmed in December of 1959. It runs about 12 minutes and ends in the 5th inning. You can watch a version of this episode on the Internet to see what you’re getting just look for it! Amazing stuff that you likely won’t see for sale again anytime soon. Save a film from destruction — adopt one today and preserve it! I try to describe items accurately but some condition aspects of these items are subjective. The answer is “yes”. You didn’t mention the run time of the film for sale. How long is it? Well that’s an interesting question. Sound films run at 24 frames per second, but silent films were often shot at a slower rate, often 18 frames per second. This means that while a 400′ reel of sound movies runs about 11 minutes long, a similar 400′ reel of silent movies will run 14.5 minutes or so if projected at the proper speed. Similarly, a 100′ reel of film will run three to four minutes. How do I tell if a film is a sound film or a silent film? In almost every case, items described as “home movies” are silent films. Also, silent films have sprockets on both sides, and sound films only on one side. (Occasionally a single-perf film will also be silent however). You cannot / should not run sound films on a silent projector — it will destroy them. You can however run silent films on a sound projector. The mothball or camphor smell is actually nothing to worry about — it’s a residue left over from camphor oil which was recommended by Kodak to keep films supple. Back in the 20s and 30s Kodascope film cans actually had a paper filter built into them which could be saturated with a drop of camphor oil, and it seems to have worked effectively. I haven’t heard the whole story but someone said its use was discontinued during WWII due to military use of camphor. Different situation if a film is emitting a vinegar odor, that indicates it is beginning to deteriorate. Films that have light vinegar odor are almost always projectable and can be telecined. In some extreme cases they may not be salvageable. You can read a lot more about this on-line. Where can I get one? It just depends what we have in stock. I have a film collection for sale. The item “16mm FILM / MOVIE 1960s HOME RUN DERBY T. V. Show with HANK AARON & Al Kaline” is in sale since Tuesday, June 16, 2020. This item is in the category “DVDs & Movies\Film Stock”. The seller is “s.maturin” and is located in Los Angeles, California. This item can be shipped worldwide.

  • Non-Domestic Product: No
  • Modified Item: No
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Film Format: 16 mm
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Sub-Genre: Japanese
Tags: , , , , , , , , ,