Max Otto Miller was an American film producer and inventor of the Miller Stereoscopic Process.[1][2] It was an early 3-D process of making and projecting pictures, using a conventional camera lens with a concave spherical lens attached to increase field without increasing object distance. It included a special design for the aperture plate and projection of the picture through a double convexed spherical lens of lesser focal length. The method used 35 mm film printed single strip anaglyphic.[3] It was used in films including the 1925 silent western The Ship of Souls.[4] Miller also produced the 1924 film A Pair of Hellions. His son was director and photographer Max B. Miller.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Camera Inc., (1935) Camera, Volume 51, p. 46.
  2. ^ Miller, Max (May 7, 1935). U.S. Patent 2000470. USPTO
  3. ^ Limbacher, James L. (1968). Four aspects of the film. Brussel & Brussel, ISBN 978-0-405-11138-9
  4. ^ Hayes, R. M. (1998). 3-D movies: a history and filmography of stereoscopic cinema. McFarland, ISBN 978-0-7864-0578-7
  5. ^ Gertner, Richard Pay, William (1985). International television Almanac, p. 184 Quigley Pub. Co., ISBN 978-0-900610-33-2
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