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Movies / Cameras in the Movies / TV / Media If you are a photographer, it's difficult not to appreciate movies too. In this forum you can discuss movies, as well as the cameras used in them. What camera used in what film / TV show etc has long been a topic of discussion at RFF. Whether the Exakta and 400mm Kilfitt lens in Hitchcock's Rear Window or the Nikons in Eastwood's Bridges of Madison County, cameras are tools which reflect the time and technology of the film.

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Apocalypse now
Old 05-28-2012   #1
Pastor Chris
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Apocalypse now

I just finished watching Apocalypse Now-Redux which aired for Memorial Day here in the US. Dennis Hopper's photojournalist character had an arsenal of no fewer than five cameras around his neck in his scenes. Most were SLRs and at least one with a motor winder. Can anyone comment on what cameras he was using? Just useless curiosity on my part really.
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Old 05-28-2012   #2
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I think that they are Nikkormats. Perhaps with a Nikon F or two mixed in.
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Old 05-28-2012   #3
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Nikon 'hockey pucks' - most of them were Nikon F's. If I remember correctly I thought I spotted an F2 with a Photomatic Finder and another with a waist level viewfinder.

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Old 05-28-2012   #4
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It's an interesting character, as Dennis Hopper himself is quite an accomplished photographer. Taschen printed up a limited number of books featuring his photography. I wish i could get my hands on one.

Phil Forrest
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Old 05-28-2012   #5
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Ditto on the above Nikons...

Thanks for this thread, Chris as I am now a proud owner of a Nikon F2 (Thanks, Gil!). The mention of a waist-level finder has me intrigued....
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Old 05-28-2012   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Phil_F_NM View Post
It's an interesting character, as Dennis Hopper himself is quite an accomplished photographer. Taschen printed up a limited number of books featuring his photography. I wish i could get my hands on one.

Phil Forrest
I wish I could my hands on one of those books too. I do have a copy of Black & White magazine, issue 51, June 2007, with Hopper on the cover. There's a a good article about him with an interview and over a dozen of his photographs.
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Old 05-28-2012   #7
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Actually you can get a copy of Dennis Hopper: Photographs 1961-1967 for under $50 if you look around a bit.

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Old 05-28-2012   #8
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I believe they were all Nikon F's, one with an F36 Motor Drive. I'm recalling from memory, not from watching recently. The F2 came along much later, I'm sure Hopper and Copolla wanted realism. I know I remember seeing a 200mm F4 Nikkor (had one when I was in High School).

EDIT: Definately all Nikon F's. Here it is:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature...qFwVuQ-Hg&NR=1
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Old 05-28-2012   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by intheviewfinder View Post
Actually you can get a copy of Dennis Hopper: Photographs 1961-1967 for under $50 if you look around a bit.

--Rich
Thanks! Just found it on Amazon for $44.09, brand new.
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Old 05-28-2012   #10
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interesting thread. btw, and somewhat OT, i just have to say this is my all time favorite movie. the filming/cinematography is just superb, especially in the Redux version. combining certain scenes with iconic music was i think something of a first as well.

the first time i saw this film i was in college. when it ended my friend and i were both so totally speechless amd thoroughly engrossed, we sat silently until the film started again, and sat through it a second time!
tony
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Old 05-28-2012   #11
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Yes, all Nikon Fs. The F2 was not introduced until 1971. The movie takes place in the '60s.
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Old 05-28-2012   #12
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Capt. Willard: "Why did he want to kill you?"

Photojournalist: "Because I took his picture. He said if I take his picture again, he would kill me, and he meant it!"

How would Col. Kurtz have handled Bruce Gilden on the street?
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Old 05-28-2012   #13
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I just watched that movie yesterday here in Bangkok......the redux version.....classic movie......I used to live in Vietnam and I've traveled a lot in Cambodia.....the quote above by Pastor Chris is classic......

cheers, michael
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Old 05-28-2012   #14
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Nokton48's link to the film clip surely shows nothing but the infamous 'hockey pucks'. And yes the F2 was introduced in 1971. I seem to recall Dennis talking about using them during the filming. I'm pretty sure I've seen them in relation to this movie - maybe stills or out-takes since Hopper was a Hollywood 'bad boy'.

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Old 05-28-2012   #15
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I just re-watched the movie recently, and I am still awe of the movie, and characters. I love the scene when Dennis Hopper comes in resembling a photo mannequin.
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Old 05-28-2012   #16
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The Colonel would have chopped off Gilden's hands and feed him a finger each day.
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Old 05-29-2012   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Deep Fried View Post
The Colonel would have chopped off Gilden's hands and feed him a finger each day.
'clarity'.
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Old 05-29-2012   #18
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Quote:
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The Colonel would have chopped off Gilden's hands and feed him a finger each day.
That is thoroughly disgusting, yet probably true to form for the character.
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Old 05-29-2012   #19
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I've seen the original film quite a few times and the directors cut once. The 50 minutes more add nothing relevant to the movie I think. Sometimes it's not too bad to take the final editing away from the director.
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Old 05-29-2012   #20
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The version that I most recently watched was the redux version, which I had not seen previously. I had not watched this movie since I was in my teens, more than 20 years ago. It was interesting to return, and of course wait for some of my favorite lines, "Charlie don't surf!" and see more, and different issues in the movie. I found the scenes where Capt. Willard was dining with the French plantation owners far up the river. The tension in that scene was incredible; all of the political opinions coupled with near insanity, and Willard just as a quietly listening bystander almost. It was a long, and enjoyable time sitting on my couch on a hot Memorial Day after services in our little town.
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Old 05-29-2012   #21
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tom.w.bn View Post
I've seen the original film quite a few times and the directors cut once. The 50 minutes more add nothing relevant to the movie I think. Sometimes it's not too bad to take the final editing away from the director.
I think I agree with most of what you had said, nothing relevant, but some additional background and color to the broad picture. I now know a little more about why Lance all of sudden showed up in a scene with camo face paint. Too long for the cinema, perhaps, but not bad for Tivo!
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Old 05-29-2012   #22
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pastor Chris View Post
I think I agree with most of what you had said, nothing relevant, but some additional background and color to the broad picture. I now know a little more about why Lance all of sudden showed up in a scene with camo face paint. Too long for the cinema, perhaps, but not bad for Tivo!
In the next director cut they should explain how dennis hopper get's his film down there in the jungle
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Old 05-29-2012   #23
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Mary Ellen Mark did some still photography for the movie. Her well-known image of Brando with the bug on his head was taken during the making of it. She took a great close up shot of Dennis Hopper too.
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Old 05-29-2012   #24
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An interesting aside to your question concerning the cameras in the film Apocalypse Now is the watch that Martin Sheen wore throughout the film. Watch collectors have identified the watch as a Seiko Automatic 6105. It was not military issued but sold at PXs in Vietnam.
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Old 05-29-2012   #25
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I would recommend reading "Heart of Darkness" by Joseph Conrad.
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