amateriat
We're all light!
Ah, but he might not have created The Prisoner had he taken up 007's Walther. Sometimes, things work out as they should. (Like Casino Royale done straight-up...finally.)telenous said:Patrick McGoohan and Leica - what a classic combination. I really have to watch again Danger Man, stupendous series (ditto for The Prisoner). If only McGoohan hadn't turned down the Bond role...
A little Leica addendum: I remember a video clip from someplace showing Jamie Lee Curtis rapidly (and happily) clicking away with a black M6. No RF dilettante, she.
- Barrett
Last edited:
wongyboi
Established
I was browsing through a set of portraiture books in a book store and one came up with celebrity photographs.
There was one of Sofia Coppola with a canonet.
There was one of Sofia Coppola with a canonet.
M
Magus
Guest
Post deleted by posters request
jonasv
has no mustache
There's this pretty well-known movie about a Russian submarine... Can't remember it's name. At a certain point they are at the north pole, posing on the ice for a group picture, taken with either a zorki or a fed I. Not a leica, but a leica clone at least.
johne
Well-known
Does this thread exhibit supressed voyeurism? If one cannot get a Leica, is just looking at those enjoying them pleasure of a preverted kind? Curious.
Johne
A tool is a tool is a a tool!
Johne
A tool is a tool is a a tool!
Last edited:
telenous
Well-known
johne said:Does this thread exhibit supressed voyeurism? If one cannot get a Leica, is just looking at those enjoying them pleasure of a preverted kind? Curious.
Johne
A tool is a tool is a a tool!
Perhaps - although there are degrees of perversion and, all in all, watching Leicas is relatively benign, one should think.
But while we are at it, isn't cinema itself a form of (legitimate) voyerism? Hitchcock was keenly aware of the quasi-voyeuristic, guilty pleasure of watching a film and exploited it to great effect. Like Gyges in Plato's Republic, the viewer is in the strange position of being invisible to the characters of the story and at the same time utterly unable to intervene.
M
Magus
Guest
Post deleted by posters request
johne
Well-known
I agree!
Johne
Johne
telenous
Well-known
The Day the Earth Caught Fire
The Day the Earth Caught Fire
So, here are two stills from an excellent British sci-fi movie of the fifties, "The Day the Earth Caught Fire". As much as I have tried I haven't been able to tell what make is the camera (I tend to think it's a Leica but it could be a Nikon? That would be strange for mid-fifties England).
Any clues? A jar of marmite for the one who guesses (to follow Mango's example).
The Day the Earth Caught Fire
So, here are two stills from an excellent British sci-fi movie of the fifties, "The Day the Earth Caught Fire". As much as I have tried I haven't been able to tell what make is the camera (I tend to think it's a Leica but it could be a Nikon? That would be strange for mid-fifties England).
Any clues? A jar of marmite for the one who guesses (to follow Mango's example).
Attachments
M
Magus
Guest
Post deleted by posters request
johne
Well-known
I must be old fashioned. I remember Jamie Lee Curtis. Whow! Leica M6? Perhaps.
Johne
Johne
sf
Veteran
telenous said:She showed great taste in P&S![]()
SHe gets all kinds of points. And the G2, though not a Leica, is a fine machine.
telenous
Well-known
Last night I went to cinema to see The Prestige (the Christoper Nolan film based on the antagonism between two rival magicians).
Before the movie, the cinema showed a few trailers of upcoming features including Blood Diamond (Brad Pitt, Jennifer Connely). Connely is brandishing in one scene what is clearly a black Leica - from the split second that I saw it, I gather it was an M6, possibly with a Summicron 35 preasph. (it had the rectangular hood).
Before the movie, the cinema showed a few trailers of upcoming features including Blood Diamond (Brad Pitt, Jennifer Connely). Connely is brandishing in one scene what is clearly a black Leica - from the split second that I saw it, I gather it was an M6, possibly with a Summicron 35 preasph. (it had the rectangular hood).
Honus
carpe diem
telenous said:... Connely is brandishing in one scene what is clearly a black Leica - from the split second that I saw it, I gather it was an M6, possibly with a Summicron 35 preasph. (it had the rectangular hood).
Our good friend Magus obviously did not advise Ms. Connely on her choice of optics.
telenous
Well-known
Honus said:Our good friend Magus obviously did not advise Ms. Connely on her choice of optics.![]()
Perhaps one makes an exception to ladies of arresting beauty and evident (photographic) assets
I wonder if she will live to regret her choice once she examines closely the bokeh in her shots
Jocko
Off With The Pixies
Better Red......
Better Red......
Those of us in the FSU ghetto can take comfort in a film of epic glory actually about a Kiev!
I commend your attention to "Notes of a War Correspondent" a North Korean masterwork from 1981 staring the lovely O Mi Ran, at that time Kim Jong-Il's girlfriend and now "Most Honoured Artist of the Republic"!
Cheers Ian!
Better Red......
Those of us in the FSU ghetto can take comfort in a film of epic glory actually about a Kiev!
I commend your attention to "Notes of a War Correspondent" a North Korean masterwork from 1981 staring the lovely O Mi Ran, at that time Kim Jong-Il's girlfriend and now "Most Honoured Artist of the Republic"!
Cheers Ian!
Attachments
swoop
Well-known
AOI Photo said:I lovec closer, but always annoy friends when I point out that she took a picture with the leica, that when printed with sloppy borders is obvoiously medium format.![]()
Then everyone tells me to shut up![]()
That bothered me too. No one understood why I was upset, that she got prints that big from a 35mm negative.
edodo
Well-known
In the show "Joey", he has the luck to live next to a femal photog that is very sexy, and in her first appearence in the show she shot him with a M6
M
Magus
Guest
Post deleted by posters request
V
varjag
Guest
Does artistic impression of Leica M counts? 
As seen in anime series Ghost in The Shell: 2nd Gig. Episode 16, around 19 minutes. A Japanese cyborg soldier trades his weapon for the camera and wanders off to take photos in refugee camps.
As seen in anime series Ghost in The Shell: 2nd Gig. Episode 16, around 19 minutes. A Japanese cyborg soldier trades his weapon for the camera and wanders off to take photos in refugee camps.
Share:
-
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.