1917 The Movie
1917 The Movie
Looking forward to seeing this WW1 movie at the cinema in January. Looks like a movie masterpiece.
''The sound design is off the hook — biplanes roar over us, deafeningly. The cinema seats shake. Much of the action is nail-biting.''
Official trailer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqNYrYUiMfg
Relatively Non spoiler review
https://www.empireonline.com/movies/reviews/1917-movie/
''The sound design is off the hook — biplanes roar over us, deafeningly. The cinema seats shake. Much of the action is nail-biting.''
Official trailer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqNYrYUiMfg
Relatively Non spoiler review
https://www.empireonline.com/movies/reviews/1917-movie/
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Re: 1917 The Movie
Apparently its filmed all in one shot.
Re: 1917 The Movie
Who wins????karatekid wrote:Looking forward to seeing this WW1 movie at the cinema in January. Looks like a movie masterpiece.
''The sound design is off the hook — biplanes roar over us, deafeningly. The cinema seats shake. Much of the action is nail-biting.''
Official trailer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqNYrYUiMfg
Relatively Non spoiler review
https://www.empireonline.com/movies/reviews/1917-movie/
Re: 1917 The Movie
I think you have misread the reviews. One of the scenes is 7 minutes long, which is unheard of nowadays.GodIsADeeJay81 wrote:Apparently its filmed all in one shot.
The review in the Times was really complimentary and gave it 5 stars, saying it wasn't quite the best war film ever, just.
Re: 1917 The Movie
Paths of Glory will take some beating.
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Re: 1917 The Movie
Saw it being filmed down the road (Salisbury Plain) but didn’t get a job as an extra
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Re: 1917 The Movie
Filmed all in one shot Haha.
Re: 1917 The Movie
I think it’s filmed to look like one long single shot. So presumably it’s effectively in real time, I.e. if the film is 100 minutes long it represents a single period of 100 minutes in the war.
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Re: 1917 The Movie
Does look good, my kind of film
Re: 1917 The Movie
ClaretAndJew wrote:Filmed all in one shot Haha.
Must be a long one shot film because it flips from day to night and back again on the trailer
Re: 1917 The Movie
I hope this helps to understand the one shot type of filming the movie employs.
Since Mendes couldn’t cut to, say, reaction shots during dialogue scenes, he began to realize that so much of the choice of how you shoot something is about what you're willing to allow to not be seen as much as to be seen.
“‘I don't think the audience needs to see that. They need to see that,’ he mused. “And it's not always the person talking who you want to have a counterpoint to that. So it forces you to make that fundamental editorial decision, which is actually, ‘I'm going to look away from who's speaking to the person who's listening’ or whatever. Those things have to be done on the day [of shooting] that you would normally be doing in the editing room. And once you've made the decision, it's amazing how the actors adapt, knowing, ‘O.K., I'm not on camera here so I'm going to wait a beat until I am on camera and then deliver this.’ And they do that instinctively too. That's why it's a dance.”
In Rope, Hitchcock would have to find ways to stop filming so his cameraman could change the film in the camera. “Somebody would walk towards the camera and it would wipe on the black of somebody walking,” said Deakins. “Then you'd cut and the character walks away from camera. It was meant to be a seamless cut. I mean, it was clever.” But the 1917 filmmakers wanted to avoid drawing any attention to the inevitable breaks between individual shots. Some of those breaks will be “tweaked” digitally to appear continuous, but others don’t even need that.
“For the most part it was in-camera, and obviously we paid specific attention to the end of the A shot and the beginning of the B shot to make sure that we had those plans,” continued Deakins. “We didn't want to every time do somebody walking up to the camera, and walking away from it. Some of them you don't need to do anything. … Some of [the cuts] just work. They just work. I've seen some of them just put together and they're just seamless already.”
Since Mendes couldn’t cut to, say, reaction shots during dialogue scenes, he began to realize that so much of the choice of how you shoot something is about what you're willing to allow to not be seen as much as to be seen.
“‘I don't think the audience needs to see that. They need to see that,’ he mused. “And it's not always the person talking who you want to have a counterpoint to that. So it forces you to make that fundamental editorial decision, which is actually, ‘I'm going to look away from who's speaking to the person who's listening’ or whatever. Those things have to be done on the day [of shooting] that you would normally be doing in the editing room. And once you've made the decision, it's amazing how the actors adapt, knowing, ‘O.K., I'm not on camera here so I'm going to wait a beat until I am on camera and then deliver this.’ And they do that instinctively too. That's why it's a dance.”
In Rope, Hitchcock would have to find ways to stop filming so his cameraman could change the film in the camera. “Somebody would walk towards the camera and it would wipe on the black of somebody walking,” said Deakins. “Then you'd cut and the character walks away from camera. It was meant to be a seamless cut. I mean, it was clever.” But the 1917 filmmakers wanted to avoid drawing any attention to the inevitable breaks between individual shots. Some of those breaks will be “tweaked” digitally to appear continuous, but others don’t even need that.
“For the most part it was in-camera, and obviously we paid specific attention to the end of the A shot and the beginning of the B shot to make sure that we had those plans,” continued Deakins. “We didn't want to every time do somebody walking up to the camera, and walking away from it. Some of them you don't need to do anything. … Some of [the cuts] just work. They just work. I've seen some of them just put together and they're just seamless already.”
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Re: 1917 The Movie
It is meant to look as if it is one long, uninterrupted shot. Obviously it wasn't all filmed in one single take, it is all stitched together with digital effects and editing. It takes them above and below ground, through areas that are deserted or through large-scale open-air battles.ClaretAndJew wrote:Filmed all in one shot Haha.
We haven't had a technical curiosity like this to get our teeth into since Gravity, I'm very much looking forward to this.
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Re: 1917 The Movie
Just out of interest, would you go to watch this kind of film with mates or misses?!
Re: 1917 The Movie
I'll take my two sons. Not my wife's kind of movie.
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Re: 1917 The Movie
My recent ex wouldn't watch it, but the one before her probably would.Alanstevensonsgloves wrote:Just out of interest, would you go to watch this kind of film with mates or misses?!
I'll be watching it with my two sons and their Uncle though.
Re: 1917 The Movie
This looks very good. I prefer the film reviews and recommendations on here over that annoying twerp of a critic on Radio 5.
Re: 1917 The Movie
Extra time and penalties!Bosscat wrote:Who wins????
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Re: 1917 The Movie
No, they turned up just before the end to hold the trophy up.Marty Dobson wrote:U.S.A
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Re: 1917 The Movie
Still in the balance. VAR still examining replaysBosscat wrote:Who wins????
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Re: 1917 The Movie
That's what the winners usually doBennyD wrote:No, they turned up just before the end to hold the trophy up.
Re: 1917 The Movie
Watched this yesterday. Great movie with fantastic camera work. Some shocking scenes of destruction on the battlefield and brings home the futility of war. 8/10
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Re: 1917 The Movie
The early VAR was called Versailles in those days.
Re: 1917 The Movie
Has anybody seen this film? Any opinions?
Re: 1917 The Movie
I enjoyed it too, well worth watching if it's your type of film but it's no Saving Private Ryan.
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Re: 1917 The Movie
I watched it at the Everyman in Clitheroe, a cracking cinema imo.
As stated before the cinematography is brilliant and really captures the essence of the Great War in, at parts, all its horrific glory.
It's a pretty basic tale of getting from A to B but that really doesn't matter imo as it's so well done and acted. You actually feel like you are part of the team sent on the mission.
There are nice little cameos littered throughout from some of these shores finest actors too which is a nice touch.
If you are expecting action packed slaughterfest akin to the opening salvo of Saving Private Ryan or the current trend employed by Superhero movies of action overkill it may leave you disappointed.
It's a solid film and I really enjoyed it tbh
9/10
As stated before the cinematography is brilliant and really captures the essence of the Great War in, at parts, all its horrific glory.
It's a pretty basic tale of getting from A to B but that really doesn't matter imo as it's so well done and acted. You actually feel like you are part of the team sent on the mission.
There are nice little cameos littered throughout from some of these shores finest actors too which is a nice touch.
If you are expecting action packed slaughterfest akin to the opening salvo of Saving Private Ryan or the current trend employed by Superhero movies of action overkill it may leave you disappointed.
It's a solid film and I really enjoyed it tbh
9/10
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Re: 1917 The Movie
I saw this on Monday and enjoyed the first half, but thought it lost its way after the bit where he gets out of the truck and crosses the bridge.
Technically very impressive though.
Technically very impressive though.
Re: 1917 The Movie
Some of the filming took place near where I live on Salisbury Plain. This time last year I was unable to use a regular walking route for several weeks due to the security arrangements for the production team's temporary offices etc.
The section that was definitely shot in this location is where the two soldiers emerge from woodland, pass through a little orchard and investigate the abandoned farm buildings. If you've seen the film you'll know the significance of this scene.
We went to see the film on Monday in Salisbury: I'm not a big fan of war films generally but this was rivetting, and the camera work superb.
1 photo shows my walk last May, with the French farm buildings visible at the top of the valley. The other shows the same walk last Tuesday, the French farm long gone now.
The section that was definitely shot in this location is where the two soldiers emerge from woodland, pass through a little orchard and investigate the abandoned farm buildings. If you've seen the film you'll know the significance of this scene.
We went to see the film on Monday in Salisbury: I'm not a big fan of war films generally but this was rivetting, and the camera work superb.
1 photo shows my walk last May, with the French farm buildings visible at the top of the valley. The other shows the same walk last Tuesday, the French farm long gone now.
Re: 1917 The Movie
Seen the film last week and thoroughly enjoyed it and so did the wife