Thinking Allowed

Colour in Film

Jan 27, 2026
Swarnavel Eswaran, filmmaker and professor of Indian cinema; Kirsty Sinclair Dootson, historian of art studying colour and empire. They trace Kodak Krishnan’s role bringing and rationing Eastman stock in India. They explore how colour film stocks, industry politics and costs shaped Bollywood palettes, skin-tone representation, and the geopolitics of cinematic colour.
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INSIGHT

Colour Shapes Emotional Proximity

  • Steven Spielberg chose black-and-white for Schindler's List because he felt colour would glamorise the Holocaust.
  • Kirsty Sinclair Dootson explains colour can make images feel more immediate and ethically fraught.
INSIGHT

Colour Film Was Geopolitical Technology

  • The first commercially viable colour negative film emerged in 1930s Germany and was repurposed as a wartime propaganda tool.
  • After WWII that technology dispersed globally and shaped Cold War film politics and rival colour processes.
INSIGHT

Mixing Stocks To Balance Politics And Look

  • Eastern Bloc stocks like SovColor and Orwo were politically preferred but produced muted colours compared with Kodak's Eastman Colour.
  • Filmmakers and labs mixed shooting and printing strategies to balance politics, cost, and vivid aesthetics.
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