fbpx
  • Subscribe & Support
  • Print Edition
    • Get Home Delivery
    • Read ePaper Online
    • Newsstand Locations
  • HV1 Magazines
  • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Submit Your Event
    • Customer Support
    • Submit A News Tip
    • Send Letter to the Editor
    • Where’s My Paper?
  • Our Newsletters
  • Manage HV1 Account
  • Free HV1 Trial
Hudson Valley One
  • News
    • Schools
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Politics & Government
  • What’s UP
    • Calendar Of Events
    • Subscribe to the What’s UP newsletter
  • Opinion
    • Letters
    • Columns
  • Local
    • Special Sections
    • Local History
  • Marketplace
    • All Classified Ads
    • Post a Classified Ad
  • Obituaries
  • Log Out
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Schools
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Politics & Government
  • What’s UP
    • Calendar Of Events
    • Subscribe to the What’s UP newsletter
  • Opinion
    • Letters
    • Columns
  • Local
    • Special Sections
    • Local History
  • Marketplace
    • All Classified Ads
    • Post a Classified Ad
  • Obituaries
  • Log Out
No Result
View All Result
Hudson Valley One
No Result
View All Result

Upstate Films raising funds for digital HD

by Violet Snow
April 1, 2016
in Community, Stage & Screen
0
Steve Lieber of Upstate Films (photo by Dion Ogust)
Steve Lieber of Upstate Films (photo by Dion Ogust)

“It’s not something we chose to do; it’s something we have to do,” said Steve Lieber of Upstate Films, which is raising money to upgrade its projection equipment from analog reels to digital HD. The cinema still has to come up with $30,000 of the $180,000 needed to buy new projectors for the theaters in Woodstock and Rhinebeck.

“In the next three to four months, five at the most, distributors will no longer be making 35-millimeter prints. Celluloid, analog — finito,” reported Lieber. “Right now, in the Hudson Valley, every theater has already complied with this directive. We’re the only theater still doing 35-millimeter.”

Since 2000, the film industry has been developing standards for digital production and projection, with the goal of improving visual quality and reducing piracy. Digital technology will also save distributors an estimated $35 million a year on printing and shipping. Instead of arriving in a 75-pound can of reels, films will consist of gigabytes of information delivered on a hard drive or, ultimately, downloaded from a server.

“It’s similar to what’s happening to books and music,” observed Lieber. “There might be some advantages — scratches won’t happen, the sound will be clearer. But at same time, thousands of small theaters around the U.S. might be forced out of business.”

Upstate Films has operated as a not-for-profit since 1972, adding a second screen to its Rhinebeck theater in 1999. Lieber and his wife, DeDe, have leased the Woodstock theater from Cy and Nancy Adler since February of 2010. The Liebers have since split, but they continue to run the business with the mission of bringing to local audiences a mix of first-run and independent films, often addressing social issues.

“It’s an anachronism to have a single-screen theater in a small town,” said Lieber. “I’m biased, but I think it’s worth preserving. Many experiences in contemporary culture take place in solitude, looking at a phone or computer screen. People walk into telephone poles while looking at their iPhones. We need to have a place where the public gets together, and the community can be in one place, to sit in the dark with 100 or 1000 people and be transported to other cultures.”

People who like the look of 35-millimeter may be dismayed by the new technology. And while the scratches and other problems associated with reel-to-reel projectors will go away, there may be other crises. “They will be the kinds of problems you have with computers,” said Lieber. “There will be some trouble-shooting that we’ll need to know how to do.”

But the theater doesn’t have a choice. Even one of the biggest distributors of classics, Janus Films with its Criterion Collection, is now making digital re-releases.

As a non-for-profit, Upstate Films is eligible for grants, which have already made up a good proportion of the money raised. Individuals have also been generous, including one movie-goer who died and left $15,000 to the theater. But more money is needed to buy the required projectors.

To make a donation, drop cash or checks off at either theater; mail checks to Upstate Films, PO Box 324, Rhinebeck NY 12572; or visit the cinema’s website, https://upstatefilms.org, and click the “Support Us” button.

Tags: digitalmoviesUpstate Films
Join the family! Grab a free month of HV1 from the folks who have brought you substantive local news since 1972. We made it 50 years thanks to support from readers like you. Help us keep real journalism alive.
- Geddy Sveikauskas, Publisher

Violet Snow

Violet Snow wrote regularly for the Woodstock Times for 17 years and continues to contribute to Hudson Valley One. She has been published in the New York Times “Disunion” blog, Civil War Times, American Ancestors, Jewish Currents, and many other periodicals. An excerpt from her historical novel, To March or to Marry, has appeared in the feminist journal Minerva Rising. She lives in Phoenicia and is currently working with horses, living out her childhood dream.

Related Posts

Elting Library Fair honors Sally Rhoads and Carol Roper
Community

Woodstock institution has community-building ambitions 

June 19, 2025
How we see each other and ourselves
Columns

How we see each other and ourselves

June 16, 2025
Communities join a nationwide day of defiance, showcasing true democracy
Community

Communities join a nationwide day of defiance, showcasing true democracy

June 16, 2025
Local rallies draw large crowds
Community

Local rallies draw large crowds

June 15, 2025
O+ Exchange celebrates grand opening this weekend
Community

O+ Exchange celebrates grand opening this weekend

June 12, 2025
Family has a new home!
Community

All in for Family

June 12, 2025
Next Post

Editorial: It was 2012, now it’s 2013

Weather

Kingston, NY
66°
Partly Cloudy
5:19 am8:36 pm EDT
Feels like: 66°F
Wind: 9mph W
Humidity: 64%
Pressure: 29.71"Hg
UV index: 0
SatSunMon
86°F / 70°F
93°F / 72°F
99°F / 73°F
powered by Weather Atlas

Subscribe

Independent. Local. Substantive. Subscribe now.

  • Subscribe & Support
  • Print Edition
  • HV1 Magazines
  • Contact
  • Our Newsletters
  • Manage HV1 Account
  • Free HV1 Trial

© 2022 Ulster Publishing

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Schools
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Politics & Government
  • What’s Happening
    • Calendar Of Events
    • Art
    • Books
    • Kids
    • Lifestyle & Wellness
    • Food & Drink
    • Music
    • Nature
    • Stage & Screen
  • Opinions
    • Letters
    • Columns
  • Local
    • Special Sections
    • Local History
  • Marketplace
    • All Classified Ads
    • Post a Classified Ad
  • Obituaries
  • Subscribe & Support
  • Contact Us
    • Customer Support
    • Advertise
    • Submit A News Tip
  • Print Edition
    • Read ePaper Online
    • Newsstand Locations
    • Where’s My Paper
  • HV1 Magazines
  • Manage HV1 Account
  • Log In
  • Free HV1 Trial
  • Subscribe to Our Newsletters
    • Hey Kingston
    • New Paltz Times
    • Woodstock Times
    • Week in Review

© 2022 Ulster Publishing