I always thought that Capa's D-day photos had the emulsion cooked by a darkroom tech who turned up the heat on the drier because he was eager to see the negs. They look out-of-focus because the emulsion ran a bit down the base.
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I think this is a story "cooked" up by Capa in order to support his image. My reasoning follows:
Capa was not above changing his version of reality to suit his professional needs. His name "Robert Capa" was not his given name, but one he chose to get noticed. He chose Robert because it sounded ubiquitously American and supposedly Capa because he wanted to be confused with filmmaker Frank Capra.
His
Falling Soldier out take (different soldier, exact same pose) throws his veracity into question. Personally, I believe that Capa actually captured a soldier, shot in the heat of battle. Which picture is it? I dunno ...
Capa insisted that the technician who allegedly cooked his film not be disciplined as would be called for if any random tech had ruined critical war film by using non-approved methods to process it. I have heard of a process that involved rinsing the film with 93% rubbing alcohol, then lighting it on fire - extinguishing the film exactly when it has perfectly dried, yet, not burnt at all.
Right.
I wonder if Capa, having landed on the Normandy beach in an early wave, found himself under enemy fire, and dove for cover. I am amazed that he was able to point an open shuttered, correctly exposed shot in the direction of a recognizable face at all! His photograph of the soldier coming ashore on D-day is amazing no matter what the back story. It is easily one of the greatest photographs of all time.
Aside from the few frames we have seen from this roll of film, there may not have been any more pointed in the right direction, and exposed so that there would be recognizable elements.
Would a persona as large as Robert Capa have wanted
anyone to have ever seen those? No. I believe he suppressed the bad pictures.