The movie camera’s body was black crinkle-lacquered metal. It was produced in 1932 and cost $75. It had a 25mm Wollensak Velostigmat lens. It used 16mm film and offered a 64 frames-per-second speed. It had four film speeds: low, normal, talking picture speed, and slow motion.
Kodak Cine-Special
Budge Crawley purchased the Kodak movie camera in 1933. According to CinemaGear.com, the Cine-Special was a spring-wound 16 mm silent movie camera produced by Eastman Kodak from the 1930s to the 1960s. It was aimed at the educational, industrial, commercial, and scientific markets. It featured a two-position turret with interchangeable lenses.