The Thief (1952) - no dialogue! Rumble Fish (1983) - all in black & white, apart from the fish! Darkness In Tallinn (1993) - a great Estonian thriller, where something (don't want to spoil it) totally unexpected happens partway through... Russian Ark (2002) - all done in one take (at the 3rd attempt, though they did re-dub some sound later) with over 2,000 actors and 3 orchestras!
Run Lola Run. Three different versions of the same time period. Brilliant film too.
Have to agree. Great soundtrack too, and probably the best film I watched in school (and it wasnt one of those last day of term classes, a real lesson day)
I remember Paul Merton talking about a film on Room 101. I think it was Stephen Fry wanted to put pretentious film / art critics into Room 101 and Merton recalled a critic lauding a film for daring to go from colour to black and white.
Apparently the fact was that the film makers ran out of colour film
I remember Paul Merton talking about a film on Room 101. I think it was Stephen Fry wanted to put pretentious film / art critics into Room 101 and Merton recalled a critic lauding a film for daring to go from colour to black and white.
Apparently the fact was that the film makers ran out of colour film
Sounds like they mean Lindsay Anderson's If....(1968). A very great film indeed.
However, according to IMDB:
Contrary to the story that says some scenes of the film are in black-and-white instead of color because the production company was running short of money and saved money by having some scenes processed in monochrome, according to interviews with Malcolm McDowell, Lindsay Anderson and the cameraman, they first shot the scenes in the school chapel in monochrome because they had to use natural light that came in through the big stained-glass window, requiring high-speed film. The high-speed color stock they tested was very grainy and the constantly-shifting color values due to the angle of the light through the stained glass made it impossible to color-correct, as well. So they decided to shoot those scenes in monochrome, and, when he saw the dailies, Anderson liked the way that it "broke up the surface of the film", and decided to insert other monochrome scenes more or less at random, to help disorient the viewer as the film slipped from realism to fantasy.
The first ever horror film to be shot in one continuous take, which took the production team 36 attempts to get the first usable cut.
The film producers ended up securing two usable takes and decided to make both available for release, providing an entire alternate version of the film.
Blue is the twelfth and final feature film by director Derek Jarman, released four months before his death from AIDS-related complications. Such complications had already rendered him partially blind at the time of the film's release.
The film was his last testament as a film-maker, and consists of a single shot of saturated blue colour filling the screen, as background to a soundtrack where Jarman's and some of his favourite actors' narration describes his life and vision.
Empire is a 1964 silent, black-and-white film made by Andy Warhol. It consists of eight hours and five minutes of continuous slow motion footage of the Empire State Building in New York City. Abridged showings of the film were never allowed, and supposedly the very unwatchability of the film was an important part of the reason the film was created.
"Conversations' innovation in split screen is the juxtaposition of shot and reverse shot of two actors in the same take, captured with two cameras, for the entire movie. The film represents a new kind of viewing experience that enlists the audience as a perceptual editor. The filmmakers allow the viewer to choose how they watch the film, following either character or both simultaneously. Seeing both characters act and react in real time lets the audience follow the emotional experience of the characters without interruption." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversations_with_Other_Women
How about films shot in just one location . Such as Buried and Devil?. Also Life in a Day was pretty groudbreaking and innovative.
How about Sleuth? Not all in one place and more than two actors but for most of the film it is just two actors in the house.
I guess it's not dissimilar to a play on screen.
Comments
and films designed to hide the truth of what is going on such as
identity
triangle
Prospero's Books - lots of picture-in-picture and cool visual stuff
Adaptation
Hulk
Brick
Spun
Rumble Fish (1983) - all in black & white, apart from the fish!
Darkness In Tallinn (1993) - a great Estonian thriller, where something (don't want to spoil it) totally unexpected happens partway through...
Russian Ark (2002) - all done in one take (at the 3rd attempt, though they did re-dub some sound later) with over 2,000 actors and 3 orchestras!
The Picture of Dorian Grey: in black and white except for the scenes with the portrait, which are in colour.
Portrait of Jennie, Is Paris Burning?: both black and white except for one colour sequence at the end.
La Jetee: composed of still pictures apart from one sequence.
Have to agree. Great soundtrack too, and probably the best film I watched in school (and it wasnt one of those last day of term classes, a real lesson day)
Not sure if it was the first mockumentary film but it's probably the most famous.
Was The Ruddles a mockumentary film or just a tv show?
Pleasantville is the one i was thinking of............
It starts in black and white and gradually turns into colour but the appearance of colour is an integral part of the story character by character
Apparently the fact was that the film makers ran out of colour film
However, according to IMDB:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tO_jmUDaHSA
The animated version of The Lord of the Rings
Cut (2010) - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1390403/reference
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_%281993_film%29
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_%281964_film%29
"Conversations' innovation in split screen is the juxtaposition of shot and reverse shot of two actors in the same take, captured with two cameras, for the entire movie. The film represents a new kind of viewing experience that enlists the audience as a perceptual editor. The filmmakers allow the viewer to choose how they watch the film, following either character or both simultaneously. Seeing both characters act and react in real time lets the audience follow the emotional experience of the characters without interruption."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversations_with_Other_Women
I highly recommend it.
I guess it's not dissimilar to a play on screen.