Theodore Case Sound Test: Gus Visser and his Singing Duck
Also known as
- Add other possible names for this topic
Theodore Case Sound Test: Gus Visser and his Singing Duck (1925) is a short film which was an early sound test used in perfecting a sound-on-film process. Theodore Case (1888–1944) began working on this sound-on-film process at The Case Research Lab in 1921.
From 1921 to 1924, Case provided Lee De Forest with inventions of The Case Research Lab for use as improvements in De Forest's Phonofilm system, but had a falling out with De Forest after failing to be credited for those inventions, such...
full article at wikipedia
Film
| Initial release date |
- 1925
| Tagline |
| Directed by |
| Performances |
| Personal appearances |
| Dubbing performances |
| Produced by |
| Screenplay by |
| Story by |
| Cinematography |
| Edited by |
| Release date(s) |
| Costume design by |
| Other crew |
| Music by |
| Genres |
| Runtime |
| Languages |
| Country of origin |
| Notable filming locations |
| Estimated budget |
| Rated |
| Soundtrack |
| Film Series |
| Sequel |
| Prequel |
| Subjects |
| Film format |
| Production companies |
| Distributors |
| Other film companies |
| Netflix ID |
With the exception of Wikipedia summaries and some images the
content on this page is typically distributed under
the Creative Commons
Attribution license or Public Domain.
The original description for this topic was automatically generated from the Wikipedia article "Theodore Case Sound Test: Gus Visser and his Singing Duck" licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
| Gallery | add an image |
There are no images for this topic yet.
Edit Weblinks
Recent Discussions about Theodore Case Sound Test: Gus Visser and his Singing Duck
There are no conversations on this topic. Would you like to start one?
Start the Discussion
