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Krasnogorsk (camera)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Krasnogorsk (Красногорск) is a series of spring-wound 16mm mirror-reflex movie camera designed and manufactured in the USSR by Krasnogorsky Zavod (KMZ), produced between 1966 and 1993.

There were four models of this series released by KMZ:

A total of 105,435 Krasnogorsk-3 cameras were produced between 1971 and 1993.[1]

This series was used by studios and professional filmmakers, as well as the military, amateurs, and artists, not only in the USSR, but all over Eastern Europe, where it became one of the most popular 16mm movie cameras.[2] As such, it also made a prominent appearance in Krzysztof Kieślowski's 1979 film Camera Buff. The Krasnogorsk cameras are still popular among independent filmmakers today.

Models

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References

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  1. ^ "ZENITcamera: Выпуск кинокамер Красногорским заводом". www.zenitcamera.com.
  2. ^ Virginás, Andrea (2021). "Lightweight cameras and dissident filmmakers: seminal case studies from 1968 to 1980 Romania". Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. (Dissent and Dissidents in Central and Eastern European Film) (41:3): 541–558.
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