The other day, a young cinematographer looked at my camera bag and audibly laughed. ‘You still shoot DSLR?’ she asked, gesturing at my Canon 5D Mark IV.
I didn’t take offense. I remember thinking the same thing about filmmakers who used the original 5D when mirrorless cameras started gaining traction.
But here’s what eight years of professional work has taught me: the best camera is the one that gets the job done.
The Case for DSLRs in 2026
Battery Life That Actually Matters
I recently spent three days shooting a documentary in rural Cambodia. No power outlets. No solar panels. Just batteries and resourcefulness.
My 5D Mark IV chewed through a fraction of the batteries my colleague’s mirrorless setup required. At one point, we were rationing power for his camera while mine kept rolling.
DSLR battery technology is mature. Mirrorless cameras, despite their other advantages, still struggle with power efficiency.
The Optical Viewfinder Advantage
There’s something about looking through a prism and mirror system that mirrorless cameras can’t replicate. The view you see is exactly what the sensor sees – no processing lag, no artifacting, no ‘let’s see how this looks on the LCD’ guessing game.
For run-and-gun documentary work where reaction time matters, this matters.
Durability That Earns Trust
My 5D Mark IV has been to Syria, South Sudan, and the depths of the Amazon rainforest. It’s been dropped, soaked in rain, and once accidentally left in a hot car for six hours. It still works perfectly.
‘Can you say that about most mirrorless cameras?’ Probably not. The complex electronic viewfinder systems and delicate sensor stabilization mechanisms aren’t built for the same kind of abuse.
Where DSLRs Fall Short
I’m not here to pretend DSLRs are superior for every application. For high-speed shooting, silent operation, or video autofocus, mirrorless cameras have clear advantages. My 5D stays home when I’m shooting sports or events.
But for travel documentaries, environmental portraits, and narrative work where reliability trumps features? The DSLR still earns its place in my bag.
Mehedi Rahman is a freelance multimedia producer and impact filmmaker with 12+ years of experience. He has shot documentary and humanitarian work across Yemen, Bangladesh, and South Asia for the World Food Programme and international media. Based in Sri Lanka, he specialises in visual storytelling that moves people — and gear that makes it possible.
