Thanks for posting, an interesting article. However the slant of the article is that the choice of film means everything. Things such as lighting and development are meaningless. While Tri-X is a very good film it does not have mystical properties.
My concern is that newbies will latch onto the concept that Tri-X will solve all their problems.
By the first few paragraphs I was expecting it to make the blind see, the lame walk etc. It had captured that essential rough, dirtiness that started with James Dean in Rebel Without A Cause and metamorphosed into that kind of "in your face" black and white honesty and grittiness of the 1960s as epitomised by McCullin, Bailey etc.
Let's not forget the part played in all of this by Jon Hamm as well. The article was certainly more Jon Hamm than Edward R Murrow.
We can only hope that everyone reading this article will ask themselves what lay behind it. I suspect it was a journalist being paid to produce an article weaving what he thought was the zeitgeist for the 1960s with a rosy nostalgia for the great days of film and the characters who used Tri-X.
I remember feeling the same warm glow that this article is attempting to evoke when watching "washed-up" Stoker Thompson refusing to throw a fight in the "Set-Up" although he desperately needed the money.
"Warm Glows" are fine. I need them just before I go to bed but I need to wake up the next day without expecting that I'll ever have the 1966 version of Raquel Welch beside me
Products, even Kodak products, characters and life in general are seldom, if ever, that rosy.
pentaxuser