The Prague Post - Filmstrip, Hungary's old-school projectors children love

EUR -
AED 4.111594
AFN 78.919101
ALL 98.675968
AMD 434.32085
ANG 2.003391
AOA 1026.502274
ARS 1266.627636
AUD 1.740612
AWG 2.014944
AZN 1.901299
BAM 1.951787
BBD 2.263087
BDT 136.180614
BGN 1.955095
BHD 0.421933
BIF 3285.478409
BMD 1.119413
BND 1.453837
BOB 7.745283
BRL 6.312485
BSD 1.120816
BTN 95.518196
BWP 15.217983
BYN 3.668024
BYR 21940.503176
BZD 2.251411
CAD 1.564728
CDF 3212.716552
CHF 0.940194
CLF 0.027456
CLP 1053.625569
CNY 8.066885
CNH 8.070389
COP 4709.092436
CRC 569.239784
CUC 1.119413
CUP 29.664456
CVE 110.037774
CZK 24.928206
DJF 198.942529
DKK 7.460857
DOP 65.877863
DZD 149.234576
EGP 56.435562
ERN 16.791201
ETB 148.81438
FJD 2.54073
FKP 0.843084
GBP 0.843193
GEL 3.067132
GGP 0.843084
GHS 13.936688
GIP 0.843084
GMD 81.157625
GNF 9689.642644
GTQ 8.610988
GYD 234.492062
HKD 8.74136
HNL 28.8251
HRK 7.536564
HTG 146.65977
HUF 403.244617
IDR 18510.340582
ILS 3.97727
IMP 0.843084
INR 95.922085
IQD 1466.43159
IRR 47141.36461
ISK 145.098729
JEP 0.843084
JMD 178.892188
JOD 0.794003
JPY 163.471332
KES 144.624383
KGS 97.893165
KHR 4500.042426
KMF 492.961714
KPW 1007.500614
KRW 1565.634362
KWD 0.344142
KYD 0.933996
KZT 569.418898
LAK 24193.327174
LBP 100299.443303
LKR 334.613512
LRD 223.441358
LSL 20.451653
LTL 3.305337
LVL 0.677122
LYD 6.16811
MAD 10.412227
MDL 19.547159
MGA 5070.942943
MKD 61.539861
MMK 2350.077382
MNT 4004.865635
MOP 9.010036
MRU 44.384724
MUR 51.437295
MVR 17.294962
MWK 1943.301996
MXN 21.708564
MYR 4.801191
MZN 71.526352
NAD 20.452128
NGN 1791.677003
NIO 41.13821
NOK 11.625192
NPR 152.837489
NZD 1.897848
OMR 0.430964
PAB 1.120766
PEN 4.108272
PGK 4.551815
PHP 62.474647
PKR 315.645426
PLN 4.234364
PYG 8948.601207
QAR 4.075333
RON 5.104856
RSD 116.97159
RUB 89.973677
RWF 1605.527636
SAR 4.19867
SBD 9.351988
SCR 16.421351
SDG 672.217458
SEK 10.89993
SGD 1.453872
SHP 0.879683
SLE 25.442116
SLL 23473.540104
SOS 639.7423
SRD 40.747209
STD 23169.59786
SVC 9.807011
SYP 14554.282247
SZL 20.451671
THB 37.397923
TJS 11.617222
TMT 3.923544
TND 3.384551
TOP 2.621775
TRY 43.397285
TTD 7.586537
TWD 33.816365
TZS 3013.383659
UAH 46.531928
UGX 4094.581326
USD 1.119413
UYU 46.823728
UZS 14541.180173
VES 104.51141
VND 29031.987239
VUV 134.472655
WST 3.121561
XAF 654.622757
XAG 0.03512
XAU 0.000358
XCD 3.02527
XDR 0.822363
XOF 644.78257
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.305086
ZAR 20.438015
ZMK 10076.064499
ZMW 29.842442
ZWL 360.450667
  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    10.53

    -1.61%

  • RBGPF

    63.8100

    63.81

    +100%

  • NGG

    -0.1000

    67.43

    -0.15%

  • CMSC

    -0.0950

    21.965

    -0.43%

  • RIO

    -0.2400

    62.03

    -0.39%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    36.22

    -0.36%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    9.04

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    -0.1400

    40.55

    -0.35%

  • SCS

    -0.1700

    10.54

    -1.61%

  • RELX

    0.6600

    53.06

    +1.24%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    22.26

    -0.58%

  • AZN

    -1.4900

    66.23

    -2.25%

  • BCC

    -2.9700

    90.74

    -3.27%

  • BCE

    -0.7200

    21.26

    -3.39%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    12.77

    -0.86%

  • BP

    -0.2000

    30.36

    -0.66%

Filmstrip, Hungary's old-school projectors children love
Filmstrip, Hungary's old-school projectors children love / Photo: ATTILA KISBENEDEK - AFP

Filmstrip, Hungary's old-school projectors children love

Tablets and mobile phones may have to be prised from the fingers of children elsewhere, but in Hungary storytime can be all about a 100-year-old piece of tech -- filmstrip.

Text size:

Generations of kids there have been enthralled with stories told with the help of a projector.

Alexandra Csosz-Horvath turns off the lights and reads "Sleeping Beauty" from a series of still captioned images projected onto the bedroom wall -- her three- and seven-year-old clearly under her spell.

"We're together, it's cozier than the cinema yet it's better than a book," said the 44-year-old lawyer.

Filmstrip -- a century-old storytelling medium that was killed off in the West by the video cassette in the 1980s -- is not just hanging on in Hungary, it is thriving with a new wave of enthusiasts charmed by its slower-paced entertainment.

Printed on rolls of film, the still images were never meant to move.

- Long tradition -

"Between the 1940s and the 1980s filmstrips were used worldwide as a cost-effective visualisation tool in education and other fields," Levente Borsos, of Seoul's Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, told AFP.

But while it was surpassed by more advanced technologies in the West, it became a popular form of home entertainment in the Soviet bloc where TVs and videos were harder to come by.

When communism collapsed, filmstrip began to disappear -- except in Hungary, where the since privatised Diafilmgyarto company survives as the country's sole producer.

"Continuous filmstrip publishing and slide shows at home can be considered a Hungarian peculiarity, a special part of the country's cultural heritage," Borsos said.

- Revival -

Producer Diafilmgyarto has seen sales rebound from 60,000 in the 1990s to 230,000 rolls last year.

Each film -- produced solely for the domestic market -- costs around five euros ($5.50), less than a cinema ticket. Most are adaptations of classic fairy tales or children's books.

One bestseller, Hungarian classic "The Old Lady and the Fawn" about a woman taking care of a young deer, has been in the top 10 since its release in 1957, according to Diafilmgyarto's managing director Gabriella Lendvai.

The company also commissions artists, including some famous Hungarians, to create exclusive content for its filmstrips.

It's "an irreplaceable tradition in Hungarian culture", said Beata Hajdu-Toth, who attended a recent filmstrip screening in a Budapest cinema along with her son to celebrate Diafilmgyarto's 70th anniversary.

"I am very happy it's part of our life and hopefully I will be able to narrate to my grandchildren as well," the 37-year-old added.

At her home in the Budapest suburbs, Csosz-Horvath also hails the tradition, preferring it to fast-paced cartoons, which she said drive the children "wild".

"They just can't understand that what happens in three seconds on the screen happens in three hours in real life," she said.

With filmstrips "they don't believe that everything happens in the blink of an eye."

Z.Marek--TPP