C'mon, he mentions it clearly that it is made by someone else:
"The film is made by one of the most famous names in film production, with nearly 150 years’ experience making film and photographic products."
Yes he does but now you have mentioned it I was specifically looking for that quote. When you look at the whole "spiel" it appears to me to be emphasising the new aspect and he does tell a good tale. I'll give you that
The article seems to wrongly conflate "film noir " with gritty black and white, high contrast, shadowy mid European scenes, Harry Lime etc but that's part of the good tale along with the box, travels across "Mittel Europa" . hints of the cold war, Soviet camera etc
In terms of the facts as stated the film producer has been in the business of film making since about the 1880s ( 150 yrs was mentioned) and this film is capable of being used at up to 6400. Which films are capable of this, D3200, Kodak 3200 or Tri-X and HP5+ pushed to the absolute limit? I'd have thought it unlikely to be either of these films based on Kodak and Ilford's rebranding policy So what does that leave, Foma? However wasn't Foma only established a 100 years ago in 1921?
So its a film( currently made?) by a 150 years old company which is a 400 speed but still OK at 6400?
Any ideas of what meets the above facts as stated in the article?
pentaxuser