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V10TDI
2008 January 2nd, 19:24
I saw this article on CNN (http://www.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/01/02/film.atonement.trackingshot.ap/index.html) and thought I'd share in the Artistic Discussion forum...any one have any thoughts to share on the long tracking shot?

:hv20-smilie72:

For The Lazy:


NEW YORK (AP) -- The story of the long tracking shot would be best told in one take.

Our camera could begin with Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil," pass through Jean-Luc Godard's "Week End" and Martin Scorsese's "Goodfellas" and finally arrive at the latest installment in the canon: Joe Wright's "Atonement."

Through cinema history, audacious, lengthy tracking shots -- single takes done with a moving (often audaciously moving) camera -- have captivated filmmakers and movie buffs who marvel at their grace and choreography. In a medium predicated on storytelling through the juxtaposition of images, the long tracking shot is the cinematic equivalent of a no-hitter in baseball: rare, untouched, and very difficult to pull off.

In the middle of "Atonement," a 5 1/2-minute shot unfolds as Robbie, a British WWII soldier (James McAvoy), comes upon France's Dunkirk beach, where the final point in the British retreat from the Germans is portrayed as a grim circus of defeat and chaos.

In the Ian McEwan novel from which the movie was adapted, the scene is described in just a few pages. McEwan writes: "It was a rout and this was its terminus." On film, though, it took a lot more doing.

The scene was composed with 1,000 extras, a number of horses and vehicles on the beach, and (digitally added) ships off the coast. It all cost a sizable chunk of the film's estimated $30 million production budget and had to be shot in one day.

That's how long the hundreds of extras were available for, and that small time frame is what initially drove Wright and his director of photography, Seamus McGarvey, to stage the single long shot, rather than squeeze in a dozen separate setups.

"It was conceived out of necessity," said Wright in a recent interview. "We had one day with the extras and then the small issue of the tide coming in and washing away the entire set."

While the tide was out and the light was right, Wright and his crew managed three and a half takes -- the fourth finally exhausting Steadicam operator Peter Robertson. (They used the third take.)

During production on other scenes, Robertson's course was mapped out, meandering through the shambled beach -- sometimes on foot, sometimes riding on a motorized cart.

"When we were making it, I didn't see it in the context of the classic tracking shot, or the history of great tracking shots," said Wright, whose "Pride & Prejudice" included a long shot, as did his British TV film "Charles II." "It felt much, much smaller than that."

But of course, the shot has been received precisely in that context.

Variety deputy editor Anne Thompson blogged: "This shot has its admirers and detractors. It's a stunning shot, but does it take the viewer out of the movie, or serve a dramatic purpose? ... I for one get a kick out of bravura shots like this, whether it's Martin Scorsese, Brian DePalma, Robert Altman, Orson Welles, Antonioni or Alfonso Cuaron."

Perhaps the highest possible praise for such cinematic devices would echo that of umpires in baseball -- they're doing their job well when no one even notices them.

New York Times film critic A.O. Scott, however, said the "Atonement" shot's only impression is: " 'Wow, that's quite a tracking shot,' when it should be 'My God, what a horrible experience that must have been.' "

Any discussion of tracking shots typically begins with Orson Welles' opening to 1958's "Touch of Evil," where Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh walk unknowingly alongside a car with explosives in its trunk.

Welles, by then a veteran director, had with director of photography Gregg Toland pioneered the use of deep focus on Welles' first film, 1941's "Citizen Kane." That meant more realism and fluidity for the camera, which could now present a foreground, middle ground and background. The apotheosis of this is reached in tracking shots that hold a film's realism for long periods.

"For the actors, they really enjoy them because you're in a situation where there's a fourth wall created," said Wright. "There's no area on the set they have to imagine; it's all in front of them."

Among the most famous is Godard's ten-minute shot in "Week End" in which a couple are stranded in a traffic jam, as well as Mikhail Kalatozov's acrobatic shot in 1964's "I Am Cuba." The conclusion to Michelangelo Antonioni's "The Passenger" (1975) is revered, as is Scorsese's legendary shot in "Goodfellas" where Ray Liotta and Lorraine Bracco enter the Copacabana.

Some films have attempted to push the limits of uncut film, beginning with Alfred Hitchcock's "Rope" (1948), which he had wanted to film in one take but settled for just ten. In 2002, Aleksandr Sokurov achieved Hitchcock's goal with "Russian Ark," a film that portrays three centuries of Russian history in one shot.

Many of these shots have become a matter of movie lore, and are often paid homage. Robert Altman composed an comic and highly self-reflexive eight-minute tracking shot to open "The Player" (1992) featuring characters discussing the "Touch of Evil" shot. In Doug Liman's "Swingers" (1996), his characters worshipfully chat about Scorsese's "Goodfellas" achievement.

Technology has helped a new generation of filmmakers accomplish increasingly daring tracking shots, particularly with the use of Steadicams. Alfonso Cuaron's "Childen of Men" (2006) featured several lengthy shots, including a daring Steadicam- and crane-aided shot during a shoot-out.

"One has to completely bow to the fact that when Orson Welles did the `Touch of Evil' shot, he didn't have a Steadicam," said Wright. "Steadicams have totally liberated the tracking shot."

Paul Thomas Anderson has made the tracking shot a trademark of his, particularly in "Boogie Nights" (1997) and "Magnolia" (1999). His new, acclaimed "There Will Be Blood" is shot in a different style, but does contain one shot where the camera tracks Daniel Day-Lewis's character carrying his injured child.

"It's only impressive because Daniel could actually carry that boy for that long," joked Anderson in an interview.

The director, a great fan and friend to the late Altman, said a guiding ethos of is to have fewer cuts: "The more things can be condensed or simple is ideal," he said.

Discussing the appeal of the tracking shot, Anderson said: "You're after one thing, which is nice, as opposed to 10 or 15 small things when you have to chop it up. You get that terrific feeling at the end of it, like `We did it. We got it.' Or you don't."

Digital editing, Anderson said, has given him a new perspective on the length of his takes.

"You really see the length of your shots. It's kind of hilarious. You sort of look at the graph and it chops along, chops along, then flatlines for a long time. You see a movie as a graph."

For Wright's next film, "The Soloist," which is now in preproduction, he acknowledges one scene is tempting to shoot in one long take, but was reluctant to do it "just for the sake of doing them."

Still, the long tracking shot remains a tantalizing tool and exhibit of cinematic virtuosity.

"Filmmaking by nature is about montage and in a way there's something quite rebellious about the long tracking shot," said Wright. "I just think they're a wonderful challenge and a wonderful game."

Erik Bien
2008 January 2nd, 19:39
For a look at one of the current state-of-the-art Steadicams and what it can do, check out this link (http://www.mk-v.com/ar-site/revolution-video.html).

jackinthebox
2008 January 2nd, 20:57
I wish I was never introduced to the concept of a long tracking shot. I always think "and here's the long tracking shot" since becoming aware. Though, like the article mentions, umpires are doing their job well when you don't notice them.

mattias
2008 January 2nd, 21:33
i love them and always try to include them in my films when there's a sequence that's suitable. whenever people are walking, often through several locations, it's a good idea to try. the sense of pace, geography and time you get from it is unbeatable. i've never quite pulled it off, but it never hurts to try since you can just cut the scene up and some of the magic will usually still be there.

i did one where a guy was exiting his apartment, walked into the street, then to the subway and down the stairs. the plan was to use a glidecam, follow him into the street, sit down in the back of a van that just started driving, tracking in front of him pacing down the sidewalk, then jumping off and following him into the subway. the glidecam guy didn't arrive, so we did it handheld. we managed to pull it off but it wasn't "interesting" enough all the way so i cut most of it out. you can see some of it, the van part, in the teaser trailer for "i love you" on my website.

/matt

mattias
2008 January 2nd, 21:54
For a look at one of the current state-of-the-art Steadicams and what it can do, check out this link (http://www.mk-v.com/ar-site/revolution-video.html).

that was more than cool. i wonder if somebody has them for rent in scandinavia. i'm very much into jib cranes right now, and this is basically like mounting one on a steadicam. insane.

/matt

JamesW
2008 January 2nd, 22:01
I loved the West Wing for some the great hallway shots that seemed to last for minutes, it can really add the right pace to a scene.

ESTEBEVERDE
2008 January 2nd, 23:31
This (http://www.dvxuser.com/V6/showthread.php?t=119519) is all done in one take.

This, on the other hand, is the pièce de résistance (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0318034/)

tgiffilms
2008 January 2nd, 23:45
cool article. The best one take I've seen that I can remember is the one in P.T Anderson's Magnolia. It's a great shot, wish they had a copy of it on youtube. Either that or some of Gondry's one takes or even Cloney's in A Confessions of a Dangerous mind, they're not as long but they're well coreographed.

It's important to note though, in post you can combine multiple shots together to appear as one. Here's an example of a director/VFX artist that did it. It's not actually one take, its three.

SCAD shorts: Dollar Bill Greenburg- http://youtube.com/watch?v=B1sDOjQvwmI

Mr H
2008 January 3rd, 15:56
The 1997 heist film "Running Time" is presented as one continuous 70 min take. If I recall correctly, there are actually 3 edits, but are done well enough that the viewer doesn't notice. Wasn't a bad movie either.

icarusi
2008 January 3rd, 17:11
The 1997 heist film "Running Time" is presented as one continuous 70 min take. If I recall correctly, there are actually 3 edits, but are done well enough that the viewer doesn't notice. Wasn't a bad movie either.
There's a Russian film 'Russian Ark' shot in the Hermitage museum which is a (IIRC) a 90minute single shot. (IIRC) It's digital as there isn't a fim camera which could take that much film even if you could move it.

mattias
2008 January 3rd, 17:51
sure, long tracking shots are by definition done in one take, but doing things in one take isn't the same as a doing a long tracking shot. don't you have any input on why they are cool, how they can be made even cooler, why sometimes they're such a drag, and so on? examples of films are cool but only if describe the shots and what about them. i was never much into compiling lists.

/matt

Erik Bien
2008 January 3rd, 17:53
Matt,

I knew there was a reason I always liked you ...

:hv20-smilie70:

Royal Tee
2008 January 9th, 00:43
There's a Russian film 'Russian Ark' shot in the Hermitage museum which is a (IIRC) a 90minute single shot. (IIRC) It's digital as there isn't a fim camera which could take that much film even if you could move it.

SEE: Post #7 :hv20-smilie77:

icarusi
2008 January 9th, 12:30
SEE: Post #7 :hv20-smilie77:The DVD extras on how they did it are worth checking too. IIRC they had the building for a 'long weekend' and were running low on time, natural light, tape and batteries if the final take hadn't been good. It's at my local library so may also be at yours.