Category
page 1Movie cameras
movie camera
camera for movie capture on film

Bolex
thumb|right|Usine Bol, Geneva, Switzerland
Bell & Howell
services company and former manufacturer of film machinery
multiplane camera
Camera used in traditional animation
Canon Cinema EOS
range of digital cinema cameras from Canon
Aeroscope
thumb|right|250px|Aeroscope (1910)
thumb|250px|Geoffrey Malins with aeroscope camera during [[World War I]]
Aeroscope, from Ancient Greek ἀήρ (aḗr), meaning "air", and σκοπέω (skopéō), meaning "to look", was a type of compressed air camera for making films, constructed by Polish inventor Kazimierz Prószyński in 1909 (French patent from 10 April 1909) and built in England since 1911, at first by Newman & Sinclair, and from 1912 by Cherry Kearton Limited.
Parvo
35mm motion picture camera
Showscan
Showscan is a cinematic process developed by Douglas Trumbull that uses 70mm film photographed and projected at 60 frames per second, 2.5 times the standard speed of movie film.
Mitchell Camera
US camera manufacturer
Eyemo
thumb|right|250px|Bell & Howell Eyemo camera
Arriflex 35
trademark
Dykstraflex
The Dykstraflex was the first digital motion control photography camera system, named after its primary developer John Dykstra. Numerous people actually created the camera, with the critical electronics being created by Alvah J. Miller and Jerry Jeffress.