National Geographic: The Last Roll of Kodachrome
Le 22 juin 2009, après 74 ans de fabrication de la pellicule couleur la plus vendue au monde, Kodak cesse de produire la Kodachrome. Steve McCurry a alors la possibilité de récupérer la dernière cartouche de film Kodachrome produite par les usines Kodak en 2010. Il part alors en Inde à Bombay et au Rajasthan, puis en Istanbul et à Londres avant de revenir à New York pour terminer la pellicule !
Пікірлер: 17
It's good to finally see this in high definition
Thanks for uploading this in HD!
It's really a pleasure to see how Steve works
Amazing Work done by Steve Sir ..📸♥️
The 1080p version only got 700views, how very interesting
@EvertG8086
2 жыл бұрын
@@bWWd0 What
What a legend!
Mama, they took my Kodachrome away
On 4:02, he picked up a Nikon F100. Later on 4:14, it becomes a Nikon F6???
@z3lop59
3 жыл бұрын
Lol, you're right
@cool2rule2
2 жыл бұрын
Such a McCurry thing, considering all the editing scandals. “Artistic liberty” I guess? LOL
@RavenclawFtW3295
Жыл бұрын
The documentary isn't even fully honest. When you watch it you get the impression that: 1. He got his first photo in Grand Central Terminal (it's actually frame 27) 2. He didn't make duplicates (he actually made duplicates of his 3 portraits of DeNiro and of the man in the tea shop) 3. He didn't want to take any risks of his subject moving (he actually took 3 candid photos and one of a street performer) 4. The end of Kodachrome would have passed "without fanfare" if it wasn't for Steve (did they honestly believe that?) Steve even wasted a photo by taking a picture of his feet while watching an interview of Stephen Colbert
@spieler440
Жыл бұрын
I just noticed that as well. Odds are he had quite a few cameras loaded with kodachrome
Pas de sous-titre ?
I have a roll of Kodachrome 64 that never got developed. I dream about what's on it.
@filipecostapt6427
2 жыл бұрын
You can have it developed in black and white
12:52 that man has double fingers?!