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A shortened version of the film survives in 9.5mm reduction print.
Will permit running of 35mm IMAX reduction prints in small theaters in remote locations.
In relief printing, a reduction print is a multicolor print in which the separate colors printed from the same block at different stages.
These were mainly in the form of the original broadcast 35mm film recordings, with a handful of episodes as 16mm film recordings or reduction prints.
Later, 35mm anamorphic reduction prints were produced for exhibition in theatres with anamorphic CinemaScope-compatible projection lenses.
A reduction print is a print of a large-size format film converted to a smaller size format (for example, a 70mm print converted to 35mm).
The later film was shot with two 65mm TODD-AO cameras simultaneously, the speed of the second camera was 24 frames per second for wide release as optical reduction prints.
However, because of their size, they would usually show reduction prints of films shot in such larger-sized formats such as Todd-AO, Super Panavision 70, or Ultra Panavision.
However, because the film needed a new, specially designed projector, the system proved impractical, and the two films made in the process, Carousel and The King and I, were released in 35MM CinemaScope reduction prints.
Pathé in France and later Victor in the USA printed reduction prints (usually, although not always, abridged) of popular films for home rental, designed to be used in Pathéscope Cinematograph or Victor Animatograph projectors.
If some of a film's soundtrack discs could not be found when 16 mm sound-on-film reduction prints of early "talkies" were being made for television use in the 1950s, that film's chances of survival plummeted: many sound-on-disc films have survived only by way of those 16 mm prints.
Even the brothers' first feature, "The Cocoanuts," from 1929, has been much upgraded, from the battered, 16-millimeter reduction prints that were for long the only source, to include a few reels of startlingly clear 35-millimeter material, and the scratchy early sound has been cleaned up enough to make the "Why a duck?"