Meyer-Optik Gorlitz Meyer-Optik Gorlitz Biotar 58mm f/1.5 II Lens for Review

With bokeh in the 96th percentile, this $1200 manual lens makes dreamy portraits. But its low versatility score means it's a one-trick pony.

Focal Length 58mm
Max Aperture f/1.5
Mount M42
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Meyer-Optik Gorlitz Meyer-Optik Gorlitz Biotar 58mm f/1.5 II Lens for lens
54.3 Overall Score

Overview

The Meyer-Optik Gorlitz Biotar 58mm f/1.5 II is a character lens, not a clinical one. It scores a 75.9 out of 100 for portraits, which is its whole reason for being. That score is built on a 96th percentile ranking for bokeh and an f/1.5 aperture that sits in the 81st percentile. For everything else, like travel or general versatility, the numbers drop off fast, landing in the 30s. This is a specialist's tool, and the specs tell that story clearly: manual focus only, no stabilization, and a minimum focus distance of over two feet. You're buying a specific look, not convenience.

Performance

Performance here is all about the bokeh and that fast aperture. A 96th percentile for bokeh is exceptional. It means the out-of-focus areas this lens creates are smoother and more pleasing than almost anything else in the database. The f/1.5 max aperture, while not the absolute fastest, still puts it in the top fifth of all lenses for light gathering. That combo is why its portrait score is so high. Just don't expect all-around sharpness to match modern optics; its optical quality percentile is only 34. And with manual focus and no stabilization, its autofocus and stabilization scores are predictably low, in the 40s and 50s. This lens performs one trick, but it performs it brilliantly.

Performance Percentiles

AF 45.7
Bokeh 97.5
Build 68.5
Macro 44.6
Optical 35
Aperture 82.4
Versatility 38.7
Stabilization 36.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong bokeh (96th percentile) 98th
  • Strong aperture (81th percentile) 82th
  • Strong build (68th percentile) 69th

Cons

  • Below average optical (34th percentile)

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 58
Focal Length Max 58

Aperture

Max Aperture f/1.5
Min Aperture f/16
Diaphragm Blades 14

Build

Mount M42
Format Full-Frame
Filter Thread 52

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 701

Value & Pricing

At $1199, the value proposition is narrow. You're paying a premium for that legendary bokeh character and the f/1.5 aperture in a manual-focus package. If you shoot portraits and live for that specific, swirly Biotar look, this might be your only option, and the price reflects that niche appeal. But if you need autofocus, sharpness across the frame, or any kind of versatility, there are many modern lenses at or below this price that will give you more practical performance for your dollar.

vs Competition

Compared to something like the Meike 55mm F1.8 Pro, you're trading autofocus, close-focus ability, and likely better overall sharpness (Meike's optical score is probably higher) for the Biotar's unique bokeh. Against the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 Z, you're giving up a wider focal length, AF, and a much lower price for, again, that special rendering. The Panasonic 14-140mm is in a different universe of versatility but can't touch the f/1.5 aperture or bokeh. This lens doesn't compete on specs; it competes on feel. The numbers show the Viltrox and Meike are more versatile and capable in most metrics, but they can't replicate the 96th-percentile bokeh.

Verdict

This is a recommendation with a giant asterisk. If your portrait work craves that specific, creamy, character-rich bokeh and you don't mind manual focus, the Biotar 58mm f/1.5 II delivers that in spades, backed by a 96th percentile ranking. The data is clear: it's a one-trick pony. But if that one trick is the exact trick you need, it's arguably the best pony for the job. For everyone else, especially given the $1199 price tag, a modern AF lens will be a sharper, faster, and more versatile tool.