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THE MACHINE
ROOM HELPS KICK OFF FIFA CENTENARY
CELEBRATIONS
Soho
facility restores never seen before
footage from the first ever World
Cup
London post facility,
The Machine Room, has brought to life
previously undiscovered 16mm archive
footage dating back to football's
first ever World Cup in 1930. The
new colourised footage of the 1930
final between Uruguay and Argentina
will be shown on a giant screen at
the Stade de France on May 20th to
help kick off the 100-year anniversary
celebrations of FIFA.
The idea came about
when football historian, Guy Oliver,
discovered the archive footage in
Uruguay while producing a programme
called The History of Football. He
pitched the idea to FIFA to produce
a 15-minute programme to kick-start
the FIFA centenary celebrations (1904-2004)
at the FIFA congress before the France
and Brazil showpiece game.
Oliver takes up
the story: "I was delighted that
FIFA had the foresight to want to
commission this project, and it was
great to have their support and commitment
from the start. This footage is a
vital part of our football history,
and will go into archive as the first
official film of the World Cup."
"The film was
in a terrible state when it was found,
existing in a number of 10 to 20 second
clips, riddled with scratches, tape
joins and emulsion problems,"
says Oliver. "At first we thought
it would not be possible to salvage
it but having seen The Machine Room's
work on the IoC's (International Olympic
Committee) footage, we thought that
if anyone could do something with
it, those guys could."
The first task was
to stitch together, wash and treat
all the 16mm footage in The Machine
Room's specialist Film Treatment Centre.
It was then transferred to the companys
Shadow telecine to HDD5, before moving
into the company's new Teranex imageRestore
system to remove any remaining scratches
and blemishes. smoke then came into
play to replace damaged frames, stabilise
and enhance the picture, with smoke
editor John McLaren also seamlessly
merging other source material with
the newly restored archive film footage.
Oliver says it was vital to make this
footage accessible to the masses.
"As the contrast
was so poor in the original black
and white footage, we needed to add
colour to help the viewer work out
what was going on."
The Machine Room
used its combustion effects system
to create mattes for over 4000 frames.
combustion artist, Stephen Miller,
adds: "We had to draw individual
mattes of each player to introduce
colour to the players' shirts, the
crowd and the pitch. Otherwise, it
would not have made much of a spectacle
as it would have been impossible to
tell which team was which!"
Finally, the company's
linear suite was used to produce inter-titles
in the form of a silent movie and
to sync up the specially commissioned
South American soundtrack created
by Miguel Mera. "As there was
no commentary," says Oliver,
"we used the inter-titles and
the upbeat soundtrack to add more
life to the footage."
Linear editor, Rob
Schofield, then completed the picture
by re-versioning the piece into French,
German, Italian and Spanish.
The final word goes
to Oliver: "Everyone was absolutely
delighted with the results - it's
fantastic to see all the original
footage repaired and enhanced to such
a high quality, in colour and all
in one programme. For the first time
everyone can now partake in the first
ever World Cup Final. Having this
valuable archive footage all in HD
means that is preserved for future
generations, and accessible in any
format."
About The
Machine Room
The Machine Room
has over 12 years' experience of providing
professional services to the film,
television and video markets. It offers
clients - including the BFI, IWM,
TWI, Path, Paramount, Shed, MGM,
HIT Entertainment, MTV and BBC Worldwide
- highly experienced operators with
cutting edge technology to provide
non-linear editing facilities, HD
post-production, DVD authoring and
encoding and film mastering and treatment
services. For more information visit
www.themachineroom.co.uk
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