Although its color spectrum was limited by comparison, Cinecolor had several advantages over Technicolor: color rushes were available within 24 hours (Technicolor took four days or more); the process itself cost only 25% more than black-and-white photography (the price lowered as larger amounts of Cinecolor film stock were bought), and it could be used in modified black-and-white cameras. Before 1945, Cinecolor was used almost exclusively for short subjects. From 1932 to 1935, at least 22 cartoons were filmed in Cinecolor, including those by
Hugh Harman and
Rudolf Ising for
MGM; and the
Comicolor cartoons by
Ub Iwerks (1933-1935) for independent distributor
Pat Powers. Notable Cinecolor cartoons were
Betty Boop in Fleischer Studios'
Poor Cinderella (1934); two
Merrie Melodies cartoons,
Honeymoon Hotel (1934) and
Beauty and the Beast (1934), and two
Iwerks Studio cartoons from 1934, ''Davy Jones' Locker
and Hell's Fire''. The first feature-length pictures released in Cinecolor were the documentary feature
Sweden, Land of the Vikings (1934) and the independently made western
The Phantom of Santa Fe (1936, but filmed in Multicolor in 1931 and starring Multicolor executive
Wallace MacDonald). A short-term burst of feature-film activity in 1939 -- yielding the
RKO Radio release
Isle of Destiny and the
Monogram Pictures release
The Gentleman from Arizona -- was not enough to keep the company solvent, and Cinecolor went into voluntary bankruptcy in 1942. An upsurge in commercial and industrial films made in color improved the company's balance sheet, and in 1942 home-movie distributor
Castle Films expanded the Cinecolor line to the 16mm and 8mm film formats, reprinting the Ub Iwerks ComiColor cartoons until 1951. Cinecolor emerged from bankruptcy in October 1944, with all creditors paid in full. Its stock price (only four cents a share in 1943) jumped to $8.50 in 1946. Lower-budgeted companies such as Monogram,
Producers Releasing Corporation, and
Screen Guild Productions were Cinecolor's chief contractors in the mid-1940s. A 1945 PRC Cinecolor release,
The Enchanted Forest, was the studio's highest-grossing film of the year, and PRC's series of Cinecolor westerns with
Eddie Dean attracted attention among exhibitors. Screen Guild's
Scared to Death (1947) featured
Bela Lugosi in his only color film. The commercial and critical success of those films led both major and minor studios to use Cinecolor as a money-saving measure. Cinecolor 35mm film stock cost about 25% less than Technicolor (in 1946, 4.5 cents a foot for Cinecolor vs. 5.97 cents a foot for Technicolor).
International Projectionist noted that "Cinecolor's service charges are also lower than Technicolor's, and the cost differential on a standard feature will exceed $50,000 by the time prints have been made, an important sum for a low-budget picture." When more producers opted for Cinecolor, the company was able to reduce the cost of printing, which made Cinecolor an even more attractive option. ==Mainstream success==