MikeL
Go Fish
I saw a show on Annie Leibovitz the other day. She was using an M6 with motor. I guess that was Leica product placement too.
ferider
Veteran
Joerg said:What irked me was the sound of a mirror slapping when the M6? shutter was released :bang:
Ciao
joerg
My wife would laugh reading this ... She heard the same comment from me
a few times while we were watching !
I know the Summicron was a v4. Not sure what camera it was though, M6 or M7.
Roland.
ywenz
Veteran
I think it's one thing to have a product featured in movie where the logo isn't readable, it's another thing to have a can of pepsi and having the can rotated between shots so the logo is visible to the camera in every single shot, even to be point of discounting continuity errors.
FrankS
Registered User
In a similar thread a long while ago, someone suggested that the props buyer/supervisor chose a Leica (in another movie) so he/she could keep it in the end.
emraphoto
Veteran
john water's "pecker" wasn't really made for tv... if that matters. and it was a canonet.
if only it worked like that movie eh?
if only it worked like that movie eh?
Ash
Selflessly Self-involved
I didn't realise a cinema would have shown Pecker on a movie screen. It was a little tacky. I was quite impressed at the miraculous nature of the cameras 
Joerg
Dilettant
ferider said:My wife would laugh reading this ... She heard the same comment from me
a few times while we were watching !
I know the Summicron was a v4. Not sure what camera it was though, M6 or M7.
Roland.
Well same here, only my wife did not get my reference
The action was supposed to be taken place in 1999/2000, so it should have been a M6 thoughit looked like a M7.....
Ciao
joerg
oftheherd
Veteran
ferider said:
But reversed. Wonder why. At least in the movie ad shot.
ferider
Veteran
oftheherd said:But reversed. Wonder why. At least in the movie ad shot.
Yep. Maybe she did a mirror self portrait / lens test
photogdave
Shops local
Let's not forget that all-time classic, EuroTrip, where the male young owner of a new M7 impressed a female photo lab clerk so much with the camera, she "rewarded" him in the back alley.
ywenz
Veteran
photogdave said:Let's not forget that all-time classic, EuroTrip, where the male young owner of a new M7 impressed a female photo lab clerk so much with the camera, she "rewarded" him in the back alley.
Yes I believe I had mentioned something of that nature...
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showpost.php?p=407333&postcount=38
Ash
Selflessly Self-involved
photogdave, check post #15 - I mentioned it at the end 
That film is one of my all-time favourite teen comedies
That film is one of my all-time favourite teen comedies
R
ray_g
Guest
ferider said:My wife would laugh reading this ... She heard the same comment from me
a few times while we were watching !
I know the Summicron was a v4. Not sure what camera it was though, M6 or M7.
Roland.
It was an M6. In a previous thread someone cropped a still from the movie and the red dot in the middle of the lens release could be seen.
JohnL
Very confused
Left-handed Argus C-3's must be *very* rare ....oftheherd said:But reversed. Wonder why. At least in the movie ad shot.
erikhaugsby
killer of threads
FrankS said:In a similar thread a long while ago, someone suggested that the props buyer/supervisor chose a Leica (in another movie) so he/she could keep it in the end.
I thought that I remembered that in reference to the LTM Leica that was put on the cover of Seventeen (or another girlteen magazine) a number of months back. Great idea on part of the props manager.
giellaleafapmu
Well-known
like2fiddle said:We rented a movie last weekend that came out in 2004 entitled "Big Fish". One of the characters in the movie is a Newsweek photographer who pulls out her camera to take a photo of her dying father-in-law...you get only a glimpse of the camera, but there's enough time to see clearly that it is a rangefinder with a big red dot on the front...I don't really watch many movies, and we don't have cable TV, so I wonder how common something like this is. I was surprised and pleased to see a film rangefinder in the movie, but I would guess it is much more common to see a news photographer carrying a digital SLR these days.
I seem to remember that in "Closer" Julia Roberts used a Leica rangefinder (and a Hasselblad) to shot her pictures.
GLF
K
Kin Lau
Guest
Under the Tuscan Sun - 2003. The Polish workers use a Kiev 4 I think.
Gray Fox
Well-known
Last night I saw one of the early 2005 Mystery Woman TV movies again, and it sure looks like it is a IIIF or G, but she never focuses or uses a flash regardless how dim the light. Maybe she zone focuses and uses 3200.
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