So the Pentax 17 film camera has been finally introduced.
Yes, this camera is not for me. I spent too many hours in a dark damp darkroom, back when I was doing theatrical photography. Just as I quickly ditched the hated Vinyl LP, when the CD came onto the market, I was a fairly early adopter of digital, when the Nikon D70 made serious digital photography affordable. Maybe my Engineering background makes me allergic to technological nostalgia.
Shure my grainy B&W pictures of Jazz musicians from the eighties have some sort of period charm, they are of their time. But the world moves on, and I cannot see the point of recreating photography of that period. I have shot a few concerts with digital, and I saw no point in reproducing the style and technology of those old prints. I am interested in content, not groovy grain, bad colour or lens defects.
This Pentax nods heavily towards the Lo-fi Lomo cameras that have never been out of production. The giveaway is the viewfinder. I quess the market for this camera is the same. Half frame film will certainly be Lo-Fi, even if the lens is decent and the vertical format is perfect for the iPhone generation. So if you really must have a crappy film camera, go for the Lomo.
My only hope is that some of the adopters of this toy camera, will move on to discover a deeper interest in photography and realise that the art of photography is something more than using the outcomes of using the defects of an obsolete technology as an illusion of individual creativity.
Film still does have a relevance, with large format cameras. The prints I had made from my old 5x4 camera, were a thing of great beauty, with creamy tonal transitions and no visible grain on my 12x16 I had made at the time. But I guess using a view camera is too much effort, and requires study, and skill.