The Celluloid Sleeping Beauty
By Mark Dunn There’s a large cupboard in our studio full of flight cases that are rarely opened. They contain much loved but defunct relics from the analog days of clapper loaders and changing bags instead of DITs and hard drives. Alongside two Mitchell cameras - one with the fabled Jackson Woodburn motor for rocksteady timelapse – lies a perfect Arriflex 435ES. The 435ES, (ES standing for electronic shutter). In its time the workhorse movie/commercial camera, it was created in 1995 to replace the 35III line. The number reflected its position as the successor to the Arri III and the fact that it was designed for 35mm and super 35mm film.
