{"id":10,"date":"2007-05-10T18:38:49","date_gmt":"2007-05-11T01:38:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/2007\/05\/10\/the-long-take-the-greatest-long-tracking-shots-in-cinema\/"},"modified":"2007-06-17T09:50:28","modified_gmt":"2007-06-17T16:50:28","slug":"the-long-take-the-greatest-long-tracking-shots-in-cinema","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2007\/05\/10\/the-long-take-the-greatest-long-tracking-shots-in-cinema\/","title":{"rendered":"THE LONG TAKE – The Greatest Long Tracking Shots in Cinema"},"content":{"rendered":"
PLEASE NOTE: I’m making edits and amendments to the list. Please see the bottom, for some of your additions which have been kindly forwarded to me in the comments. I’m only adding films that have youtube clips, so please send me those links. Thanks.<\/em><\/p>\n 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.<\/p>\n 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.<\/p>\n 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:<\/p>\n