<p>Yes, the Kodak disposables have the excellent Kodak Gold 800 film in them. It is a close relative of Porta 800, and a shame it is no longer available except in the OTC cameras.<br>
Both Gold 800 and 400 (aka Ultra Max 800 and Max 400) are incredibly good films, that unfortunately have a bad rep from the early days of the Net of being grainly low quality stuff. Maybe once true, or more likely related to use of old expired film, but not now. Fantastic saturated colors with great skin tones (unlike the Fujicolor 400 which can bring out the red in Caucasian faces as you noticed) and very little grain when fresh.<br>
If you want a very similar look, try Porta 800, at approx. $10 for a 36 exposure roll. Fantastic stuff.<br>
Or, try Fuji 800. It is a completely different film from the 400. It handles mixed ligting well, and has great skin tones without the red face issue of the 400. In fact, last year I shot an indoor event, mixing the 2 films - all the 800 came out great with perfect skin tones and even good results without flash inder fluorescent lights, but the 400 shots suffered from the red face issue. It was an eye opener to me, how different the 2 films are. Maybe the 800's better handling of people and indoor lighting is due to the fact that it is a close relative of Fuji's now cancelled 800 NPZ/ 800Z Potrtait Film. (edge marking of Fujicolor 800 = CZ= Consumer Z, while NPZ = New(?) Professional Z.)</p>