When the shot is impossible to film

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  • Опубліковано 22 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 394

  • @InCinematic
    @InCinematic  Місяць тому +137

    What scene in the Shining is your favorite? I'm partial to the reb bathroom myself.

    • @behelit1997
      @behelit1997 Місяць тому +4

      Wendy seeing the putrid skeleton in the hotel

    • @Snowman-556
      @Snowman-556 Місяць тому +12

      @@behelit1997 When Jack is giving the speech while backing Wendy up the steps

    • @ellenripley4640
      @ellenripley4640 Місяць тому +5

      I second the bathroom scene. The way the camera flips 180 degrees in the middle of the scene as if that is the moment Grady and Torrance switch roles.

    • @nev.catalyst7478
      @nev.catalyst7478 Місяць тому +5

      Love the slow room 237 reveal

    • @Snowman-556
      @Snowman-556 Місяць тому

      @@nev.catalyst7478 “You ain’t got no business goin into room two three seven anyway, so stay out!”

  • @marctronixx
    @marctronixx 22 дні тому +735

    im a 22 year steadicam operator. i was taught by GB himself. shining was my fave movie due to the steadicam. the low mode bracket was designed to invert the steadicam upside down so the camera lens could get down to that tricycle.

    • @HotTakeAndy
      @HotTakeAndy 21 день тому +10

      So how do you feel about the use of drones being used for these types of shots now?

    • @marctronixx
      @marctronixx 20 днів тому +42

      @@HotTakeAndy not only drones but the ronin is used as well. its due to lower budgets and too many steadicam ops. the market is flooded with folks with little experience saying they will do a job for much less than a seasoned steadicam op. im not upset or anything about it. does not bother me. hey im even a part 107 sUAV (drone) op and im also doing drone shots for college sports for TNT as well. by doing this, im alsop taking a cut from the blimp ops who would have done this ( but for a much higher cost). you have to adapt..

    • @28russ
      @28russ 19 днів тому +4

      ​@@marctronixxHey mate, I'm just curious what kinda drones do ya use? I imagine different drones for different jobs. I flew FPV racing drones for a few years (haven't for awhile now) so just curious if ya use racing drones at all as I see they're being used a bit for car chase scenes and other kinda high speed action scenes and to film action sports like mountain biking, snowboarding, motorbike racing/ freestyle, rally cars etc. They've really taken off (pun intended haha) for filming. And curious if you use any standard consumer drones like any of the DJI models?

    • @marctronixx
      @marctronixx 18 днів тому +10

      @@28russ mate, I have 3: DJI Inspire 2, Inspire 3, and a dutch designed acecore neo for heavy payloads ( arri ). ive not used those race drones but they produce wicked visuals! i used to have a skydio ( and various smaller DJI drones like the phantom and mavic) but never really got into it as the camera was not able to capture the quality i needed. my hat's off to you for being able to fly those fpv racing drones! there's even competition games for them!!!

    • @robertstevensii4018
      @robertstevensii4018 18 днів тому +3

      Does it weird you out that youtube finds the exact video for you that you need to comment on, or have you become used to it?

  • @slick4401
    @slick4401 Місяць тому +495

    When Kubrick first saw the demo, he contacted Garret Brown right away and told him that he was interested in using his machine for a film. He also told him that he should rush with getting a patent for it, because it was possible to deduce how the steadycam system worked from its shadow on the ground as it appeared in parts of the demo.

  • @ChronoMune
    @ChronoMune Місяць тому +552

    Alright the rocky bit blew my mind. So cool he made that shot happen in rocky because of his demo

    • @Ron-d2s
      @Ron-d2s Місяць тому +17

      Kubrick went through the demo film frame by frame then sent a letter to the guy saying that the shadow of the rig could be seen for A SINGLE FRAME!
      He cut that frame and rereleased it.

  • @keaton718
    @keaton718 Місяць тому +466

    I like that steady cam still has just enough wobble and visible tracking of a moving subject that you can tell it's human operated.

    • @bradywilliams2951
      @bradywilliams2951 24 дні тому +36

      Yeah, it's not as 'perfect' as a gimbal, so it still has a natural feel.

    • @kuromiLayfe
      @kuromiLayfe 19 днів тому +25

      yea… it gives more the sense some ethereal being is operating it in the correct setting especially at the low angle shots.

    • @lukefreeman828
      @lukefreeman828 3 дні тому +2

      @@kuromiLayfe which is a super appropriate feeling for films like The Shining

    • @emilymschoener9193
      @emilymschoener9193 2 дні тому

      Agreed.

  • @a.chto.tut.pisat.
    @a.chto.tut.pisat. Місяць тому +1146

    I didn't even think we couldn't shoot shots like that

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +210

      Older films used rails and dollies to help with these shots, but it truly was a revolutionary tool

    • @ToddMikosh
      @ToddMikosh Місяць тому +90

      @@InCinematic Yes, but the length of the shots on The Shining betrayed the absence of rails. We viewers could see that there weren't rails--that made them even creepier.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Місяць тому +7

      @@ToddMikosh Well, you can also lay down sheets of Masonite. Picture the crew throwing down sheets of Masonite just in front of the dolly like a bucket brigade as the dolly chased Danny. 😂

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Місяць тому +21

      Well now you know. There’s various tricks for smoothing out a handheld camera that were used before the invention of the Steadicam but they all have drawbacks, not to mention the ergonomic toll they take on the camera operator. Some use a faux-gyro stabilization. If you go further to get true gyro stabilization, you’ve basically invented the steadicam (although you’d still need to invent the vest that provides the resting point for the spin axis, not to mention improving the ergonomics for the operator*).
      *Operators still suffer from strains and injuries (typically back and knee issues) from carrying the weight of the camera and rig, but the weight is better distributed by the vest/harness.

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 29 днів тому +7

      @@ToddMikoshTo be fair, the super long tracking shots in Das Boot were less Steady than the Danny shots iirc, but still less Wobbly than the ones like 0:27. 😮

  • @kathulhurises
    @kathulhurises 14 днів тому +38

    The smoothness of the shot of Dany riding his tricycle throughout the hotel’s hallways was one of those scenes I immediately took notice of on my first try, there’s something so mesmerizing about it. This movie just holds up so well still, nearly 45 years later.

  • @wrlord
    @wrlord 22 дні тому +101

    We're so used to that by now that we don't even appreciate it.

  • @pierrezapata90
    @pierrezapata90 Місяць тому +214

    If i remember correctly, "Halloween" (1978) spent almost its entire budget on a steadycam. A film about Halloween had literally 3 pumpkins in it and 1 was used for the opening. Some of this die to that it was actually filmed not in the Fall but also the the budget for everything else was so small in an already small movie. The steady cam being such a new invention it was expensive at the time but absolutely worth it for the feel of that film.

    • @sle2470
      @sle2470 Місяць тому +2

      Thank you. Came here to say this.

    • @00WatName00
      @00WatName00 25 днів тому +7

      If only they knew to use chickens 😔

    • @chrisflores4788
      @chrisflores4788 22 дні тому +8

      ​@@00WatName00The idea of a chicken with a 25 lb. camera on its head just makes me lol 😂

    • @clursunny
      @clursunny 6 днів тому

      @@chrisflores4788or imagine the Heavy Rain chicken camera 😂😂

    • @misterturkturkle
      @misterturkturkle 11 годин тому

      It takes a tough man to make a tender chicken

  • @HankAndStuff64
    @HankAndStuff64 Місяць тому +130

    I really appreciate how perfect the audio mixing in this is, I love when video essays feel great in my ears

    • @Itsthatoneguy371
      @Itsthatoneguy371 26 днів тому +5

      Well balanced voice overs, interviews and music. I agree.

    • @benniepieters
      @benniepieters 24 дні тому +11

      So many video essayists do not do proper sound mixing

    • @HankAndStuff64
      @HankAndStuff64 24 дні тому

      @benniepieters agreed

  • @Threedog1963
    @Threedog1963 20 днів тому +78

    My family lived next door to a camera man for the local news station when this movie came out. I was a teen ager and he was in his early 20's. When I mentioned "how cool" The Shining was to him, he told me he was blown away by the camera work more than the dialog or anything else.

  • @satyrosphilbrucato9140
    @satyrosphilbrucato9140 Місяць тому +44

    My college friend and roommate Karl Hawk built a steadicam for the student films we made in the early 1980s. Worked beautifully, too. Steadicams were still kind of an arcane technology when Karl built his first one in 1983 or 84, and the effect floored audiences when he'd show those movie during student film festivals.

  • @pandoracle
    @pandoracle 14 днів тому +9

    It's brilliance is not only due to the use of a unnatural steady camera, it is also because of the acting, the frightening imagery and the hotel's impossible lay out, amongst several other things. But I really do appreciate you highlighting, exploring, and analyzing this aspect of it's brilliance and explaining it to us. Thanks!

  • @evenstoats2639
    @evenstoats2639 3 дні тому +1

    Never get tired of The Shining. I can watch it over and over,still gives me chills!

  • @THR33STEP
    @THR33STEP 28 днів тому +8

    One of my favorite films of all time! Everything is perfect from the acting to the sound effects to the camera work!

  • @govanentertainment1777
    @govanentertainment1777 26 днів тому +35

    That’s why Stanley Kubrick is one of my favourite directors.

  • @tapasprinsen
    @tapasprinsen 22 дні тому +23

    James Cameron used the Steady Cam arm for the Smart Guns in Aliens in ‘86. So creative!

    • @saschamayer4050
      @saschamayer4050 19 днів тому

      Look, man. I only need to know one thing: where they are. 🔫

  • @Csimon2429
    @Csimon2429 Місяць тому +39

    Garret Brown looks and sounds kinda like James Cameron. I wonder if anyone has asked if they were brothers ever. It's Kinda amazing that they both revolutionized camera technology in their own ways as well, so many similarities, it's uncanny

    • @curttuckfield5565
      @curttuckfield5565 Місяць тому +8

      I was just thinking the same thing. Looks and sounds like.

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +9

      @@Csimon2429 I can't unsee this now

    • @MouthBreatherGaming
      @MouthBreatherGaming Місяць тому +16

      I thought it was Cameron at first.

    • @Csimon2429
      @Csimon2429 Місяць тому +3

      @@InCinematic brother from another mother?

    • @davidlisteresq
      @davidlisteresq Місяць тому +3

      ONly by reading this comment did I realise that wasnt Cameron.

  • @IdlewildPony
    @IdlewildPony Місяць тому +90

    That’s neat how it became the hotel’s POV.

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +16

      Yeah, Kubrick really knew how to use a camera

    • @Snowman-556
      @Snowman-556 Місяць тому +3

      I love that movie and never thought of it like that. But hell yeah

    • @Dustyplastic73
      @Dustyplastic73 Місяць тому +3

      @@InCinematiclots of great directors make good art with the camera, but Kubrick was one of a few who aimed to change the way we viewed cinema as an art form.

    • @MSorge13
      @MSorge13 Місяць тому +3

      It definitely helps that Kubrick was a photographer in the past. It helped give him a unique perspective on the way cinematography works and how it can be implemented. That, along with Garrett Brown’s use of the Steadicam, made The Shining look and feel so different. Even watching it now, it still stands out.

  •  19 днів тому +9

    My confort movie its The Shining, its like... so cozy for some reazon. thank s4 the video dude

  • @membear
    @membear Місяць тому +80

    That poor guy must have ran miles with that camera with the 100 takes of each shot Kubrick did.

    • @MrYerak5
      @MrYerak5 Місяць тому +10

      Next olymics he won a gold metal

    • @sylviaisgod6947
      @sylviaisgod6947 27 днів тому +6

      *must have RUN

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 25 днів тому +5

      @@sylviaisgod6947 Thank you for this... I understand language changes but this is such an annoying trend! But props to OP saying must have instead of must of.

    • @Vingul
      @Vingul 17 днів тому +2

      ​@@EricaGamet that's not something to give props for, only something to diss people for getting wrong.

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 17 днів тому

      @@Vingul I give props where props are due... "must of" really grinds my gears.

  • @andrewdubose9968
    @andrewdubose9968 23 дні тому +5

    1:34 I had no idea that this was the origin of the rocky scene! 🤯🤯

  • @stacychipouras8741
    @stacychipouras8741 14 днів тому +1

    Thank you. I really enjoyed this video 💙

  • @luiscarlosencina2697
    @luiscarlosencina2697 3 дні тому

    Thanks to you guys….very cool…because I like the way tha it film’s…..and now I know the beginning of the first shout’s….it is the FAMOUS…….SHINING…..😮

  • @welkinator
    @welkinator 19 днів тому +1

    When I first saw this movie, 1980 or 81, I was instantly struck at very beginning with the follow shot of the car going through the tunnel. I had never before seen such a coherent shot made aerially.

  • @jonl.5967
    @jonl.5967 Місяць тому +3

    Love the buildup with Dick Halloran and the One Light that is on above his head when Jack swings the Axe. Truly Terrifying Scene among so many unforgettable scenes. A brilliant Film by Kubrick. Still love to watch it and find new little treasures every time.

    • @wizardsuth
      @wizardsuth 21 день тому

      It was quite a surprise for those who read the novel, since in the original story he survives.

    • @jonl.5967
      @jonl.5967 21 день тому

      @@wizardsuth Yes, but apparently Kubrick and his co-writer felt they needed a murder to make it a true horror movie, and to make sure Stephen King knew it wasn’t going to be a copy of his book.

  • @jessebeegee
    @jessebeegee 20 днів тому

    the commentary tracks for this movie are just stellar!

  • @richhold7775
    @richhold7775 26 днів тому +1

    Nice touch with the three jump scares, Monday, Tuesday, Thanks for Watching. Like they were taken from the movie.

  • @gregoryfilms9405
    @gregoryfilms9405 Місяць тому +11

    The steadicam was definitely a game changer.

  • @EeveeFromAlmia
    @EeveeFromAlmia 15 днів тому +1

    Dude I didn’t even consider that these shots would have been impossible until now - but you’re totally right. Stabilisation has come so far and so quickly

  • @rivapeeva
    @rivapeeva 16 днів тому +1

    theres a good reason kubrick is regarded as one of the most influential directors ever

  • @duncan-rmi
    @duncan-rmi 28 днів тому +3

    we had two steadicams on the soap-opera I worked on in the 80s. life-savers... if you ran out of time to block & shoot a scene with the usual wide/matching two-shots/matching close-ups strategy, you could light for the wide (with some caveats) then make some changes to the blocking & then thread the camera in amongst.
    when GB (or one of his people) came to see what we were doing with the mk1, & to do some training, he was horrified to see a cable attached to the camera. well, it's a video camera... of course! so we had developed our own way of using it, with the cable fastened a certain way & an assistant keeping it clear of the cameraman's feet. we did reverse-scan mods for some shots too, & a fair bit of under-slung.
    fun-fact- the mk1 had a valve (tube) in its power supply. something absurd like 30kV on the green c.r.t. so it would be visible in daylight.

  • @jekw23
    @jekw23 23 дні тому +1

    Reading a book shows the possibilities of the film. Think that helps support the fact Kubrick didn’t adapt a novel per se but used it as the starting point for where he took the film.

  • @TyroKith
    @TyroKith День тому

    Fantastic video!

  • @afriend9428
    @afriend9428 Місяць тому +2

    *Amazing!* ⭐️

  • @Snowman-556
    @Snowman-556 Місяць тому +7

    I knew that the steady cam was used in it. I didn’t realize it was used that much. The big wheel scenes when he’s turning the corner it makes your head try to look around it. Pretty weird feeling. Btw my favorite horror movie.

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +1

      I started the video with the intention of just talking about the big wheel scene, and then I just kept finding more and more places where it was used

    • @Snowman-556
      @Snowman-556 Місяць тому

      @@InCinematic me too

  • @maxdon2001
    @maxdon2001 7 днів тому

    Great video!

  • @3DSage
    @3DSage Місяць тому +5

    Fascinating to learn about where and how it all started :)

  • @ER_Murrow
    @ER_Murrow 14 днів тому +4

    "The faintly diabolical quality depends on the supernatural steadiness of the shot."

  • @icescrew1
    @icescrew1 29 днів тому

    After all these years (i saw it opening night) I finally get it. You are 100% correct.

  • @PaulCanniff
    @PaulCanniff 15 днів тому

    This is clear to people who make films, but I think it's less obviously impressive to the audience. Our brain naturally smooths our visual inputs, especially for motions we are making ourselves like walking or running. The steadicam is a more natural POV, and the handheld look is an artifact -- the technology of the steadicam cancels out the limitations of a bouncy camera. Steadicam immerses us, and hand-held can remind us that we're watching a film (or add the chaotic feel of truly violent motion where wanted). I think that for the general audience it's that sense of immersion that adds fear. The smooth motion doesn't feel unnatural or weird to them, but rather organic and transparent, like you'd see it if you were following the characters without technology.
    tl;dr: The tech and craft are impressive. The effect on a naive audience is actually to immerse them in the movement, rather than feeling odd or uneasy.

  • @ichaffee1
    @ichaffee1 Місяць тому +4

    omg!! YES... iVE seen the Shining so many times.. and the cinematography makes the nightmare of the action get into your head.. . incredible

  • @Spaceman500five
    @Spaceman500five Місяць тому +4

    Great job on this video! Short and sweet and educational. Hope you do well in the future.

  • @szczypior2714
    @szczypior2714 Місяць тому +5

    Phenomenal video! Thank you for it, your channel is simply fantastic!

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +3

      Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it

  • @Flea-Flicker
    @Flea-Flicker 21 день тому

    Interesting! I watched this on the big screen theater in 1980 the day before my daughter was born. I am also a photographer and videographer who never realized WHY that movie had this eerie quality and this explains it best. That and Jack finding out in the bathroom there is a person trying to inject himself into this... situation. Did you know that sir?

  • @richardcoughlin8931
    @richardcoughlin8931 29 днів тому +3

    When Stanley Kubrick is satisfied, you’ve done the nearly impossible

  • @Vpmatt
    @Vpmatt 20 днів тому

    Brilliant analysis. Got to watch the film again, been far too long.

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  20 днів тому

      Much appreciated! I love going back to rewatch it every now and then

  • @chupap1
    @chupap1 Місяць тому +35

    Nice video! Two tiny factual corrections: the “30 Impossible Shots” reel was distributed in 1974, not 1976--Kubrick’s telex in response to the reel was dated November '74. And, Garrett didn’t have to be “flown out” to Philadelphia to work on Rocky, as he already lived there! There are also a number of moving shots included that were actually done on dolly (the two from 4:49 to 4:55 for instance). Regardless, anything celebrating GB's groundbreaking work on The Shining is a good thing!

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +8

      Appreciate it. I realized the date mistake after I had made it, but it was hard to figure out exactly which shots were on a dolly.

    • @chupap1
      @chupap1 Місяць тому +7

      @@InCinematic It's not easy! Because of Kubrick's insistence on doing so many takes, GB had the opportunity to improve his operating technique so that many of the shots are all but indistinguishable from dolly moves, so you really have to look close to find the "tells". A few others that are dolly: 2:06, 2:48, 3:01.
      .

  • @thewatcher5271
    @thewatcher5271 22 дні тому

    This Was Great, Man! REDRUM! I Love The Shining. Reminds Me Of F.E.A.R. Thank You. (Comment #216)

  • @geneve999
    @geneve999 16 днів тому +1

    Amazing to think how technology has evolved: we can now purchase a stabilizer for smartphone for around 100 Euros and there you go, you have a steadycam and can shoot a movie with your smartphone!

  • @Ryyi23
    @Ryyi23 19 днів тому

    I remember when I first learned about about this! It's so cool!

  • @imokay3397
    @imokay3397 21 день тому

    What a great video

  • @miket3652
    @miket3652 21 день тому

    Amazing, and yet the one thing I remember the most is being completely cheesed off, seeing the shadow of the helicopter that was filming the intro... completely baffling.

  • @ariadneschild8460
    @ariadneschild8460 9 днів тому

    Its like we're silently following the characters around the hotel like ghosts. The Shining is one of the first horror movies I saw that stuck with me and something about the orange carpets gave me the creeps.

  • @hannuback
    @hannuback Місяць тому +1

    Steadycam has saved a lot of time in film making. The Longest Day had a beautiful shot on the beach of Normandy, but briefly you can see the shadow of the camera and the operator in the smoke. It's obvious that they had to build a rail for that shot, but I've often wondered how different old movies would be if they had a steadycam. It's not always for the best, I guess, the static shots of the black and white era somehow make that one scene really stand out in that movie.

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 16 днів тому +1

      Fincher almost takes an anti-steady cam approach to his directing and that turns out to be striking.

  • @mii9010
    @mii9010 12 днів тому

    Shoutout to ER for using Steadycam because it would be "cheaper" than using the multicam setup yet gave it its unique movement and style!

  • @JvoxProductions
    @JvoxProductions Місяць тому +19

    I think what the steady cam essentially does is make sure that the viewer isn't made aware of the act of filming, making the scene as immersive as possible. I wouldn't read anything further into it. The scenes aren't scary because the camera is smooth. They're scary because the smooth camera is capturing the scariness created by Kubrick without any distracting camera shake.

    • @piggywahwah
      @piggywahwah Місяць тому +2

      Its weird cos the backrooms is an online hit, so much so, the main creator is making a film with A24 studios. They went right back to handheld in those horror shorts.

    • @RegularCupOfJoe
      @RegularCupOfJoe Місяць тому +4

      Correct. The human eye and head work together to provide a degree of steadiness in our field of vision. That's what allows us to focus on things. So, yes, the steadicam makes it easier for the brain to stay focused on the subject matter being filmed. Thus, it's easy to become immersed in the horror of it all. Like the video mentioned, the center-framing is perfect, and without steadicam, the scenes wouldn't have had quite the impact. The eerie unease just wouldn't be there.

    • @piggywahwah
      @piggywahwah Місяць тому

      @@RegularCupOfJoe Yea it goes with this film, the isolation, the slow burn, the steady build of jack being possessed... That all went out the window for Clockwork', some crazy iiratic shots which go great with the movies themes.

    • @wizardsuth
      @wizardsuth 21 день тому +2

      In many films the presence of camera artifacts such as shaking and lens flares detract from the immersion. One notable exception is _Firefly_ in which they were deliberately added to CGI shots, enhancing the realism by making them look as though the scenes were filmed with physical cameras.

  • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
    @BariumCobaltNitrog3n 27 днів тому

    I invented a different kind of steady-cam in the late 70's that had the same effect, especially running up and down stairs. It was a bowling ball on the end of a broom stick and a 1/4-20 screw on the other end. Camera goes on the screw, hold the stick in the middle and just twist or tilt for slow, rock solid movement.

  • @frogginet5353
    @frogginet5353 9 днів тому +1

    i think you underestimate the other details of the film a little bit, but you're definitely right about all the camera stuff

  • @alhypo
    @alhypo Місяць тому +61

    Yeah, and now directors intentionally use shaky cam to try to convey movement and intensity. But really it's just awful to watch. It's a crutch. I don't watch anything with shaky cam.

    • @space_1073
      @space_1073 Місяць тому +13

      That’s pretty limiting. You’ll miss out on some great movies that way

    • @Johnfisher12345
      @Johnfisher12345 Місяць тому +7

      This is an awful take. Granted there are many uses of shaky cam that are gratuitous and unnecessary, but there are many others which are fantastic. Time to open your brain back up.

    • @alhypo
      @alhypo Місяць тому +7

      @@Johnfisher12345 Unnecessary and gratuitous is specifically what I'm referring to. I'm not suggesting all camera work should be perfectly stable. But there are many directors obviously using it as a crutch to cover up what would otherwise be boring to watch.
      Good use of camera shake is measured, strategic, and balanced. Such as alternating between shaky and steady shots.
      Poor use of shaky cam is constant and unrelenting. And no, I don't think I'm missing anything by skipping movies with gratuitous shaky cam. They are pretty much always bad movies.

    • @al2275
      @al2275 28 днів тому +2

      Not the shaky cam!!!

    • @wizardsuth
      @wizardsuth 21 день тому +2

      _The Blair Witch Project_ is not for you.

  • @RobertKing00
    @RobertKing00 Місяць тому

    I was just talking to my wife about how excited I am to be seeing this in IMAX tonight and I pick up the phone and UA-cam gave me this

  • @edwardmowton9825
    @edwardmowton9825 20 днів тому

    I mean even the intro is an insane shot..... being that smooth in the 80's. The way it follows the car..

  • @JF-em6hr
    @JF-em6hr Місяць тому

    I had a bunch of nightmares last night and just wanted to add; that movement is very similar. Where I was detached at first and then slowly getting closer (floating) to a place I don't want to be involved in.

  • @Slapjabber
    @Slapjabber 20 днів тому +2

    I think this is before digital, so I always wondered if a human being typed those dozens of papers on the desk with the “Makes Jack a dull boy” in different patterns.

    • @wyattmann8157
      @wyattmann8157 19 днів тому +1

      I remember hearing that Kubrick insisted on them all being typed out individually. No copies.

    • @Slapjabber
      @Slapjabber 18 днів тому +1

      @@wyattmann8157 Wow, how cool is that, except for the people typing.

  • @membear
    @membear Місяць тому +5

    I knew they used the Steadicam for the tricycle shots a long time ago but didn't realize all the other shots that they also used it for.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Місяць тому +2

      Some of that could have been done by a dolly, but they had the Steadicam on set, so why not?

  • @ComposerKuandohan
    @ComposerKuandohan 17 днів тому

    This is definitely something that is hard to appreciate without context and how filming was like at the time. Nowadays, steadycam is used in almost every single shot and it seems like anything outside of that is a stylistic choice. It sounds like using steadycam in this film at this particular time was a stylistic choice. Funny how times change.

  • @stratocaster1986able
    @stratocaster1986able 15 днів тому

    Not sure if you've studied the cinematography of 'Angst'' (1983), but it is mindblowing.

  • @burtrangle3546
    @burtrangle3546 15 днів тому

    The W. Carlos' soundtrack contributed to the visual effect. It gives the sense that a pack of trickster coyote spirits is gliding in pursuit.

  • @Alejoninla
    @Alejoninla Місяць тому +1

    all work and no play makes jack a dull boy" 😁

  • @johnwpmusic
    @johnwpmusic 3 дні тому

    The shining is a masterpiece in film studies.

  • @pretzelprints
    @pretzelprints 23 дні тому

    Very cool!

  • @guguigugu
    @guguigugu 19 днів тому

    most Kubrick's shots are very "geometric". they remind me of renaissance paintings. that, combined with his propensity to put light sources inside the frame, makes his films look so striking.

  • @stolensentience
    @stolensentience 17 днів тому +6

    I guess you could say this movie was a shining example of steady cam

  • @gram_gaming
    @gram_gaming Місяць тому

    underrated channel! You deserve way more subs

  • @rocksk8er111
    @rocksk8er111 4 дні тому

    Welp, time to rewatch the Shining again

  • @volkerschmitt
    @volkerschmitt Місяць тому +2

    Yeah ... earie camera fair enough but Shining is spooky as hell because of the music! :)

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +1

      There's a really good analysis I watched a while ago where a composer broke it all down. It's also underrated

  • @christopherchadwick2659
    @christopherchadwick2659 24 дні тому

    The tracking shot following Danny as he go-karts through the hotel really unnerved me as a child when I watched the trailer. I told my missus about it and showed her but she just shrugged her shoulders as if to say, that's not scary. So I got our ten year old and let her watch the trailer from 40 years ago. She told me she'd never sleep again.

  • @ronpierson
    @ronpierson Місяць тому

    I recall way way back when the film Marathon Man was released reading about how the use of the Steadicam allowed for many of the running shots that otherwise would have been impossible. The article said the Steadicam was the game changer that enabled the film to be made.
    If I recall correctly it said this was the either the first or second film to use the new technology.

  • @easymentality
    @easymentality Місяць тому +3

    2:02
    Holy sh*t, you have the original color grading! What's this from? My version has the ridiculous PINK coloration of the tennis ball and toys.

  • @notreallydavid
    @notreallydavid 14 днів тому

    'one in particular proved to be the most difficult'
    Well, yes...

  • @MrJonBertsch
    @MrJonBertsch Місяць тому +4

    03:15 Black Christmas, an amazing horror film

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +2

      An absolute classic! At least, the original

  • @Dumba55
    @Dumba55 14 днів тому

    The invention of the Steadicam is revolutionary.

  • @joshuacoldwater
    @joshuacoldwater 6 днів тому

    There is actually a lot more about this shot that you didn’t even mention. Most of this film was shot inside a small English studio, they didn’t actually have enough space to create the entire layout that Danny rides around. So, he begins makes a few turns and arrives back at the beginning again BUT in the time that he was gone (a mere few seconds) they moved all of the set decoration away to make it appear he was at the second floor at the top of the balcony. He then turns and continues down the hall. Where the numbers are different (only because the doors had been literally flipped around quickly while he was around the corner).
    This scene was nearly impossible to shoot on the set they shot it on. If you look at the actual size of the set- it would baffle you.

  • @tourist6290
    @tourist6290 19 днів тому

    The steadycam is something amazing. I wish way more directors would make use of it. Another thing i really dislike is when there are too many, too quick cuts. So annoying.

  • @stellaVista
    @stellaVista 3 дні тому

    The Cuban/Russian made Film "Soy Cuba!" from 1961 still has the most breathtaking, uninterrupted shots. It all culminates in this unbelievable funeral procession, where the camera first moves through the procession, then flies upwards past facades, balconies with people throwing flowers. It then moves to the adjacent house, enters a cigarette factory and ultimately moves through the window and flies OVER the procession. All in an uninterrupted, gliding motion. (famous scenes and the whole movie are on UA-cam).

  • @tracyrain4941
    @tracyrain4941 27 днів тому

    For me, the best scene is where Jack is axing down the bathroom door. The way the camera moves with the axe is mesmerising and horrific. 😊

  • @71janas
    @71janas 13 годин тому +1

    The zooming in on the 1921 picture

  • @jonoghue
    @jonoghue 14 днів тому

    4:17 is such a creepy image, and it's hard to explain exactly why. The empty space at the top of the frame, the distance from the girls, the stillness of everything, it feels like one of those early internet screamer pictures

  • @DavidOakesMusic
    @DavidOakesMusic Місяць тому +2

    That DOP sounds just like James Cameron.

  • @Jiiimbooh
    @Jiiimbooh 24 дні тому

    I think the handheld fight scene looks good because it makes you feel like you're there walking up to the people fighting. It wouldn't have worked as well for following the tricycle in The Shining.

  • @Apjooz
    @Apjooz Місяць тому +3

    Shaking camera often distracts me by a great deal. Even the fact that I don't know if it's on purpose or not.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Місяць тому

      I stopped _Huger Games_ after the first few minutes of shaky cam.

  • @haken7016
    @haken7016 Місяць тому

    You learn something new every day. Thanks @InCinematic

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill 20 днів тому

    The coolest part is that the average moviegoer doesn't even know its being used. The technology simply disappears and they're sucked into the film without being distracted by a shaky picture. It feels as if you're *THERE;* as if you're a *part* of the shot. And that makes _The Shining,_ in particular, so much more terrifying than it would otherwise be. That's the genius of this invention.

  • @darkestdot2752
    @darkestdot2752 Місяць тому +2

    He's still following the rule of thirds but placing it from top to bottom instead of from left to right.

    • @MSorge13
      @MSorge13 Місяць тому

      That’s a good point!

  • @kodak49
    @kodak49 Місяць тому +1

    You can compare his shots of the Army attacking Jack Ripper's base in Dr. Strangelove with the Shining (and Full Metal Jacket's assault on the sniper) and see how the Steadicam was preferable. I believe Kubrick lamented that it hadn't been invented in retrospect but I can't remember if I'm paraphrasing a quote or someone else's conclusion.

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +1

      That's an interesting thought. I'll have to dig around for that quote

  • @ebolarnator1794
    @ebolarnator1794 26 днів тому

    If only the guys filming The Bourne movies knew of this amazing invention from 30 years ago (at the time).

  • @rangerrecon
    @rangerrecon 23 дні тому

    "I'm sorry to differ with you, sir, but you are the caretaker. You've always been the caretaker. I should know, sir. I've always been here."

  • @monkey_doodle
    @monkey_doodle Місяць тому +2

    this channel is a gem
    i thought this was insider for the first few seconds

    • @InCinematic
      @InCinematic  Місяць тому +1

      Appreciate it! That's the best channel I have been mistaken for!

  • @gojewla
    @gojewla 10 днів тому

    @0:39 lol at that guy’s tiny shorts! 😂

  • @uniqueurl
    @uniqueurl 10 днів тому

    My fav shot is the helicopter shot in Shawshank redemption.