Canon's Sure Shot Classic 120 — 35mm autofocus zoom compact to 120mm, program AE, sold as Prima, 1999.
The Canon Sure Shot Classic 120 is a fixed-lens 35mm autofocus zoom compact from 1999, with the 120 referring to the roughly 120mm long end of its zoom range. Canon sold it in Europe as the Prima Super 120 and in Japan under the Autoboy name, so the same body appears under all three labels.
As a fixed-lens 35mm compact it has no interchangeable mount, so those fields are blank. It carries a built-in zoom lens reaching about 120mm at the telephoto end, autofocus, an automatic built-in flash, program automatic exposure, and motorised film loading, advance and rewind. It is battery-powered and electronically timed, so a live cell is required for operation.
The Classic 120 suits general travel and family use where a broad zoom range covering wide to short-tele framing is convenient. It is simple to point and shoot in an automatic body, with the usual compact-zoom trade-off of a slower aperture as the lens is extended.
When buying used, check the film-door light seals for foam decay, inspect the zoom lens for internal haze or fungus and confirm smooth travel, and verify the LCD is free of bleed and dead segments. Test the autofocus and zoom motors, confirm the flash charges and fires, and inspect the battery door and contacts for corrosion.