I'm back. First off, thanks to all who have been sweet enough (and kind enough) to mention Kritzer Time and Writer's Block, both of which, amazingly, came out in 2004.
So, this morning I headed over to the Dome and for the first time since 1959 saw Scent of Mystery on the big Dome curved screen. Well, not exactly. Here's the story.
They'd put the film on big platters, but one of the platters had a problem, so they had to lop off the first two minutes of the film - a shame. Scent of Mystery had no credits - it went directly from the Overture to the aerial shot that opens the film. However, what we saw (once they got the projecter threaded - an ordeal, as it wasn't the projectionist who runs 70mm) was called Holiday in Spain, about which more in a minute. When they finall began running the film they had the wrong lens on, which made the image very small. They then tried a succession of lenses, but ended up using one that didn't fill the entire Dome screen - too bad. The print was just about completely faded, but given that it was shot in Todd AO, it was breathtakingly sharp. And even though the amazing eight track sound was not balanced or complete (these fellows just didn't seem to know anything about the 70mm set up), it was so brilliantly recorded it sounded incredible even with the faults. They don't do better today. More below.