Third Dimensional Murder
Third Dimensional Murder | |
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Directed by | George Sidney |
Produced by | Pete Smith |
Written by | Jerry Hoffman |
Starring | Pete Smith Ed Payson |
Narrated by | Pete Smith |
Music by | David Snell (uncredited) |
Cinematography | Walter Lundin (director of photography) B.C. Parker (camera operator) |
Edited by | Phillip W. Anderson |
Production
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Distributed by | Loew's Inc. |
Release dates
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Running time
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8 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Third Dimensional Murder (1941), also known as Murder in 3-D, is a 3D short comedy film produced and narrated by Pete Smith and released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. This is the last of the Audioscopiks 3D short film series, after Audioscopiks (1936) and The New Audioscopiks (1938).
Synopsis
Our narrator, Pete Smith, gets a phone call asking for help at an old castle. Smith arrives and is attacked by a witch, a skeleton, an Indian warrior, an archer, and the Frankenstein monster (Ed Payson). The latter character was specifically modeled after Boris Karloff in Son of Frankenstein.
Background
The third and last in the Pete Smith Audioscopiks 3D series of shorts, this film used footage shot specifically for it, unlike the previous two shorts which utilized test footage shot by Jacob Leventhal and Jack Norling.[1]
With the success of the first two shorts, Smith consulted J.M. Nikolaus in the camera department at MGM. Nikolaus went to studio manager E. J. Mannix who gave Nikolaus a budget of "about $3,000" to create a stereoscopic camera rig. After some trial and error, Nickolaus created a camera using two Bell & Howell 35mm cameras with specially matched lenses made by Bauch and Lomb. The lenses were 2¾ inches apart and were shot into prisms. George Sidney directed the short.[1] (Sidney later directed the 3-D feature for MGM, Kiss Me Kate.)
As with the two previous Audioscopiks short films, the prints were in red-green anaglyph by Technicolor. This film opens in 2-D color, with a young woman showing how to hold the 3-D viewer. Prints for the two earlier films were also made by Technicolor to achieve the red-green anaglyph prints necessary for 3-D projection.