Yes. Faster the film more grain, but the sharper the image..
Slow film speed (ISO) will make a photograph grainier. It also will be more likely to blur the subject, so you should use a tripod if at all possible. Faster speeds of film are used for capturing action shots.
It depends on what film you are watching. Rom com - slower horror - faster thriller - faster adventure - stays same
"Slow motion" effects result when the film is run through the camera at faster than normal speeds: the faster the film is run during shooting, the slower the motion will seem on screen. The logic is easy to understand. When the film runs faster during shooting, more frames per second are used to film the action. Therefore, when the film is viewed, more time is needed for those frames to pass through the projector.
Color movie film.
The Color Purple - film - was created on 1985-12-18.
Movie or still photography film has an emulsion, or exposure speed. This is marked on the box and on 35mm speed still shot camera films. Common sppeds are 100, 200 and 400; the higher the number, the faster the exposure time; cameras are set on tirpods and a shutter cable is used to make the camera steady. High speed film is grainier than slow speed film. Portraits are usually taken, using slow speed film with the camera on a tripod. This number tells you how long the film should be exposed, usually a fraction of a second and if your camera is set correctly, the film will be properly exposed. If a slower setting is used than is correct, then the photo will come out OVER-exposed and will be progressively darker, depending on HOWslow the film was exposed. Makers of film usually include Instruction for proper use in the box or package. New unused films likes cold surroundings better and many people store their unused film in their regrigerators where it keeps much longer. Leave it in the unopened boxes until you actually use it. For asll-around use, 200 speed 35mm color film is the one most-commonly used by less-experienced photographers. Rookies should stay away from films slower than 100 speed; using it requires brains and experience and rookies usually have neither and will ruin a lot of expensive film AND their vacation memories since the film would most likely come out black, after it is developed by professionals. When learning darkroom procedures and developing film, NEVER plunge into it by offering to develop other people's film for the practice and NEVER attempt to develop important pictures for practice either. You'll screw up the film, lose friends and you might just get your butt kicked, or be sued.
There's no such thing as a special camera just for color film. You can go to a classic-camera dealer, buy a Leica I that was built before there even was color film, and shoot color film in it.
yes
"Movie" and "film" are interchangable terms.
GWTW was released as a color film
"Becky Sharp" (1935) was the first feature-length three-color Technicolor film.
The TV special and film are both in color .