When she is already up the stairs and is going through the hallway and the shot slows down, it's looks like she is not moving forward at all. This is a perfect depiction of the nightmare we all had at some point when we are trying to run away from something terrible and it's like our lags are too heavy and we can't run. Perfection.
I put this down to her knowing she has to keep her distance from the cameraman, she holds back with an unrealistic arm movement to make it look like she's still running but you can see she's not moving forward at that point. She does a great job but it's clear that she is having to hold back from a full sprint to keep her on mark.
@@schnubbel76 There was a whole train of people with the cameraman. They all can only move so fast together. I do see the exaggerated running, but that's only after watching it a few times.
Of all the things talked about in this video, the one I cannot get over is how the set was flipped specifically for this shot to give the audience a subconscious cue that this is mirror image of the "real-life" staircase. It's a small but essential part of the Hollywood magic that makes this particular shot a classic!
@@donsan6404 They mentioned at 1:43 that the set was built for this purpose, so my only guess is that they built a duplicate set for that particular shot (and hired the best Script Supervisor in the business!)
@@MichaelSavidgeStoryteller O don't get why they didn't just flip the shot, would have been much easier, and would have given a small hint that it was indeed a mirror :)
@@donsan6404 it's actually filmed on two different sets/set change. When she first goes downstairs to find her father, stairsare on the right, room with father is on the left. There is a new frame after she says she's going to get the medication. This time, room with dad is on the right, stairs are on the left. Filming could stop easily to make this change, and then proceed with the iconic mirror scene that follows.
Cabinet door mirror is attached to the camera, the opening shot the banister would be camera left when running up the stairs however the follow shot the bannister is flipped because they're shooting into the literal mirror, then the mirror is disconnected from the rig and attached to the cabinet seamlessly as the camera pulls out from the cabinet.
@@bradleycarranceja Is that how they did it? I'm wondering because filming from the mirror and not seeing the camera in the shot means the mirror must be 45° to the scene and the camera 90°, however the corridor doesn't seem wide enough for that.
Except it's really a composite shot, the clip of the girl opening the bathroom vanity mirror is overlayed on top of the shot of her running down the hallway.
while it's definitely a technically impressive and inventive shot, what was the thematic significance? is it a comment on light, reflection, refraction? time travel? travel of light?
That shot broke my brain when I first watched it. When it came out on DVD I slow-mo'd it over and over and still couldn't work out how it was done until years later. Kudos to the effects team and everyone involved. One of the most clever shots in film history, IMO.
I totally agree with this statement. On DVD I played this over and over and every time I was saying to my wife...HOW DID THEY DO THIS? My wife was so annoyed, "Can we just watch the movie?" It's one of the most amazing shots in movie history in my opinion.
I remember watching Contact in the theater with my boyfriend at the time and his parents. They all thought the movie was boring and disappointing and I didn’t understand why. I was left in awe by the end of it.
Having lost my father months before seeing this movie, I was in tears from the dramatic impact of how this was shot and the knowing of what was to come. Great film meaning making. One of my favorite scenes in any movie.
Just watched this for the first time (on HBO Max) and this shot literally made me get up out of my recliner. *This right here is what separates good directors from great directors.* To not only have the vision for it, but the skill to actually make it happen. Just brilliant. Well freaking done, Mr. Zemeckis.
Zemeckis has had a thing for exquisite and revolutionary shots since his work on ‘Back to the Future’. From then on with Roger Rabbit, Forest Gump and so on but you can really see where he gets the passion from with those 3 films. He’s one of the GOATs.
@@jmchezsome jobs are just work for hire really and it’s the studios “vision”. Also not everyone can spit out bangers. So much from so many people go into a movie and sometimes it just doesn’t work out.
FYI, they recreated this now-iconic mirror shot almost exactly the same way at the very beginning of Consecration (2023) because it is the same actress, only now she is an adult. It happens at the 4-minute mark!
@@vFANGvWelp, guess I’ll use Google for you: welp exclamation US informal US /welp/ UK /welp/ used to express disappointment or resignation (= the fact that you must accept something you do not like): Welp. I lost my job. Anyone got any advice? Welp. They never said it would be easy.
@@vFANGv it basically just means “well,” but with a little more of a shrug. It was really popular like 10-12 years ago, but you don’t see it as much anymore
Not to be confused with “whelp”, which is a disparaging term for a young man, implying that they are naïve. And since I learned the word “whelp” several decades before Millennials started using “welp”, on the Internet I always mistakenly infer the former.
It broke my brain first time I saw it too. Today it breaks my heart. No matter how fast she ran and with as much determination she was still incapable of altering fate.
I watch Contact at least once a year, every year….i love everything about it on every level and watching the making of the film is a real treat in itself.
This French guy on RUclips did an interesting expose on all the metaphors allusions presented visually in the film. There's really a lot there. Way more than I thought. He said something about Joan of Arc and the costume design that kinda blew my mind.
I agree that it is underappreciated. I watched it in theaters when it came out and it didn’t have much cultural impact, but in recent years I’ve heard people referencing it more.
Same here, I was with my girlfriend at the movies back then and I must have shouted or something. I said something like what an amazing scene and she was oblivious to what had happened. I watched the movie with my wife a while back and I told her in advance about it, it took me literally 5 replays for her to notice and still thinking it wasn't a big deal.
@@dunebasher1971 That could have been the case,, but seamless speed ramps with aperture pulls (sometimes shuter pulls) were common at that time, via the Preston SAC (Speed-Aperture Computer).
@@dunebasher1971If you watch the shot, the shot does get brighter at the point where the film slows. So you could say it's not "seamless" after all. But they made the switch just as she's turning down the hallway at the top of the stairs, and there's a light on in the hallway, so it makes sense for the light to be different in the upstairs hallway than on the stairs. Basically, the slow motion and the light change happen at the same time as a change in location on the set, so we can chalk up the change in light to the change in physical location. There's more light in the upstairs hallway than on the stairs. Making the speed change when moving to a different physical area helps the change in light (which was partly an actual change in light at that part of the set, based on what we see of the set in the rest of the scene) feel natural.
I always thought the staircase being on the other side was a continuity error but the fact that it's intentional so the entire shot is a reflection... blows my mind!
This film had many memorable shots. The beginning alone is quite mind blowing and it really puts things in perspective (we’re meaningless, except in our own minds).
I think his eyes were watering when he described the reflection of the father daughter picture. That's how good that scene still is. From one of my top five favorite sci do movies.
I still need the a 3rd pov from someone in the room to understand how this works. He’s still explaining it from the camera’s pov and I can’t conceptualist it.
There were two shots stitched together, and they did not use an actual mirror. Shot #1 is the girl running up the stairs and down the hall. After she reaches the doorway, shot #2 is a pullaway shot from the medicine cabinet with a bluescreen in place of the mirror. The "reflection" in the bluescreen mirror is just shot #1. The Corridor Crew covered this ruclips.net/video/pTl42COCNaM/видео.html Start at around 4 minutes 18 seconds.
I remember watching this scene in Contact and being blown away. Still to this day this shot is incredible. Some people have incredible vision and others can action it 👍👍👍
It's like magic tricks. People think learning the secret ruins the illusion, but it really makes you appreciate it more. Just watch Penn and Teller's Lift Off of Love, or their cups and balls with clear cups. Simply amazing. Like you, I never had any idea how hard this shot was, but learning how hard it was makes the entire thing so much more amazing.
I remember I saw the film in a cinema in Canberra, Australia, and from beginning to end, there was not a sound from the audience. I was enthralled by this scene but I am sure there were others, such as the camera going from outside, through a window to the inside of the house. And then there was the rather unsettling sound of leaves rustling in the wind, as I recall, on the day of the funeral. Marvellous, intelligent film-making.
Great video about a great cinematographer working on a great effing movie! THAT shot still baffles me to this day! When it was shown on TV, I asked people around me the following day what they thought about that amazing shot, and nobody knew what I was talking about... I dunno if it's a compliment to the movie itself (they were taken by it), or if people just don't pay attention to the poetry of film making...
Can we all collectively come together and just say this is the best shot in cinema. The amount of brain focus this required to conceptualize and understand the logistics. Wow!
I remember seeing Contact at the cinema and being absolutely gob-smacked at how cool this shot was. I then bought the DVD as soon as it came out (when DVDs cost nearly £30!!!) and raved about the shot, and made countless people watch it, while I tried to explain to them why it was so clever! No exaggeration to say it’s one of my favourite shots of all time.
Of all the movies and scenes I’ve watched and appreciated over the years, this one definitely was noted at (without thinking too much about at the time) as very impactful and creatively executed. Top notch film making moment.
Thank you for this! It's like magicians revealing their illusions after many, many years. I had been confounded by this shot for all this time. Genius!
Absolutely just mind blowing. So brilliant in so many ways…so then on top of this incredibly profound metaphorical film exposer, you have the genius of composer Alan Silvestri who ties it all together and brings it home with his subtle but poignant orchestration ♥️ Brilliant…just brilliant. Ahhhhh the 90s films….
I saw this countless times and wondered how they did it. Thinking it was all one shot with mirrors in front of the camera or something. But I just couldn't resolve it in my mind. The composite is that good I had no idea. The hand reaching out is so in sync with the separate footage it really does look like a reflection of her arm. So glad this was explained and I can finally sleep at nights now, lol
When I watched this scene many years ago, I was wow, how can they do that? And in May 2024, a year after my father died, I cried. Suddenly the scene is so real.
The subtle change to slow motion is very cool. Saw this when I was eleven and this shot was what made me realize film could really be stylish and artistic visually as well as telling a story. Before that I never really noticed the technical aspects of a shot.
What wows me about this shot is that someone got her hand to line up with the cupboard handle perfectly, for the compositing of the reflection to be perfect. I wonder if the cupboard shot opening was done first.
I'm glad they at least showed the answer to what we all wanted to know, which was how the mirror got worked into the shot. He didn't answer that at all, just said the special effects team did it.
One of my favourite movies. I never once thought about this shot apart from appreciate it as part of the overall film. For me, THAT's great cinematography, you don't want look behind the curtain or even think about the curtain during the movie, just be absorbed and enjoy what you are watching on screen. This interview was an education, and really interesting to think about the skill, vision and wider team needed to create it.
I saw this film very recently and this exact shot stuck with me as I tried to rap my head around how they did it. What great timing for this to be recommended to me.
This is so cool. I have limited videography experience but a decent amount of still photography that I know how much auto stuff I have when I do simple videography now with a mirrorless camera and a steadying gimbal. The fact that all the focus was done by somebody who wasn’t looking through any kind of viewfinder has always blown my mind, and then wondering what you had to do to change aperture as well as frame rate on the go like that. I have watched this movie a number of times and I had never noticed the way the view seems to come from the mirror until I saw her hand go up like that. Awesome.
What’s so great about this shot is you don’t realise how clever it is until the pay off. That’s when you sit there in this moment of “wait, did that just happen…” and replay the sequence in your head. It’s a great showcase of expectation and reality conflicting and the cognitive conflict it creates.
It's an insane shot, I've been dazzled ever since. I don't think I've ever seen a shot that sells the illusion of being an impossible one-shot so well.
It’s interesting, to this day I remember this scene vividly, but I also recall hating it for the longest time. Eventually, I found that I didn’t hate the scene at all; the scene itself was incredible. I hated how effective it was at making me feel grief and helplessness. It’s a masterfully done piece of art that unrelentingly imposes emotion.
I've always admired that shot. Beautifully done. Just wish there was more shots to accompany that one in the rest of the movie. it was THE stand out shot for sure.
The power of a relatively simple VFX shot and a well thought out piece of direction. People are so spoiled by cgi these days that they forget what a good filmmaker can do with so little
There are many fantastic shots in cinema that we can hold up to the light, such as Lean's "mirage'' shot - which was born of his incredible observation habits & integretion of a natural phenomena, Kubrick's realistic rotating space station, or Coppola's Valkyrie-napalm scenes (among many others), yet what makes this shot from Contact so very special is it's simplicity. No surreal phenomena of nature, nor airplane hanger-size set, nor was a fleet of Hueys and explosives engineers was needed to pull off a vision that is absolutely breathtaking. In the tradition of Hitchcock, this is just good old fashioned director's concept realized by cinematographer's ability to deconstruct the concept and then built it into frames (with a great team). A truly simple shot, and yet, even with insight of commentary I can still barely visualize actually pulling it off - especially with such a delicate touch. Bravo!
I have wondered for years how they pulled off that shot, and I've watched the movie easily 100+ times and worked in 3D and video for a few years. Knowing this wasn't lots of VFX and was mostly shot live in film on steadicam just blows my mind.
The first time I ever viewed a film at a movie theater stoned was 'Contact' in 1997 (not to mention it being one of only a handful of times I'd toked up in my then short 15 year old life). My buddy Michael Meatbäl smoked up and then snuck into a screening of 'Contact' at the movie theater located off in the southwest corner of the Boise Towne Square mall and stayed on through for a second screening primarily motivated to see this scene once again and confirm exactly what we had in fact seen in actuality. Great film still to this day in May 2024.
This film also had one of the best uses of 'morphing ' Ive ever seen, just after Jodie Foster says 'poetry' in the capsule near the end. The last great Zemeckis film.
When she is already up the stairs and is going through the hallway and the shot slows down, it's looks like she is not moving forward at all. This is a perfect depiction of the nightmare we all had at some point when we are trying to run away from something terrible and it's like our lags are too heavy and we can't run. Perfection.
It looks as if she is hopping on the spot a few times and it looks totally awkward and weird.
I put this down to her knowing she has to keep her distance from the cameraman, she holds back with an unrealistic arm movement to make it look like she's still running but you can see she's not moving forward at that point. She does a great job but it's clear that she is having to hold back from a full sprint to keep her on mark.
Imagine the pressure on this actress. She nailed it though. Everyone did.
@@schnubbel76 There was a whole train of people with the cameraman. They all can only move so fast together. I do see the exaggerated running, but that's only after watching it a few times.
No it doesn't
Of all the things talked about in this video, the one I cannot get over is how the set was flipped specifically for this shot to give the audience a subconscious cue that this is mirror image of the "real-life" staircase. It's a small but essential part of the Hollywood magic that makes this particular shot a classic!
I still dont understand how they flipped the staircase
@@donsan6404 They mentioned at 1:43 that the set was built for this purpose, so my only guess is that they built a duplicate set for that particular shot (and hired the best Script Supervisor in the business!)
@@MichaelSavidgeStoryteller O don't get why they didn't just flip the shot, would have been much easier, and would have given a small hint that it was indeed a mirror :)
@@ZapAndersson he say we make a slomo shot manulay that mean thy cant use that thing in that time i gusse it was so impresive
@@donsan6404 it's actually filmed on two different sets/set change. When she first goes downstairs to find her father, stairsare on the right, room with father is on the left. There is a new frame after she says she's going to get the medication. This time, room with dad is on the right, stairs are on the left. Filming could stop easily to make this change, and then proceed with the iconic mirror scene that follows.
The amount of work put into a minute-long shot is incredible.
That's how the best become the best. Details.
Till this day this shot is one of the most impressive and mesmerizing in the whole cinema history!
Agree
Cabinet door mirror is attached to the camera, the opening shot the banister would be camera left when running up the stairs however the follow shot the bannister is flipped because they're shooting into the literal mirror, then the mirror is disconnected from the rig and attached to the cabinet seamlessly as the camera pulls out from the cabinet.
@@bradleycarranceja Is that how they did it? I'm wondering because filming from the mirror and not seeing the camera in the shot means the mirror must be 45° to the scene and the camera 90°, however the corridor doesn't seem wide enough for that.
@@bradleycarrancejadude, they show in the video how they did it and there isn't a mirror in sight
Except it's really a composite shot, the clip of the girl opening the bathroom vanity mirror is overlayed on top of the shot of her running down the hallway.
This is my favorite shot of all time. Not only is it cool looking but it has huge emotional aspect to it
Also foreshadowing to the wormhole.
Yes, for me too, if there wasn't the opening shot of Touch of Evil. Still can't decide which is my #1 ;-)
Very powerful. This shot and the emotion and the situation of an actually great dad, dying. Damn. I wish she had pills downstairs too
while it's definitely a technically impressive and inventive shot, what was the thematic significance? is it a comment on light, reflection, refraction? time travel? travel of light?
That look in Jenna's eyes as she reaches for the handle is terrifying.
That shot broke my brain when I first watched it. When it came out on DVD I slow-mo'd it over and over and still couldn't work out how it was done until years later. Kudos to the effects team and everyone involved. One of the most clever shots in film history, IMO.
How does this contrast with the dissociative scene of the sheriff on the beach in Jaws? (Sorry, "Plan 9..." is still a mystery to me).
Agreed. I did exactly the same thing. Just amazing.
@@josephososkie3029are you referring to the iconic dolly zoom of Chief Brody on the beach?
I totally agree with this statement. On DVD I played this over and over and every time I was saying to my wife...HOW DID THEY DO THIS? My wife was so annoyed, "Can we just watch the movie?" It's one of the most amazing shots in movie history in my opinion.
I was sure they were carrying the furniture with the mirror all the way up the stairs and no green screen. It would be funnier.
I remember watching Contact in the theater with my boyfriend at the time and his parents. They all thought the movie was boring and disappointing and I didn’t understand why. I was left in awe by the end of it.
If they didn't understand it, find a new guy. Very powerful indeed.
Red flag. Someone with no sense of awe or imagination.
Arrival is a great double feature to this film if you haven't seen.
It's too cerebral for some people, but I too loved it. I would expect nothing less cerebral from Carl Sagan and Bob Zemeckis!
The key phrase of your post is "boyfriend at the time."
Having lost my father months before seeing this movie, I was in tears from the dramatic impact of how this was shot and the knowing of what was to come. Great film meaning making. One of my favorite scenes in any movie.
Just watched this for the first time (on HBO Max) and this shot literally made me get up out of my recliner. *This right here is what separates good directors from great directors.* To not only have the vision for it, but the skill to actually make it happen. Just brilliant. Well freaking done, Mr. Zemeckis.
And then he goes ahead and directs the "Live Action" Pinnochio. Uggh!
Zemeckis has had a thing for exquisite and revolutionary shots since his work on ‘Back to the Future’. From then on with Roger Rabbit, Forest Gump and so on but you can really see where he gets the passion from with those 3 films. He’s one of the GOATs.
@@jmchezsome jobs are just work for hire really and it’s the studios “vision”. Also not everyone can spit out bangers. So much from so many people go into a movie and sometimes it just doesn’t work out.
One of the most amazing shots in cinema history
I very LOUDLY yelled "WHAT!?" when Don said "We got it all in one take." LOL Got me!
Got me too! Good one Don.
I remember this at the time in the theater. "Oh neat, that's all going to be one shot". And then the mirror. "WHAT!?" indeed.
Wait, it technically was one shit, no? Just has a cute composite at the end
Same
I did as well!!
FYI, they recreated this now-iconic mirror shot almost exactly the same way at the very beginning of Consecration (2023) because it is the same actress, only now she is an adult. It happens at the 4-minute mark!
That's really interesting. I guess they treated it as some sort of homage and not a blatant ripoff.
Welp, watching this after Contact
@@vFANGvWelp, guess I’ll use Google for you:
welp
exclamation US informal
US /welp/ UK /welp/
used to express disappointment or resignation (= the fact that you must accept something you do not like):
Welp. I lost my job. Anyone got any advice?
Welp. They never said it would be easy.
@@vFANGv it basically just means “well,” but with a little more of a shrug. It was really popular like 10-12 years ago, but you don’t see it as much anymore
Not to be confused with “whelp”, which is a disparaging term for a young man, implying that they are naïve.
And since I learned the word “whelp” several decades before Millennials started using “welp”, on the Internet I always mistakenly infer the former.
It broke my brain the very first time I saw it. This scene is genius and so visually powerful. Hands down!
It broke my brain first time I saw it too. Today it breaks my heart. No matter how fast she ran and with as much determination she was still incapable of altering fate.
I remember literally gasping at that shot when I was a kid
One of the most mind bending shots I've seen.
But also one that will stay and haunt you a little.
Whats baffling is seeing the world beyond the bathroom in the mirror…we the audience are coming from the looking glass into our world. Genius.
I watch Contact at least once a year, every year….i love everything about it on every level and watching the making of the film is a real treat in itself.
Contact is one of my favourite movies. Absolutely brilliant
I'd like to watch it once a year every 3 years
This French guy on RUclips did an interesting expose on all the metaphors allusions presented visually in the film. There's really a lot there. Way more than I thought. He said something about Joan of Arc and the costume design that kinda blew my mind.
“We got it on the first take”
O: He got me for a moment there. Lol
Same. I blurted out, "holy shit!" and then a second later, "ah, heck, you got me." XD
Contact is a fantastic book and it’s a hugely underrated film! Probably one of the best films of that decade and an all time classic!
I think the film is very highly rated.
Who underrated this film!??? Lol. It's highly acclaimed. 😂
Three and a half hours to find out the alien is her god damn father ~ Mr. Garrison
Yeah, everyone needs to stop saying “underrated” when what they actually mean is “really good”. Enough, already.
I agree that it is underappreciated. I watched it in theaters when it came out and it didn’t have much cultural impact, but in recent years I’ve heard people referencing it more.
Incredibly emotional scene. One of my favorites from the movie.
I remember seeing this in the theater, and that shot actually blew my mind a little. Still talked about after all this time. Well done. :)
Same here, I was with my girlfriend at the movies back then and I must have shouted or something. I said something like what an amazing scene and she was oblivious to what had happened.
I watched the movie with my wife a while back and I told her in advance about it, it took me literally 5 replays for her to notice and still thinking it wasn't a big deal.
5:15 and THAT'S why it's beautiful. The aperture opening up is absolutely seamless.
I suspect that it wasn't *that* seamless in camera, and some digital post work was needed to help it along.
@@dunebasher1971 That could have been the case,, but seamless speed ramps with aperture pulls (sometimes shuter pulls) were common at that time, via the Preston SAC (Speed-Aperture Computer).
@@dunebasher1971If you watch the shot, the shot does get brighter at the point where the film slows. So you could say it's not "seamless" after all. But they made the switch just as she's turning down the hallway at the top of the stairs, and there's a light on in the hallway, so it makes sense for the light to be different in the upstairs hallway than on the stairs. Basically, the slow motion and the light change happen at the same time as a change in location on the set, so we can chalk up the change in light to the change in physical location. There's more light in the upstairs hallway than on the stairs. Making the speed change when moving to a different physical area helps the change in light (which was partly an actual change in light at that part of the set, based on what we see of the set in the rest of the scene) feel natural.
I always thought the staircase being on the other side was a continuity error but the fact that it's intentional so the entire shot is a reflection... blows my mind!
This film had many memorable shots. The beginning alone is quite mind blowing and it really puts things in perspective (we’re meaningless, except in our own minds).
Wonderful movie. Encapsulates the hope we had for humanity. We did really have it all.
I think his eyes were watering when he described the reflection of the father daughter picture. That's how good that scene still is. From one of my top five favorite sci do movies.
One of my favorite movies.
Seen a lot of movies in my day. This shot always sticks with me. Brilliant.
I was 14 when I watched Contact when it was released. I've watched it countless times since, and it's still one of the best films ever made.
I still need the a 3rd pov from someone in the room to understand how this works. He’s still explaining it from the camera’s pov and I can’t conceptualist it.
There were two shots stitched together, and they did not use an actual mirror.
Shot #1 is the girl running up the stairs and down the hall.
After she reaches the doorway, shot #2 is a pullaway shot from the medicine cabinet with a bluescreen in place of the mirror.
The "reflection" in the bluescreen mirror is just shot #1.
The Corridor Crew covered this
ruclips.net/video/pTl42COCNaM/видео.html
Start at around 4 minutes 18 seconds.
A very powerful scene in a very powerful film! Kudos to all the folks who made it happen.
"Contact" is one of my favorite movies (and books) of all time, and on my watch annually list with "Patton."
One of the greatest shots ever put to film. Incredible and illuminating video!
I remember watching this scene in Contact and being blown away. Still to this day this shot is incredible. Some people have incredible vision and others can action it 👍👍👍
I've seen this movie at least a half dozen times. Never noticed this. My jaw hit the floor. 10/10.
It's like magic tricks. People think learning the secret ruins the illusion, but it really makes you appreciate it more. Just watch Penn and Teller's Lift Off of Love, or their cups and balls with clear cups. Simply amazing.
Like you, I never had any idea how hard this shot was, but learning how hard it was makes the entire thing so much more amazing.
Carl Sagan would have been proud. I only wish he'd lived long enough to see it.
this is purely beautiful work
I remember I saw the film in a cinema in Canberra, Australia, and from beginning to end, there was not a sound from the audience. I was enthralled by this scene but I am sure there were others, such as the camera going from outside, through a window to the inside of the house. And then there was the rather unsettling sound of leaves rustling in the wind, as I recall, on the day of the funeral. Marvellous, intelligent film-making.
This shot always blew my mind. Thanks for sharing the secret. Had to watch twice to get it.
Great video about a great cinematographer working on a great effing movie! THAT shot still baffles me to this day! When it was shown on TV, I asked people around me the following day what they thought about that amazing shot, and nobody knew what I was talking about... I dunno if it's a compliment to the movie itself (they were taken by it), or if people just don't pay attention to the poetry of film making...
My favorite shot of all time in my favorite movie of all time - fantastic.
Really great content. Thanks for putting these stories out there. Incredible!
just totally brilliant planning and camera work
One of the best shots in cinema history!
Can we all collectively come together and just say this is the best shot in cinema. The amount of brain focus this required to conceptualize and understand the logistics. Wow!
Definitely in the top ten for me.
no
Maybe top 50. The single car shot in “War of the worlds” is definitely top ten. Almost as if drones were used.
I don't get into 'the best ever', because I think that depends a lot on what you've seen, but obviously it's one of the greatest.
I am with you bro. This is my number 1.
Can't think of any other so... Complex and subtle at the same time.
I remember seeing Contact at the cinema and being absolutely gob-smacked at how cool this shot was.
I then bought the DVD as soon as it came out (when DVDs cost nearly £30!!!) and raved about the shot, and made countless people watch it, while I tried to explain to them why it was so clever!
No exaggeration to say it’s one of my favourite shots of all time.
Of all the movies and scenes I’ve watched and appreciated over the years, this one definitely was noted at (without thinking too much about at the time) as very impactful and creatively executed. Top notch film making moment.
My favorite shot of all time❤ this is pure art. Bravo!
I always wondered how did they do it. Thank you.
Thank you for this! It's like magicians revealing their illusions after many, many years. I had been confounded by this shot for all this time. Genius!
Beautiful story, beautiful movie, beautiful scene, beautiful construction of a scene
Absolutely just mind blowing. So brilliant in so many ways…so then on top of this incredibly profound metaphorical film exposer, you have the genius of composer Alan Silvestri who ties it all together and brings it home with his subtle but poignant orchestration ♥️ Brilliant…just brilliant. Ahhhhh the 90s films….
Brilliant vision, execution and wonderfully shot. A big congratulations to the Whole team!
This movie had so many jawdropping moments that made my body shiver. Such a fantastic movie.
what a great shot, it sets up the viewer for a magical experience for the rest of the film.
I saw this countless times and wondered how they did it. Thinking it was all one shot with mirrors in front of the camera or something. But I just couldn't resolve it in my mind. The composite is that good I had no idea. The hand reaching out is so in sync with the separate footage it really does look like a reflection of her arm. So glad this was explained and I can finally sleep at nights now, lol
I remember watching this in the theater and thinking....What a great shot.....
When I watched this scene many years ago, I was wow, how can they do that?
And in May 2024, a year after my father died, I cried. Suddenly the scene is so real.
Such an elegant and well-conceived shot, that I had to watch the explanation twice before I understood the trick of it
I remember that shot viscerally. Jenna Malone gave an incredible performance, and so did the rest of the cast. Loved David Morse's work as always.
Even just the intro shot where the camera goes through the balcony door window and through the hall into her room is pretty impressive.
The subtle change to slow motion is very cool. Saw this when I was eleven and this shot was what made me realize film could really be stylish and artistic visually as well as telling a story. Before that I never really noticed the technical aspects of a shot.
definitely one of the best movie scene ever.
never noticed the reversed part, now I can't unsee it.
These men are bloody gods, and Contact is one of the greatest films ever made. Hats off.
Brilliant work, kudos to all involved!
I always found this scene to be brilliant, amazing and often wondered how they did it. Thanks for posting.
Stunning shot. Thanks for sharing this!
Beautiful breakdown.
I love this movie from start to finish. It captures the kind of chaos that would ensue if something like this happened
What wows me about this shot is that someone got her hand to line up with the cupboard handle perfectly, for the compositing of the reflection to be perfect. I wonder if the cupboard shot opening was done first.
Look carefully and you'll notice the hand reaching out has a different color sweater under the jacket than the actress.
Ever since I saw Contact the very first time, I have been amazed at this shot!
I'm glad they at least showed the answer to what we all wanted to know, which was how the mirror got worked into the shot. He didn't answer that at all, just said the special effects team did it.
Contact has always been my all-time favourite film; absolute masterpiece.
This is one of the greatest shots of all time. Absolutely blew my mind when I saw it. And still does, even knowing the secret...
One of my favourite movies. I never once thought about this shot apart from appreciate it as part of the overall film. For me, THAT's great cinematography, you don't want look behind the curtain or even think about the curtain during the movie, just be absorbed and enjoy what you are watching on screen. This interview was an education, and really interesting to think about the skill, vision and wider team needed to create it.
I saw this film very recently and this exact shot stuck with me as I tried to rap my head around how they did it. What great timing for this to be recommended to me.
Technique, magic in support of story, character, and emotions. Such a good movie.
Carl Sagan would have been proud.
Wow, that is a brilliant shot!
I've always loved that shot.
This is a great scene. Technology and execution merged seamlessly to give body to a brilliant and beautiful idea.
This is so cool. I have limited videography experience but a decent amount of still photography that I know how much auto stuff I have when I do simple videography now with a mirrorless camera and a steadying gimbal. The fact that all the focus was done by somebody who wasn’t looking through any kind of viewfinder has always blown my mind, and then wondering what you had to do to change aperture as well as frame rate on the go like that. I have watched this movie a number of times and I had never noticed the way the view seems to come from the mirror until I saw her hand go up like that. Awesome.
What’s so great about this shot is you don’t realise how clever it is until the pay off. That’s when you sit there in this moment of “wait, did that just happen…” and replay the sequence in your head. It’s a great showcase of expectation and reality conflicting and the cognitive conflict it creates.
Fantastic movie, easily of the best of it's genre ever!
It's an insane shot, I've been dazzled ever since. I don't think I've ever seen a shot that sells the illusion of being an impossible one-shot so well.
I used to teach high school students how to reproduce this shot. It’s crazy how much easier it is with modern technology.
It’s interesting, to this day I remember this scene vividly, but I also recall hating it for the longest time.
Eventually, I found that I didn’t hate the scene at all; the scene itself was incredible. I hated how effective it was at making me feel grief and helplessness.
It’s a masterfully done piece of art that unrelentingly imposes emotion.
I've always admired that shot. Beautifully done. Just wish there was more shots to accompany that one in the rest of the movie. it was THE stand out shot for sure.
Love this film! Awesome shot
Love that movie. So well done.
One of the best SF films of all times. In top five.
The power of a relatively simple VFX shot and a well thought out piece of direction. People are so spoiled by cgi these days that they forget what a good filmmaker can do with so little
A wonderful scene..!!! Great interview..!!
A 1997 movie still has in 2024 one of the best visual FX I've ever seen.
Contact is one of my favourite films. I watch it about three times a year.
Love this shot. Love this movie & the Carl Sagan book. 🎉
There are many fantastic shots in cinema that we can hold up to the light, such as Lean's "mirage'' shot - which was born of his incredible observation habits & integretion of a natural phenomena, Kubrick's realistic rotating space station, or Coppola's Valkyrie-napalm scenes (among many others), yet what makes this shot from Contact so very special is it's simplicity.
No surreal phenomena of nature, nor airplane hanger-size set, nor was a fleet of Hueys and explosives engineers was needed to pull off a vision that is absolutely breathtaking. In the tradition of Hitchcock, this is just good old fashioned director's concept realized by cinematographer's ability to deconstruct the concept and then built it into frames (with a great team). A truly simple shot, and yet, even with insight of commentary I can still barely visualize actually pulling it off - especially with such a delicate touch. Bravo!
That shot still blows my mind today, great film btw
A hauntingly beautiful scene, thank you
That shot absolutely BLEW MY !@#$%@#$ MIND when I saw this in the theater.
I have wondered for years how they pulled off that shot, and I've watched the movie easily 100+ times and worked in 3D and video for a few years. Knowing this wasn't lots of VFX and was mostly shot live in film on steadicam just blows my mind.
How would it be done with today's technology? Still a single shot, or spliced together in post?
Amazing shot, amazing story told in this video.
I love this shot and adore this movie.
The first time I ever viewed a film at a movie theater stoned was 'Contact' in 1997 (not to mention it being one of only a handful of times I'd toked up in my then short 15 year old life). My buddy Michael Meatbäl smoked up and then snuck into a screening of 'Contact' at the movie theater located off in the southwest corner of the Boise Towne Square mall and stayed on through for a second screening primarily motivated to see this scene once again and confirm exactly what we had in fact seen in actuality. Great film still to this day in May 2024.
This film also had one of the best uses of 'morphing ' Ive ever seen, just after Jodie Foster says 'poetry' in the capsule near the end. The last great Zemeckis film.