Famous Rangefinder Folk

CraigK

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Jan 25, 2005
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Hi All,

I was watching an old documentary on the second world war and saw some archive footage of General Erwin Rommel using a Leica (I wonder what ever became of that camera?).

Anyway it got me thinking about famous rangefinder fans. So let's see who we can come up with shall we?

I'll start with Queen Elizabeth ll and her trusty Rollei 35

Queen_E_II.jpg


And speaking of Rommel, how about Erich v. Stroheim as the famous "Desert Fox" in the classic film "Five Graves to Cairo" ....apparently he insisted that the prop camera be a real Leica AND have film in it.

rommel.jpg
 
German film director Wim Wenders ('Paris, Texas' , etc.) used a Plaubel Makina 67 (medium format folding RF) for his book 'Written in the West' (and a Noblex panoramic camera - or was it a Widelux??? - for 'Pictures from the SUrface of the Earth')

Roman
 
Craig, you read that thread on the Leica Forum at photo.net? The general consensus was that it wasn't a Leica but a Canon (due to the non-rounded body edges and placement of rangefinder window).

Roman
 
In the John Wayne film "Hatari", the female lead is a photographer, has a Nikon SP. Yeah, my wife has nothing to worry about with me yelling "Look at the camera that girl has!"

In the Smithsonian's photographic exhibit of the "Beatles" in the History and Technology building, most of the pictures were taken with a Nikon SP. Their publicity guy used an SP; one of the "Boys" took a pcture of him with it. Ringo preferred a Pentax, as seen in "Hard Days Night".
 
Brian Sweeney said:
In the John Wayne film "Hatari", the female lead is a photographer, has a Nikon SP. Yeah, my wife has nothing to worry about with me yelling "Look at the camera that girl has!"

A modified Argus C3 is featured quite prominently in "Sky Captain" being used by Gywneth Paltrow
 
David Douglas Duncan and Horace Bristol really pushed the technology of RF cameras forward in new ways when they had some Nikon lenses "fitted" to their SM Leicas when they covered the Korean War. The negs they sent back to the the Life magazine labs in NYC were immediately hailed as the sharpest 35mm images ever seen. Duncan sold off his Leica glass. It marked the beginning of the end of German dominance of the 35mm industry.

Rather than copying and pasting the entire story, here are some links:

http://www.nikon.co.jp/main/eng/d-archives/camera/history_e.htm

http://mir.com.my/rb/photography/hardwares/history/

(Use the 'Find' function of your browser to look for "Duncan" in each case.)

http://www.mail-archive.com/pentax-discuss@pdml.net/msg159894.html

😎 /ScottGee1
 
And, to answer the orginal question, I'll add Stanley Kubrick. He was an expert on the use of optics to achieve the unique 'looks' for his films. There are numerous pix of him with a Nikon S of some sort around his neck.

🙂 /ScottGee1
 
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