Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

'Forgot you were there': Film projectionists are being lost in the digital age

“My dad used to say we could do time on a murder rap because it was just like a jail cell,” Joe Rivierzo, a third-generation projectionist, told Yahoo Finance (video above).

Rivierzo spent his earlier days putting movies on the big screen. He and his fellow film projectionists made sure the actual film material ran smoothly in the tiny room stuck behind the plush, red seats filled with popcorn-eating cinema-fans.

“If everything ran well, you didn't have to come downstairs for anything,” he added.

Once Rivierzo was even forgotten in the projection booth when the entire theater cleared out due to a bomb scare.

“You had to be a certain type,” says Rivierzo, referring to the solitary nature of the profession. “We were the last guy to touch the film after all that talent was assembled, right? Light guys, sound guys, actors, screenwriters… so I could ruin a blockbuster or a classic.”

Joe Rivierzo of the Local 306 Projectionists Union New York City. (Source: Yahoo Finance)
Joe Rivierzo of the Local 306 Projectionists Union New York City. (Source: Yahoo Finance)

‘My grandfather cranked all day’

Rivierzo — who learned film from his father, Lou, who also learned from his father, Dominick, before him — saw cinema grow up in front of his pilot-glasses covered eyes. An Italian immigrant, Rivierzo’s grandfather operated a projector — with piano accompaniment because sound for film hadn’t been invented yet — in a Vaudeville theater in New York.

“The piano players changed twice a day, and my grandfather cranked all day. Even though they were synchronous gears, he would be slower than the fresh piano player. So my dad would bring my grandfather's dinner and crank the balance of the night after school,” Rivierzo said.

And so Rivierzo knows the history of the film projector operator and experienced the art form as his career developed. Now, after more than three decades, he has witnessed the fall of the film projector and the projectionist with the rise of digital media.

“The transition to digital. That's where my career in the projection booth pretty much came to an end — 37 years,” says Rivierzo. “Somebody's up in that booth right now. It's a lot of younger guys working computers and you know set up a whole week's worth of movies, but they're not union.”

Richard Peña — Professor of Film Studies at Columbia University. (Source: Yahoo Finance)
Richard Peña — Professor of Film Studies at Columbia University. (Source: Yahoo Finance)

Experts aren’t surprised by what’s happening.

“Art forms come and go, and styles of art forms come and go,” Richard Peña, professor of film studies at Columbia University, told Yahoo Finance. Peña also served as the director of the New York Film Festival from 1988 to 2012, and saw first hand the digital revolution in cinema. “I sometimes use the example with my students of something like the Blues. I lived in Chicago for eight years and I was always a great fan of Blues and became a bigger one when I was there. I mean, does anyone really think the Blues is still really a living form?”