Iconic All-Seeing Computer Eye HAL 9000 from the movie 'Space Odyssey 2001'taken Stanley Kubrick in 1968, was made on the basis of the lens Nippon kogaku japan Fish-eye-NIKKOR 1: 8 f = 8mm (more often appears under a more modern name Nikon Fisheye-Nikkor 8mm f / 8).
Rephrased the classic: "Go to the Nikon / Evil side, we have HAL 9000 and cookies."
And the photos from him?
Luminous pupils of robots always amused. Why do they emit light, although it should be the other way around? but it looks ominous (probably).
really ominous, again, it is easy to show with the help of a luminous pupil how “life” leaves the robot under pressure :)
Or maybe they work with infrared light? They emit in a wide range of the infrared spectrum (therefore partially glow in red) and process the reflected light. So you can see in complete darkness.
And they don’t realize that we see this spectrum and how their eyes glow.
the eyes of the Chinese would probably be blue
It is worth mentioning another lens, Zeiss 50mm f0.7, used by S. Kubrick when shooting scenes by candlelight in my favorite 1975 film by Barry Lyndon.
Some of the most unusual lenses
With this planar, they shot the back of the moon
Zeiss made an interesting lens in 1967. And what kind of mount does he have?
Nikon also has a 6mm fisheye and a viewing angle of 220 degrees. Who cares can be made to order, the price is 35000 dollars
it's all nonsense. what for illuminate the inside of the face in a spacesuit of the latest films? he doesn’t see nichrome there
It's elementary to see the face of the protagonist.
"HAL9000 does not want to harm human beings"
Anthony Hopkins once said in an interview that he sculpted the image of Hannibal Lecter with HAL9000 :)