In an August 12 post on his "Zero for Conduct" film blog (see also his August 18 follow-up), Michael Atkinson waxes lyrical on the virtues of the "long shot" ...
"The more movies you see, the deeper into the aesthetic issues of cinematic eloquence you plunge, the more likely you are to come around to see the long shot—tracking or otherwise—as a kind of ur-cinema, a fundamental, uniquely filmic and matchlessly expressive and experiential movie manifestation no cataract of fast cuts, Avid foofaraw [my link], montage theories and digital pyrotechnics can encroach upon."
He then proceeds to tick off a handful of long-take faves—from Murnau's Sunrise (pictured above), Welles's Touch of Evil, Kalatosov's I Am Cuba, Godard's Weekend, Antonioni's The Passenger, Sokurov's Russian Ark—and proposes establishing a "Long Shot Hall of Fame" to honor the whole aesthetically malingering crew. "Any consideration," he goes on, "would land soon enough before the busts of Mizoguchi, Jancso, Tarkovsky, Angelopoulos"—who from my point of view deserves a wing of his own—but then "what about the long shots we've forgotten about, or never heard praised?"
Got one of those for ya, Mike, from the incumbent master of the multiple-minute stare. The shot in question, from James Benning's 1977 experimental masterpiece 11 × 14, involves a single, continuous take from the front window of a CTA train (actually the Evanston Express, which operated more or less nonstop back then) running to the Merchandise Mart from somewhere around Wellington Avenue. Obviously the problem, assuming you've already caught on to Benning's methodology—that no shot can come to an end before the completion of some "naturally" cohesive action—is that you know exactly what's in store: approximately 15 minutes of the same damn footage, through the window, down the tracks ... with an anonymous guy silhouetted against the glass, smack-dab blocking about a quarter of the view.
A perfect example of what I thought of then as Benning's Calvinist urge to punish the audience before ushering it to grace. Yet usher to grace he does—since what's mainly revealed, even within these harshly demanding parameters, is that the camera necessarily "sees" things differently than we do. Example: for the full duration of the shot the focus never changes (always set at infinity), yet typically, in an identical "real life" situation, our eyes would be refocusing constantly, depending on subliminal intent: it's nothing we've any control over, just the way our biological system functions. Or another example: without some deliberate intervention, the camera simply stares fixedly ahead; yet our own eyes are forever darting around, changing informational venues: we're not forced to look at any particular thing—in fact, holding the same uninterrupted gaze for minutes on end may not even be possible. Also, from a sensory-deprivation angle (or maybe it's a case of Stockholm syndrome!), there's a kind of emergency mise-en-scene you start inventing in your head: look, here comes a Ravenswood train down the opposite track ... closing in, closing in, then suddenly a "whoosh" as it glides right past, almost like a phantom. But how much of this is self-invented and how much something we've been primed to discover? Whatever the answer it's still a terrific rush ... and to think that if we'd actually been sitting in an el car watching (or more likely not watching) these logistics playing out, we'd probably be bored to tears. But Benning was always aware of what he had in mind; it's the rest of us who had to catch up.




BEAUTY NUMBER 2 is one of the most beautiful film documents that I hae yet encountered. The genius is the soundtrack. The offscreen tormentor of Edie Sedgwick is one of the best movie villians that you will you never see. And you get a real sense of the power of the long shot: time passing and time recorded.
And CHELSEA GIRLS gives you split screen long shots. It is a crime that the majority of his film work remains unknown and virtually out of reach on DVD (although there are some nice Spanish import DVDs that I've seen, but they include none of the good Edie movies).
My favorite long shot would be the Ball Sequence from the MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS; WOULD BE if Robert Wise hadn't destroyed it. I hope he's in hell.
In the same spirit her's Film Vocab Lesson # 2:
In common filmic vernacular, SHOT is also synonymous with TAKE. "Let's get this SHOT before we lose light."
And regarding Godard and Antonioni, at least the two that I can recall most prominently, they are also masters of edited shots. The former with the jump cut, and the latter with the fucking fantastic ending to Eclipse.
Although a lot of them, such as Mizoguchi, seem to be both as they employ long shots AND long takes.
Hou's "The Puppetmaster" has about 100 shots (I counted them once) and almost all are long shots in long takes but the perversity is that most are static shots with no or little camera movement.
Some of the most awsome long takes I've seen are from the tv teen comedy "Parker Lewis Can't Lose". I only sampled a few episodes when it was on TV but everytime I was captivated by its camera moves. Quite impressive for tv, perhaps there were some closet avant-gardists working there.
I guess Stan Brakhage would be the opposite of the long take as very often every FRAME is different. But subjectively I feel like each film is one continuous long take of a moving kaleidascope. Wonderful, wonderful stuff!
I like long takes as much as the next film buff but montage heavy films can be just as good and expressive. My example: Guy Maddin's "The Heart of the World".
"No matter if it is a white cat or a black cat; as long as it can catch mice, it is a good cat." --Deng Xiaoping
The same can be said for long take/short take.
The long takes of Welles or Kalatozov are magnificent examples of technical choreography and achieve a swift elegance of movement that you can only get from a wildly moving camera. There's a certain furious motion to them that can be invigorating...
But Antonioni, Tarkovsky, etc. approach the long take completely differently. I hope you don't mind me ranting about Atkinson's words on your page, but you can't just call a long take 'uniquely filmic' and get away with it. What's so unique about it? Does an image get better the longer you look at it? How is ANY of it 'lyrical'? BS, if you ask me.
And you didn't say much good, either.
Anyway, I applaud the comment of this Ben guy above me. He knows what's up. Good comment (unlike mine).