Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]&&&&&&&&&&& Ted wrote: Which is the greater? This is for each to decide after viewing both at the same time. %%%%%%%%%% Video cameras can now go where cameras have never gone before, and this can add to the excitement of the event, or the intimacy of the result, but the still image is often the one remembered, burnt into the "cortex". I was "doing" the Robert Capa exhibition in Chicago last week, and there was a video of his life produced by the director [a video I would love to own----- must own everything ;-) ] showing in the lobby. In it, there were cine and still images of the Spanish Civil war, and at first, I found the moving images more interesting and "complete", but the still images stay with you. The longer the video ran, the more impressed I became with the Capa images, finding the cine segments more like fillers and explanations for the weary. Then I remembered the Eve Arnold exhibition we saw before leaving 4 weeks ago. She had dabbled in cine only to return to the still images, not because the film lacked impact, but because the still image was more personal. To produce a film you "must" have a crew, and we are disappointed if you miss the finish or the touch-down, to produce the still, you need to your camera, to be "there", and your ability, and somehow this is reflected in the end result; the still seems to me to be more personal, and the cine a team effort. Eve Arnold wanted to work alone and returned to her N's. Alastair Firkin, http://users.netconnect.com.au/~firkin/AGFhmpg.html