Tired of Hearing "Film is Dead"? Well, So Are We. Kodak Vision 3 50D

lonelyboy

Established
Local time
4:48 AM
Joined
Nov 1, 2005
Messages
63
Location
Hong Kong
Introducing KODAK VISION3 50D Color Negative Film. The premier motion picture film portfolio welcomes the world's finest grain film to the family. Ready to capture hearts and minds in the digital age and far beyond.

http://www.kodak.com/go/50d
 

Attachments

  • 50D.jpg
    50D.jpg
    57.9 KB · Views: 0
Film isn't dead, but Kodak sure is. This is just the dying gasp before the gurgle of blood that is spills to the ground. Except that the blood is all their money and the thing that is dying is everything wonderful that Eastman made out of that company.

At least Fujifilm has been able to take the new world in stride, releasing impressive cameras and still churning out the film for us! Hooray Fujifilm!
 
Certes, Kodak make a major error when they appointed a salesman instead of an engineer as CEO: I am convinced that Carl Kohrt would have been a better CEO than George Fisher. But I still wouldn't write Kodak off quite yet. There are some very clever people there. Not many at the top, unfortunately.

Cheers,

R.
 
Certes, Kodak make a major error when they appointed a salesman instead of an engineer as CEO: I am convinced that Carl Kohrt would have been a better CEO than George Fisher. But I still wouldn't write Kodak off quite yet. There are some very clever people there. Not many at the top, unfortunately.

Cheers,

R.

Agree!

😎
 
I would have been very excited about this news had I been still based primarily in Taipei, where it is possible for individuals to get color motion picture filmstock shot in 135mm canisters developed. Looks like a nice film and I look forward to trying it someday.
 
I would have been very excited about this news had I been still based primarily in Taipei, where it is possible for individuals to get color motion picture filmstock shot in 135mm canisters developed. Looks like a nice film and I look forward to trying it someday.

Did u try to contact the motion picture labs in Taiwan to process your film? I hear that the Taiwan labs are able to process short length of motion picture film for still photography use.
 
Yeah, and Kodak was introducing new B&W paper, too. Right up until the time they stopped making it. Kodak is a dead man walking.

At the time they killed it, many newspapers were still using a lot of B&W paper. We couldn't understand why they dropped it.
 
Last edited:
Film isn't dead, but Kodak sure is. This is just the dying gasp before the gurgle of blood that is spills to the ground. Except that the blood is all their money and the thing that is dying is everything wonderful that Eastman made out of that company.

At least Fujifilm has been able to take the new world in stride, releasing impressive cameras and still churning out the film for us! Hooray Fujifilm!

If only we needed more proof that there are millions of ignorant people.

.
 
At the time they killed it, many newspapers were still using a lot of B&W paper. We couldn't understand why they dropped it.

In 2005? Really? You must be thinking of some very, very, very small newspapers or they were run by Luddites (I was interning with a 1,000 circulation weekly in technologically-impaired Bumblefork, USA at the time, and even they were digital). I had to do some paste-up layout even (physically waxing a piece of paper and then sticking it to a page to be photographed for the presses), and the photos I pasted up were laser printer copies of digital files.

At later papers where I worked (up until this summer), I made a habit of checking out the old darkroom supplies. I have yet to see a chemical or roll of film (bulk or otherwise) with an expiration date later than 2001 (which means they were made in the '90s). BTW, I wasn't working for the NY Times, but very small daily newspapers (less than 5,000 daily circulation). Film died there more than 10 years ago.

Besides, Kodak B&W paper kind of sucked, anyway. I like Kodak film. I like Kodak chemicals. I just thought Ilford made better paper. No skin off my nose when they didn't want to cater to hobbyists and college students (their paper was more expensive, anyway).

I seem to remember a lot of yelling over how film was dead when the Nikon D1 came out in 1999 (A DSLR that you can carry and use, with a review screen, too!), as well as the Canon 1Ds (first full-frame, 11mp camera which was "better" than film, thus spoketh Pop Photo at the time) and the Digital Rebel (first DSLR under $1,000)... Hmm... I don't think it's dead yet.
 
On twitter I'm @filmdevelop and I invented the hastag #believeinfilm so it goes without saying that I'm pretty much up in Kodak's inhouse social media team's face regarding film.

They really have no clue about what to do with it or how to sell it. Their film for still photography falls into a no man's land between consumer products and motion picture film. I've done enough badgering that I can get @kodakcb to talk about film but not much.
 
Back
Top Bottom