I don't see what the kerfuffle here is about.
Prior to the introduction of the Canon AE-1, the photography industry was one of generally predictable progress, with emphasis on engineering and finish. Also, since the yen was pretty cheap in relation to the dollar, products didn't have to be nickel-and-dimed to mediocrity to make a buck for the companies making them (unrelated example: the Hitachi stereo receiver in our livingroom is a nice example of mid/late 1970s mainstream audio gear: not even top-of-the-line, it actually replaced a much-newer but badly ailing JVC receiver that had far more bells n' whistles – including remote control. The Hitachi sounds better to me, as well). Product life cycles were a lot longer, too, which had direct bearing on the amount of effort out into a particular product.
Then came the AE-1, and with it a new economy of scale for the photo biz: highly automated production, injection-molded plastics, higher production targets and cranked-up mass marketing, not just at the usual suspects (you and me), but to the proverbial Joe/Jane Six-Pack who never felt the need for anything more sophisticated than a Pocket Instamatic. There were now TV commercials (anyone else here remember the shock of seeing a Canon SLR being pitched on the idiot box back then?). A niche product gets kicked into the Big Time.
Naturally, Nikon, Minolta, Olympus, Konica et al couldn't just sit and watch Canon go to town with that kind of market share, so they did a similar change-up in their product offerings as well, and made similar marketing pitches. SLRs got smaller, lighter and cheaper (and, once in a while, better; I fondly remember Minolta's early X-series as offering good bang-for-the-buck). And people were buying the things in droves, which, not coincidentally, was great for Kodak, which was still the 1100-pound gorilla in the film biz. For us more-El Serioso types, we still had some of the best cameras ever made, with the best still to come. For a handful of years, everybody was happy (well, everybody except the guy slouching in the corner of the old Stadtler Hilton with the stogie and the Crown Graphic: "Spoiled lil' brats y'all are, with your shiny lil' automatic-doodad toys...whatever happened to REAL cameras?").
But there's a problem when a business suddenly expands from a relatively-small, focused market to the big, bright lights of mainstream consumerism: that business becomes a high-wire act that has to keep coming up with more and newer stuff, and on a faster time-line, to keep people interested and buying in order to keep those newly-expanded production facilites humming. "Innovation" is a word that got thrown around a hell of a lot over the last 20 years or so, but there were just so many areas that could be truly improved in terms of cameras, and after a while, things got desperate. Easier film loading? Got it (Canon QL system, followed by a few others). Auto-exposure? Got it already. Multi-mode AE? Done. Compact motor-drive? Got it. Built-in motor-drive? Yep, if you must. Dedicated auto flash? Uh-huh. TTL auto flash? Er, sure...wanna buy a filter with that?
It is said that autofocus did for the photography industry what the Compact Disc did for the recording industry (funny how these two occurred at roughly the same time). It certainly did so for Minolta, which was actually in serious financial straits at the time, and decided to take a gamble and develop a full-fledged, system-based autofocus SLR at a time when everyone else was merely dipping their toes in the AF arena with modified versions of manual-focus cameras and one or two (often cumbersome) AF lenses. Minolta also took a chance of a different sort by handing over development of the system to a relatively young designer – something that simply didn't happen in the industry at the time (this designer also came up with the X-700, whcih became something of the Ford Taurus of the industry, giving Minolta a much-need cash injection, and the designer enough cachet to be picked for the Next Big Thing). The Maxxum 7000 was, of course, a wild, crazy success, further broadening the 35mm SLR's appeal, and apparently catching the rest of the industry completely off-guard. You know the rest of the story.
Except that now, there really weren't any technological worlds left to conquer: you've got a camera that practically loads the film for you, adjusts exposure for you, focuses for you, advances and rewinds the film for you, fires the cute little pop-up flash for you. Any more tricks?
Not really. And that's a problem, at least if you make these toys.
When you pick up a Canon EOS 1v, Nikon F5/6, Pentax MZ-S, or Minolta Maxxum 9, can you think of anything sorely lacking from a technological standpoint? (Frankly, I think the problem with these cameras is that they're packing a bit too much, but that's another argument.) I don't mean picking nits here. Focusing speed/accuracy good enough? Metering good enough? Film drive fast enough? (At the agency I worked for, while playing around with one photographer's EOS 1v, I couldn't help but notice that these cameras' motor-drive FPS speeds were approaching double-digits just as the first digital SLRs were coming on-line directly from Canon and Nikon). There's one other good reason why Canon hasn't felt the need to develop anything beyond the 1v (besides a shrinking film-camera market): there's literally no place left to go.
Unless, of course, you stick a sensor in the thing. Then you have a whole new marketing frontier to play with. And since, by necessity, the digital camera is joined at the hip with the personal computer, the product life cycle shortens considerably, leading to rapid product turnover and end-users replacing products based on perceived, if not functional obsolescence (this can backfire too, as anyone who worked for Contax, Konica Minolta or Mamiya would likely tell you).
Of course, I don't shoot with SLRs anymore, except for the old Olympus I pull out once in a while for close-up work. So, to a point, I couldn't give a tinker's cuss about the SLR world.
But I care about film, because that's my image-making lingua franca. The fact that Canon hasn't cut their film-camera line off at the knees yet means someone is still buying them (or, as Bill might chime in and remind me, photography is a relatively small part of Canon's business model these days, unlike Nikon, and thus they can afford to hang in the film-camera biz longer without ill financial effect). People out here are still buying and shooting the stuff, but certainly not in the quantities they did just a few years back. What I'm hoping for is stability at some point, as opposed to continued free-fall in the film market*. That's the only way we'll still have any of the stuff around. I remain the guarded optimist on this one. (But, Bill, don't pull that punch bowl just yet...I need a drink after writing all this drivel.) 😀
- Barrett
(*It can be argued that, like real estate and the dot-com thing, there was something of a "bubble" in film sales between 1990 and 2000 on account of the explosion of really good and afforable auto-everything point-n'-shoot cameras, and the rapid proliferation of one-hour labs that sprouted like kudzu to serve the owners of those nifty new cameras. Like all booms, it had its begiining and end.)