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Blog EntryMissread - Kings of Convenience, ..Oct 3, '07 5:04 AM
for everyone

some genius of them...

Kings of Convenience are an indie folk-pop duo from Bergen, Norway. Consisting of Erlend Øye and Eirik Glambek Bøe, the musical group is known for their delicate tunes, calming voices, and intricately subtle guitar melodies. Both Øye and Bøe sing in their tracks, and both of them compose.untill now, they are still in independent lable for their music.. and I really2 like all of their songs..

 

 

 

 

Missread, a single from the last album..and a flick story about a friends.. in this case, i realy2 love their video clips.. this is another long track shot record..full of long track and a reality scene is true there.. there is a crew that bring some chairs for erlan and eirik.. really2 beautifull.. enjoy this video clips..i don't know who te director of this video clip, but  :) enjoy one long track shot of full video clip..

 

Download this Film (don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)

enjoy.. :)


Blog EntryTen Minutes Older - extreme compilation :)Sep 25, '07 10:23 AM
for everyone
Ten Minutes Older

Ten Minutes Older  the great film compilation in 2002, that a lot of cool and spartan directors directed there in each episode. There is 2 segment of this filn, The Trumpet and The Ciello.

The Ciello

Eight master directors of world cinema combine forces for this omnibus film that focuses cumulatively on the subject of time. Bookended by cello interludes, Ten Minutes Older: The Cello presents just one parameter to each of its filmmakers: no final entry can be more or less than ten minutes long. The resulting films run the gamut of styles and moods, beginning with Bernardo Bertolucci's Histoire d'Eaux, which presents an Indian fable about a mentor's impatience. In Mike Figgis' entry About Time 2, the director continues with the experimental structure he pioneered in Timecode; similarly, Jean-Luc Godard uses his time allotment to present a fractured series of clips on youth, death, and love. Another non-narrative entry, Volker Schlöndorff's The Enlightenment presents a series of images on racism. Claire Denis' effort Vers Nancy chronicles a philosophical discussion on time between a teacher and student on a train ride; in Jirí Menzel's Ten Minutes After, the effects of time on aging Czech actor Rudolf Hrusinsky are documented. In perhaps the film's most narrative-oriented segment, director Michael Radford offers up a sci-fi vision of an astronaut returning to earth to find that his son has aged faster than he has. Ten Minutes Older: The Cello is a companion piece to 2002's Ten Minutes Older: The Trumpet, which aired in the U.S. on the Showtime cable network.

The Trumpet

Seven internationally respected filmmakers offer different perspectives on time and fate — some witty, some somber — in this omnibus film, with the stories linked by performances from jazz great Hugh Masekela. Dogs Have No Hell by Aki Kaurismaki follows one man's unusual journey as he celebrates getting out of jail by travelling to Siberia in search of a wife. Victor Erice directed the impressionistic Lifeline, in which a family of Spanish farmers try to help an infant who has fallen ill. Werner Herzog visits the Uru Eus tribe of South America — believed to have been the last unknown indigenous people on earth prior to their discover in 1981 — and explores the often sad toll their discovery has taken upon them in Ten Thousand Years Older. Chloe Sevigny plays an film actress waiting out a ten-minute break in her trailer in Int. Trailer. Night, directed by Jim Jarmusch. Wim Wedners contributes Twelve Miles to Trona, in which a young man, dazed and ill, tries to drive himself to a doctor through a barren desert. Spike Lee looks into the Florida vote-counting scandal, and how Al Gore's assistants and supporters reacted to it, in the short documentary We Wuz Robbed. And in 100 Flowers Hidden Deep, directed by Chen Kaige, a delusional elderly man is convinced his furniture still stands in the vacant lot where his home used to be, and he persuades workers to help him move it away to safety.

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here is the episode of Godard's work, Jean-Luc Godard - Dans le noir du temps  one of The Ciello session with english subtitles.

Jean-Luc Godard uses his time allotment to present a fractured series of clips on youth, death, and love. just like origins and deaths, in his manifesto of histoire du cinema.

Download this Film (don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)

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here's Jim Jarmusch's - INT. Trailer. Night. One of The Trumpet session. :) some experimental from him about "film" itself.

Download this Film (don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)

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here's Victor Erice - Lifelines, in which a family of Spanish farmers try to help an infant who has fallen ill One of The Trumpet sessions

Download this Film (don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)

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here's Wim Wedners contributes Twelve Miles to Trona, in which a young man, dazed and ill, tries to drive himself to a doctor through a barren desert. one of The Trumpet Session

Download this Film (don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)

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:) cheers.. and enjoy it


Blog EntryEROS - a tryptich about eroticismSep 25, '07 10:15 AM
for everyone

Eros

is a triptych about eroticism and desire by directors Wong Kar Wai, Steven Soderbergh and Michelangelo Antonioni. The film also serves as an homage by the two younger directors to Antonioni, who has informed and inspired their work.

Three directors from disparate cultures put love and sexuality under the spotlight. Wong Kar Wai's The Hand stars Gong Li as a 1960s high-end call girl in an impossible love affair with her tailor. Steven Soderbergh's Equilibrium stars Robert Downey, Jr. as an advertising executive under enormous pressure at work. During visits to his psychiatrist (Alan Arkin), they delve into the possible reasons why his stress seems to manifest itself in a recurring erotic dream. Michelangelo Antonioni's The Dangerous Thread of Things is the story of a ménage-a-trois between a couple and a young woman on the coast of Tuscany.

"For me the experience of shooting The Hand was a very intense and intimate one. We began to work on the project in 2003, during the SARS epidemic. The original plan was to shoot in Shanghai. Owing to the epidemic, it had to be revoked. Because of travel restriction, we could only shoot in Hong Kong and Macau. We shot with a very basic crew as many had decided to leave the inflicted area. We tried to shoot as fast as we could. The last two days of shooting were done in a continuous 48-hour shift. Each day, we went through our daily ritual of cleansing our hands and putting on masks. Upon the advice of health authorities, we tried to avoid any physical contact with one another. This situation inspired me to make a film about the act of 'touch.' What motivated me to do this film was Michelangelo Antonioni–who had been the guiding light for me as well as filmmakers of my generation. I am deeply honored to have participated in this project. And, I must also thank Ms. Gong Li, Mr. Chang Chen and the rest of the cast and crew for their unrelenting and generous support for the film."

– Wong Kar Wai

 

"I wanted my name on a poster with Michelangelo Antonioni."

–Steven Soderbergh

 

Here is The Hands by Wong Kar Wai, The Hands.. bring erotica but not pleasure.. here's the kar wai magic to bring the erotica.. :) kar wai not forget about the east culture . With the stars Gong Li as a 1960s high-end call girl in an impossible love affair with her tailor

it splitted in 5 part. enjoy :)

part 1

 

 

part 2

 

 

part 3

 

 

part 4

 

 

part 5

 

 

Download : Part1 | Part2 | Part3 | Part4 | Part5
don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)


Blog EntryBuilding no.7 - Steven Soderbergh experimentalSep 25, '07 10:13 AM
for everyone

Steven Andrew Soderbergh, who directed Oceans eleven, until thirteen, sex lies and videotape also alot of another features fiction.. now has shot his experimental film by himself.

Building no.7 , a short experimental film created by soderbergh. homage to Godards Alphaville, soderbergh created the true vision about film and video itself and assuming about video like histoires Du Cinema project, Soderbergh try to make the argument with his eye about godard... :) some silly point from soderbergh maybe.. for me .. it's a silly point.. but enjoy this.. Building no.7.

 

Download this Film (don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)

enjoy.. :)


Blog EntryVincent - 1982 Tim Burton MasterpieceSep 25, '07 10:12 AM
for everyone

Vincent visualizes his nightmarish fantasies: his aunt dipped in wax, his beautiful wife buried alive, and his dog Abacrombie transformed into a horrible zombie. But at every turn he is reminded by his mother that, “You’re not Vincent Price, you’re Vincent Malloy. You’re not tormented, you’re just a young boy.” The film ends with a tongue-in-cheek citation of Poe’s “The Raven“: “And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor, Shall be lifted . . .Nevermore!” Thus, in a humorous way, the boy Vincent shares with the protagonist of the poem–the student trying to forget his lost Lenore–what Poe himself described as the “human thirst for self torture . . the luxury of sorrow,” as he melodramatically indulges his dark fantasies. Vincent is for Burton the same sort of indulgence, a chance to represent himself on the screen as the tortured boy/outsider/artist. He characterizes Vincent as an artist by associating him with both the easel and the quill pen. Isolated and misunderstood in the grand tradition of the romantic artist, Vincent engages the darker side of life via the screen personae of Vincent Price, a figure associated with Poe through his roles in Roger Corman’s Poe films of the 1960s.

The film is also an early stylistic benchmark for Burton, whose collaboration with Heinrichs established a pattern of combining 2D and 3D animation within a single film. Heinrichs, who has since collaborated with Burton as associate producer (Frankenweenine) and production designer (Edward Scissorhands, Nightmare Before Christmas), argues that Vincent was a breakthrough project “that taught Tim and me that you can combine the really graphic look of a two-dimensional picture with something that works in three dimensions.” The melding of these two modes of animation is found throughout the film, and endures as a stylistic signature in Burton’s later work. Heinrichs says that this notion of combining dimensional and flat animation was suggested by the three-dimensional models that Disney used to provide its animators as reference material.

The film’s combination of 2D and 3D methods is foregrounded by its use of black and white. Without the use of color to establish spatial separation and define areas of screen space, the combination of 2D and 3D spatial representations is distilled and clarified. Black and white also reinforces the binary juxtapositions throughout the film: Burton effectively opposes light or high key scenes for Vincent’s normal childhood with dark or low key scenes for his imagined torments.

 

Download this Film (don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)

enjoy.. :)


Man With The Movie Camera - 1929 Dziga Vertov masterpiece

Soviet Union 1929. Production Company: Vufku. Director: Dziga Vertov. Photography: Mihail Kaufman. Editing: Dziga Vertov, Jelizaveta Svilova

Dziga Vertov, one of many film icons that famouses as Sergei Eisesnstein breaking the documentary movement on his first breaktrough. The Director who known with the theory about taking picture and then write the story after the picture taken.

in This film he talk much about life and society of life in his own velocity.. enjoy this part..

Part 1


 

Part 2


 

Download Part 1 | Download Part 2

(don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)


Blog EntryGodard's Weekend - 400 feet full ShotSep 10, '07 10:45 AM
for everyone

Weekend - 1967 Godard masterpiece

JeanLuc Godard, alone FilmMaker that always make his own cinematic law being full of confidence to bring the reality Ideology in his film,Weekend. The famous 400feet full long track shot is very amazing.. this is those long shot that titled Action Musicale in that film..

this scene also called crossing the farm.. simple talk about different music and how godard very impression with mozart and he bring it on that scene just like an anecdot,... if we seen this scene.. just see there a lot of directing but it also came with a reality of life.. sound of dialogue is present alot of pictures and it's only a dialoge the piano player with his beautiful lady who being attracted with his piano playing..

actually in vivre sa vie, Godard do his long track shot too but in weekend, this long shoot is very impression with itself explanation and see the music background, the polyphonic tones, and every camera stop there always a message that Godard try to tell about life itself.

enjoy it..

download this Video ( don't forget to save it as .FLV and rename the get_video name of file)


Blog EntryLa JeTee - 1961 chrisMarker masterpieceSep 10, '07 10:03 AM
for everyone
La JeTee - 1961 chris Marker masterpiece
 
"Nothing tells memories from ordinary moments, only afterwards do they claim rememberance on account of their scars."

A short film that is a reflection about time, happiness and love, entirely composed of b&w static shots. La Jetee, is one of the most enigmatic and thought provoking science fiction films ever made.
The original French version should be available around here, but the English narrator got something captivating and laconic in his voice, too.
 
12 Monkeys is the remake for this film... that's claimed from the diector of 12Monkeys.. but for me, Ted not sure bout his apreciation of La Jetee and 12Monkeys just a sensations that hollywood viewing his capability of a giant blockbuster.. coz, in La Jetee, we've seen a lot of fantasi and reality labyrinth .. and also a depth message from chrisMarker for viewing his capability of it's own story... un Photo Roman.. that statement is dept and more deep if we called a film is motion capture... stillFrame photo also can make our mind motioning those pictures in ourselves memory and mind.. that's the point of Marker by viewing this film.. he use 35mm movie camera, but he choose to make this film looks like photo slide and he claimed that he's under lowBudget.. but if we take a look again scene by scene, this film is full of directing and reconstruction.. about museum, pierr itself, also a lot of dramatic events.. i think this film is not lowBudget.. but however chrisMarker makes a great movement in that year.. beside fritz lang, truffaut,dzigaVertov and the other of film icons.. :)

-mbek-

here is LaJetee in English naration.. it splitted in 3 part.. just for fast viewing

Part 1

Part 2


 

Part 3


 

 

Download La Jetee part - 1 | Download La Jetee part - 2 | Download La Jetee part - 3

(don't forget to save as .FLV files and rename of get_video name of file name that you download ..)


THE LONG TAKE

The Greatest Long Tracking Shots in Cinema


PLEASE NOTE: YouTube has taken many of the clips off since this original post. I will keep checking for repostings. If you have links for me, please put them in the comments section. Thanks.

In a director’s cinematic bag of tricks the long tracking shot is the boldest way of making a statement. It’s the flashiest and most attention-grabbing egotistical way of flexing one’s muscle. In most cases it's a narcissistic maneuver, “look-at-me” filming technique, but rare ones, the best ones, serve to reflect and further the story in a way that can’t be reflected with traditional editing.

Let’s examine specifically the long ‘tracking’ take which involves extensive and complicated movements of the camera. The fact is filmmakers have been doing long takes since the medium was invented. In fact the first films didn’t have any edits. Perhaps the first most notable film to use long unedited takes for storytelling purposes was Alfred Hitchcock’s “Rope” (1948) which was an entire film shot in real time created by seamless cutting together a series of long 8-10 mins shots made to look like one. In 1948 it was a bold and unprecedented experiment for Hitchcock. The film works because its takes place entirely in one room for 80 minutes, so there was limited movement and lighting changes.

The difficulty arises when the camera is forced to move which complicates the logistics ie. Focus changes, lighting changes and hiding production equipment. And so perhaps the first true, universally-accepted “long tracking shot” is Orson Welles’ opening shot in “Touch of Evil” (1958). This shot was a large step up from Hitchcock’s experiment because of the extensive movement of the camera. Let’s start the list with this masterful one:

Touch of Evil (1958) – The Opening Shot - dir. Orson Welles

This shot is perhaps the greatest, because it actually has a specific purpose to its length. The shot starts on a bomb being placed in the trunk of a car. The camera follows the car into the street. As the camera moves back we pickup Charlton Heston walking with his date. Though we’re concentrating on Heston, subliminally, as the audience, the bomb is still in our minds. The sheer length of the take heightens the tension for the payoff at the end. It’s important to note that on its first release Universal placed the opening credits over the shot, which severely retracted from its power and suspense. In a later re-release Welles original intention of the scene was re-instated.





Goodfellas (1990) – The Copacabana – dir. Martin Scorsese

The other granddaddy of the long tracking shot is Ray Liotta and Lorraine Bracco’s walk through the Copacabana in “Goodfellas”. This shot’s serves to put the audience in the point of view of Karen, who is about to be swept off her feet by the temptation of the gangster lifestyle. This introduction to Henry’s world will counterpoint their eventual downfall later in the film. The movement of the camera through the tight spaces and long corridors while maintaining constant dialogue makes this shot an impressive maneuver and a benchmark in cinema.




Boogie Nights (1997) – The Opening Shot in the Club – dir. Paul Thomas Anderson

All of PT Anderson’s films have a bit (sometimes a lot) of Martin Scorsese in them. Boogie Nights is no exception. The opening shot which starts on a marquee and moves down the street and into a 70’s disco serves to introduce to us the ensemble characters. The shot ends on Mark Wahlberg moving in slo-motion triumphantly introducing Anderson’s star character. As a side note, it was rumoured PT Anderson specifically started the shot on the marquee which reads the title of the movie, to make it impossible for the studio to re-title the movie, which was done with his first film – “Hard Eight” (aka “Sydney”).




Raging Bull (1980) – Pesci and De Niro Walking to the Fight – dir. Martin Scorsese

No youtube clips are online yet for this shot, so I’ll describe it. Starting on Jake La Motta and his brother exiting their dressing room the camera follows them down the hall to the arena, where La Motta is to face the Middleweight Champion for the first time. The shot starts in front the brothers as they make their way through the winding corridors and tunnels, then the camera moves in behind as they enter the arena. As they make their way through the cheering crowd and into the ring, the camera lifts in the air to capture the entire arena in a wide shot. In 1980 the steadycam was a new invention, but Scorsese obviously used it to its full potential as soon as he could get his hands on it. This great shot serves the story because it highlights the greatest moment for La Motta – the fight which won him the Middleweight belt.


Oldboy (2003) – The Fight with the Hammer – dir. Chan Wook Park
<BR>Perhaps not grandiose in its flare or style - the camera only moves back and forth on one axis - but the impact of the action on screen is awe-inspiring. Fight scenes are usually choreographed around the camera so the punches, kicks and falls appear real and violent. But in one majestic tracking shot Chan Wook Park puts to shame most other fight scenes. It’s a dozen baddies with just one guy, one shot… and one hammer.

BTW: The actual long shot doesn’t start until the 30 sec mark of this clip:



The Player (1992) – The Opening Shot – dir. Robert Altman

Another one of the greats. Altman was actually sending up, or paying homage to “Touch of Evil” and actually references it in the dialogue. The shot takes place entirely outside on the grounds of a Hollywood studio. The camera tracks, and picks up pieces of conversation from several characters, all setting up and providing the backstory for the film. Altman innovatively overlaps the conversations as he moves from one conversation to the next. He frames the star, Tim Robbins, in an awkward shot through an obscured window to his office. Robbins, as Griffin Mill, is taking a pitch from Buck Henry (writer of “The Graduate”) for “The Graduate 2”. Simply hilarious.




Magnolia (1999) – Entering the Studio – dir. Paul Thomas Anderson

This shot doesn’t quite have the dramatic impact of “Touch of Evil”, “Goodfellas,” or even “Boogie Nights”, but it’s still a marvel. Anderson combines the techniques of Scorsese and Altman to create a dizzying tour of the television studio where much of the drama will go down. It’s raining and Stanley Spector and his dad are late for their game show taping. It’s a tense sequence which moves at a quick pace with much help from Jon Brion’s hypnotic music cue.





I Am Cuba (1964) – The Rooftop – dir. Mikael Kalatozov

There are half a dozen shots in this film which would make this list. Youtube happens to have the magnificent rooftop shot, which introduces the decadent lifestyle of the Cuban upper class. This shot is important because it provides counterpoint up the plight of the poor farmers and working class Cubans whom we will see in the next scene. Not only is it beautiful but it’s so bold that the shot ends with the camera following a woman into the pool and under the water.

The other shot from the film I would have included is the parade sequence which actually covers a Cuban demonstration by moving up a building, crossing the street in midair, through the top floor of a cigar rolling manufacturer and out the window again moving through mid air. I’m tired just writing this.

Note: This clip has a different soundscape, but you can still see the shot:



Children of Men (2006) – The Car Chase – dir. Alfonso Cuaron

Please don’t watch this clip if you haven’t seen the film as it contains major spoilers. Good, now that we got that out of the way, let’s discuss the magnificent chase between Clive Owen and the bunch driving away from the vicious marauders. The shot spins around to show all the characters fighting off the assailants as they drive backwards, avoid bullets and spears etc. No effects were used to create the shot other than a specially rigged car which allowed the camera to hang suspended from the roof and spin and move to capture everyone's reactions. This shot is one of a series of long extended takes in the film – equally impressive is the rescue of the baby in the refugee camp at the end of the film.

Please note, the car scene has been removed since this original post. Therefore, I've included the long take gunfight scene - again spoilers ahead:



Hard Boiled (1992) – The Hospital Shootout – dir. John Woo

During the shooting of “Hard Boiled”, towards the end of a long series of days at the hospital, John Woo realized he was running out of time to shoot the remainder of the action sequences. He decided to ‘compromise’ and shoot the remainder of his scene in one shot, the result is the John Woo version of the long take. It’s almost unbelievable the carnage, gunshots, and explosions he creates with just one shot of the camera. You just have to see it to believe it.




The Protector aka Tom yum goong (2006) - Running Up the Staircase dir. Prachya Pinkaew

It’s no “Goodfellas” that’s for sure, in fact the scene is just ridiculous, but the sight of Tony Jaa leaping up the circular staircase, and throwing guys off the side and down the stairs is just so satisfying and audacious it’s worthy of inclusion on the same list as “Touch of Evil” or “Goodfellas”. Wow. Again, you have to see it to believe it.





Carlito’s Way (1993) – The Subway Chase - dir. Brian De Palma

Brian De Palma has used his trump card too many times (ie.“Bonfire of the Vanities”, “Mission to Mars”, “Snake Eyes”) and so I’m inclined to discount his entries. But “Carlito’s Way” is one of the great long take shots. The shot follows a chase between Al Pacino’s character in flight from a trio of mobsters in the NY Subway system. It’s magnificent choreography punctuated by Patrick’s Doyle grand score. Unfortunately no youtube footage exists yet.


Russian Ark (2002) – The Whole Damn Movie – dir. Aleksandr Sokurov

Using a sophisticated High Definition camera, Sokurov was able to do what Hitchcock originally wanted to do - stage an entire movie in one shot. “The Russian Ark” is more an artistic experiment than a traditional narrative film, and technically, it’s an achievement, but only a few occasions in the 96-minute running time does the film actually achieve the grandeur the storyline implies. But when it does, it is magnificent – you just have to sit through the really boring parts.

Here’s 10 mins of it:




The Passenger (1975) – Locke’s Death – dir. Michelangelo Antonioni
Warning this clip contains spoilers. A rare feat is a final long take shot. “The Passenger’s” final shot is a 7-min long opus which starts inside a hotel room, where we see Jack Nicholson’s character lying on a bed, the camera then pushes in to catch the action outside. It actually goes through the window and outside into the courtyard. By the end of the shot, the camera has turned itself around and is looking into the room where we discover Jack, while out of our sight, has just been murdered. It’s one of the more sly and devious long take shots of this list.





Of course dozens of other films have used long takes including Gasper Noe’s “Irreversible”, Godard’s “Weekend”, and many of Tarkovsky’s and Theo Angelopolis’s films. This is by no means comprehensive. Please chime in your favourites.

Thanks.

ADDITIONS AND AMENDMENTS:

Due to the overwhelming responses I've added some more clips. Please see below.

Satantango (1994) Walking to the Police Station dir. Bela Tarr

Bela Tarr is a master, and sadly I'm not familiar enough of the work to provide ample commentary, but this clip is a beautiful shot:





Weekend (1967) Tracking Across the Farm Dir. Jean-Luc Godard


Jean-Luc Godard's classic, "Weekend" features a series of long tracking shots, as a kind reader pointed out, 'before it was in vogue'. Check this one out.









Breaking News (2004) – The opening shootout - Dir. Johnny To

This highly stylized crime classic opens with a wild shoot out with the police, of course, all in one take. Shades of De Palma on this one.




Strange Days (1995) – The Opening POV Chase – Dir. Kathryn Bigelow

Kathryn’s Bigelow’s opening shot is taken from the POV of a robber escaping a robbery. It’s entirely handheld and therefore very jittery and nausea-induces. But it’s lengthy. Judge for yourself.





Nostalghia (1983) – Carrying the Candle – Dir. Andrei Tarkovsky

The Russians/Soviets seem to love their long takes. Here’s a head-turner from Tarkovsky’s “Nostalghia”, which features a man’s numerous attempts to carry a lit candle across a courtyard. It’s not technically amazing, but it’s fascinating how it draws you in. It’s a remarkable example of determination.






Elephant (2003) – John's Walk Through the Halls and Outside – Dir. Gus Van Sant

Elephant has about a dozen long steadycam shots. Here is a key shot, from the brilliant Harris Savides, which shows John walking through the halls and then outside the school. The movement and camera exposure from inside to outside is seemless. Potential SPOILERS here as well.






Kill Bill Vol 1 (2003) – The 5,6,7,8’s – Dir. Quentin Tarantino


Here’s another one of Tarantino’s De Palma homages – the famous 5,6,7,8’s shot. Robert Richardson is at the helm photographically on this one. Enjoy.






Serenity (2005) – The Opening Credits/Walk Though the Ship – Dir. Joss Whedon

By popular demand, here’s the opening of “Serenity”. Capt Mal starts out in the cockpit, then moves back through the rest of the ship introducing us to all the characters. A well-hidden cut occurs midway, but it’s two impressive long takes put together.



Snake Eyes (1998) - The Opening - Dir. Brian De Palma

Ok Ok Ok. I really dislike this film, but people wanted this shot up here. Here's 10 minutes of the opening of Snake Eyes, whose opening shot lasts 20mins or so - too long for a 1000 mag of film, so I think there's a cut in there.





Great Expectations (1999) Kissing in the Rain – Dir. Alfonso Cuaron

Alfonso loves his long takes. This one cleverly spliced a few shots together, but is a great moment nonetheless. Enjoy.





Nine Lives (2005) - William Fichtner Sequence – Dir. Rodrigo Garcia

Rodrigo Garcia’s “Nine Lives” is composed of nine different each showing a part of a woman's life. This one features the great character actor William Fichtner showcased like he should.






Irreversible (2002 ) – At the Club - Dir. Gaspar Noé


Gaspar Noé’s notorious film with Vincent Cassel and Monica Belluci. Here are a couple of segments mended together over a span of a full day and night. All segments are long tracking shots. Warning this clip contains some graphic material. Viewer discreti…. Ahh just watch it, it won’t kill you.






Werckmeister Harmonies (2000) - The Hospital Riot - Dir. Bela Tarr

Just watch your jaw drop with this climatic scene (shot) from "Werckmeister Harmonies". This may contain spoilers as it comes towards the end of the film. But there's no shocks or twist, just one amazing shot. Enjoy






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