The official title of the person who runs the
projector in a
movie theater. My job, for two summers at the
dollar cinema. The projectionist is like the
Quasimodo of the movie theater, he (she) works in the dark, isolated from
customers and the rest of the staff, in a room over everyone else's heads.
Most
multiplex theaters now have one big
projection booth, so that one or two people can operate all the projectors. The place I worked has 8, and they didn't keep me all that busy unless something broke. Nowadays, we assemble each fiml onto one big horizontal platter, instead of using 20-minute single reels. Since the projectionist doesn't have to watch constantly for
change-over marks, he can start one film, then work on getting the others ready to start. Once a projector is running, in focuse and in
frame, the only thing to worry about is a mechanical failure or a
splice breaking.
The job has it's moments, like when some
decrepit old projector jams, blows an
amplifier (or worse, a lamp), or just refuses, out of pure spite, to start. When a film feed jams, it ruins about a foot-long section of the film, because even though the film has stopped moving, the 1/2
horsepower motor that drives the projector has more than enough power to rip out the
sprocket holes. 3500 watts of light passing through a single
35mm frame for more than a second will melt a neat rectangular hole in the film, too.