You're perhaps referring to the brilliant 1966 film Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? The story is about a somewhat dysfunctional couple, George and Harriet (Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor) a university professor and his wife who befriend a new teaching couple Nick and Honey (George Segal and Sandy Dennis) and follows them on one evening of drunk mayhem and intriguing mind games where many hidden inner issues are exposed.
The movie is an adaptation - nearly word for word - of the stage play of the same name by Edward Albee. This should be on anyone's list of "must see" films. Stunning psychological work. Or you may possibly be thinking of Days of Wine and Roses from 1962, starring Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick.
Yes.
saraswatichandra
Yes. "Un Chien Andalou" (its correct name) was a silent film in black and white.
The Leather Saint with John Derek
i think its called the color of friendship
You can develop black and white film at a photography lab, a darkroom, or a specialized film processing service.
ye
well you can use black and white film and develop them using a regular camera. basically just load your camera with black and white film if it is that kind of camera.
The first black and white film was the very first film ever made: Roundhay Garden Scene
Yes.
No, color negative film is not black and white. It is designed to capture and reproduce colors in a negative image format.
saraswatichandra
The first Godzilla film in 1954 was a black and white film .
Initially in 1960 this was a partly colour film; length wise 85% black & white and 15% coloured. In 2004 this was technically redeveloped as complete colour film.
The 1954 film "White Christmas" was shot in color and VistaVision.
A Midsummer's dream
The 2006 Casino Royale began the film in black and white. The 1954 Casino Royale (the first one depicting James Bond as "Jimmy Bond" and as an American agent) was shot entirely in black and white.