Old Cameras in Old Movies

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Kino

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Martha Raye with what appears to be a Leica in "Hellzapopin" (1941). I shot this off the screen of a 35mm Steenbeck with an IPhone, so sorry for the low quality...

Martha_1.jpg
 

choiliefan

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I guess that's where your ID KINO comes from? :smile:
That Steenbeck is quite an impressive piece of equipment.
 

wiltw

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Contemporary cameras appearing in movies made at a certain time are one thing...has anyone spotted a movie in which the time setting of the move is in the past (compared to when the movie was released originally) and a camera appropriate to that past is seen?
Hypothetical example: movie D-Day released in 2013 and depicting 1941 planning and invasion of Normandy and showing a photographer using a Cunningham Combat Camera​
 

wiltw

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Anyone else amused by the noise that flashbulbs make in movies? Back in the day I shot many flashbulbs, from No. 5 or 25, the mighty mite M 2 and the tiny AG-1. All were silent, but once in a while there was a tiny crackle, which indicated that the glass bulb had cracked or shattered within the protective lacquer coating. I guess the burst of light isn't dramatic enough without some sort of sound. I also wonder how many photogs licked the bulb before seating it in the flash holder. Good way to corrode the gear! I would occasionally rub the center contact against my jeans to brighten it, but that was about all.

I sure was glad when I could afford an electronic flash, specially the "auto flash."

How about the click-whirr when the camera is a manual film advance camera, not one with motorized film winder?!
 

Kino

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I guess that's where your ID KINO comes from? :smile:
That Steenbeck is quite an impressive piece of equipment.
Yeah, I've watched millions of feet of film on this beastie and it just keeps going. Of course, it helps that Dwight Cody of The Boston Connection has our service contract and keeps the machine in tip-top shape. I ditch it all at the end of the year; retirement. Sad, but ready to go...
 

guangong

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Just viewed Rosi’s Salvatore Giuliano. Story takes place when Rolleiflex was king. Rolleiflexes galor!
 

choiliefan

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An episode of Gunsmoke from the late 1950's featured this:
1699010340128.jpeg

1699010371996.jpeg

Here is a view of the magnesium? wool in the flash pan:
1699010437698.jpeg

and the rain of sparks as Miss Kitty has her portrait done:
1699010559166.jpeg
 

Kino

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An episode of Gunsmoke from the late 1950's featured this:
View attachment 352296

Here is a view of the magnesium? wool in the flash pan:
View attachment 352298
and the rain of sparks as Miss Kitty has her portrait done:

Looks like a Kodak or Korona View camera.

The flash tray is for magnesium powder, but it often came in the form of a "ribbon" that could be ignited whole for a timed burn or ground-up for a instantaneous flash.

The film holder on the photographer's shoulder in the last picture appears to be a metal Graphic type holder from the next century...
 

Don_ih

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Not a movie, but a tv show. Law and Order Toronto Criminal Intent, the second episode. It's pretty hilarious.

1709388346456.png

1709388371981.png

1709388399835.png


I especially like the obviously-not-taken-with-a-Leica photos dangling from the wire.
 

guangong

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A very brief appearance of a Mamiya Six in Kinuyo Tanaka’s 1955 film The Moon Has Risen.
 

JPD

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This is from "The Devil's arithmetic" and is supposed to take place in 1941.

Itsthelatest.jpg
 

Donald Qualls

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Not anything you'd call an "old movie" but the third episode of the new Fallout series on Amazon Video has a photo shoot ("The Beginning" is the scene header -- internally set in 2076, which in the Fallout timeline has technology roughly like early 1950s to early 1970s) where the photographer is using an RB67 -- with a backdrop, full multi-light remote setup, and on a tripod. Waist level viewfinder, though (I'd have expected a prism, even on a tripod, to get the camera up to eye level).

At first (with about 2 seconds of screen time) I thought it was a Hasselblad, but when they came back I could see the cocking motion with the lever, and when they zoomed in I could read the Mamiya nameplate above the lens.

Too bad the actor wasn't instructed about the need to advance film on the back separately from cocking the body with the lever on the right side...
 

JPD

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An episode of Leave it to Beaver with Richard Deacon and his Kodak:
The coveted Retina IIIC... I hope it got some real use and not only used as a prop.

The Swedish short tv series "I dag röd" (Today red) from 1987, and taking place in 1945. The photographer "Harry Friberg" has a much later Rolleiflex 3,5F.

Trenter_IdagRod1945.jpg


In the tv series (they are based on books by Stieg Trenter), "Träff i helfigur", also from 1987, takes place in 1948. This Rolleiflex 3,5 MX (or 3,5A) from the first half of the 1950s is another anachronism.

Trenter_TraffIHelfigur1948.jpg
 

aw614

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Three Body, the Tencent version of the drama
 

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ant!

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Just saw in the Netflix series Bodkin, episode 2, a Minolta SR-1. Not sure what the lens is, but I think might be a third party zoom from Sigma or something, so maybe from the 80s. Since the show plays in the present, sure, why not and possible, but somehow still an odd model choice. I guess the SR line is cheap...
 

Donald Qualls

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Since the show plays in the present, sure, why not and possible, but somehow still an odd model choice

Might be characterization. I haven't seen Bodkin but if the character has a dislike of digital, or is old enough to have had such a camera from new and the fact they still use it says something about their personality, it might well have been an intentional choice.
 

ant!

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Might be characterization. I haven't seen Bodkin but if the character has a dislike of digital, or is old enough to have had such a camera from new and the fact they still use it says something about their personality, it might well have been an intentional choice.

The character says she doesn't like digital, something like this, and takes photos of village events. She's maybe 50, so likely hasn't bought the SR-1 new, but of course of an age where she started and stayed with film.
 

bjorke

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The 1958 Japanese film "Giants and Toys" is about publicity, so a key character (played by Yûnosuke Itô), a celebrity himself, photographs using Rolleiflex & Leica, while others photograph HIM with press cameras. It's on Mubi, YouTube, etc. GREAT film btw, despite the curious use of a wide-angle finder.

1722279045463.png
 
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