Some independent movie was even made (fictional) about a young man who
receives a Canonet GIII as a gift and becomes a celebrated street
photographer. (I can't remember the movie's title; I think it had only one
word................


The movie was "Pecker". (Freud had a theory why you might have forgotten the
title...)
The thrift-shop camera was actually a Canonet 28 (later model, described in
the Canon Museum Site). It was an AE camera with a pretty good 2.8 lens and
a real optical rangefinder. I have two of them for sale for $60 if you are
interested The GIII (G for "good" according to the Canon museum) had a 1.7
or 1.9 lens and optional manual shutter and aperature setting. There were a
whole string of Canonet model from the sixties to the eighties. They are
metal cameras that just keep on working. Cameraquest.com covers a lot of
this type in some detail. I have a drawer full of them but most have
marginal exposure control, except the Canonets)
Bill Lawlor

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