Hanimex's motorised point-and-shoot — fixed focus, auto flash, motor wind and rewind, AA power
The Hanimex IC2000 is a 1990s fixed-focus 35mm point-and-shoot from Hanimex's budget IC series, which also included the IC 500 and the autofocus IC3000. Many bodies carry IC2000 Motor branding, reflecting the built-in motor drive that distinguished it from the brand's cheaper thumbwheel compacts.
Documented features are a fixed-focus lens, automatic exposure, and a built-in automatic flash, with a motor that loads the film, advances it after each frame and rewinds at the end of the roll. Power comes from two AA batteries, and the black plastic body keeps the camera light. Hanimex published little further detail, and the lens focal length is not reliably documented.
As a slightly better equipped sibling to the era's focus-free compacts, the IC2000's motor wind makes it genuinely point-and-shoot: there is nothing to do between frames. It suits beginners and casual film shooters wanting an inexpensive everyday camera, with the usual limits of a small fixed-aperture plastic lens in low light.
The camera is battery-dependent for loading, advance and rewind: confirm it wakes on fresh AAs, the motor cycles and the flash charges before buying. Listen for weak or grinding transport and inspect the battery compartment for corrosion, the commonest fault on AA-powered compacts of this age.