Films shot in Ansco Color included The Man on the Eiffel Tower (1949), Bwana Devil (1953), Kiss Me, Kate (1953), Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954), Brigadoon (1954), and Lust for Life (1956), the final film shot on this film stock.
Cardboard glasses with earpieces and larger filters were used to watch Bwana Devil, the feature-length color 3-D film that premiered on 26 November 1952 and ignited the brief but intense 3-D fad of the 1950s.
On November 26, 1952, at the Paramount Theatre (Oakland, California), the premiere screening of the film Bwana Devil by Arch Oboler took place as the first full-length, color 3-D (aka 'Natural Vision') motion picture.
Devil | The Devil Wears Prada | The Devil Wears Prada (film) | Sympathy for the Devil | Art of the Devil 2 | The Devil in Miss Jones | The Devil Came on Horseback | The Devil and Daniel Webster | Devil's Island | Devil's Elbow, Missouri | Devil's Elbow | devil | The Devil Went Down to Georgia | The Devil's Rejects | The Devil Rides Out | Devil's Punch Bowl | Devil's Peak | Carter Beats the Devil | Bwana Devil | To the Devil a Daughter | The White Devil | The Devil's Crown | the Devil | Shout at the Devil | Robert the Devil | Jersey Devil | Devil's Peak (Cape Town) | Devil's Causeway | Devil's Broom | A Devil of a Woman |
The book has been adapted to film three times: a monochrome, British film of the 1950s, a 1952 3-D film titled Bwana Devil, and a 1996 color version called The Ghost and the Darkness, where Val Kilmer played the daring engineer who hunts down the lions of Tsavo.