'1917' Behind-the-scenes Extended Featurette on One Long Shot

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after finishing the last Bond movie I wanted to try and find something that I've never done before and I kept really scripts and there was nothing that I wanted to do and eventually my agent and PIPA who's producing this movie said why don't you just write your own script and I made a lot of fuss about I don't write you know they just just try this film it's very much Sam's passion project it's the thing that he had in his mind for a number of years and was just looking for a way to get the chance to make it [Music] the idea for the movie came from when I was a very small kid my grandfather fought in the First World War his name was Alfred Hubert Mendez and he went to war in 1917 he was for messenger on frontlines and he was given the job of carrying the message from post to post and I started with this fragment really cap very good bike pick a man bring your kit the movies based around to the journey of two men and I wanted the audience to have a relatively new experience with those men I wanted to feel that they didn't know them and it's a real luxury to be able to make a movie on this scale with two actors who really are relatively speaking new to the game George makai and Dean Charles Chapman who were playing Scofield and Blake both of them are extraordinary young actors George embodies some of the qualities that I was looking for there's something about him that's very old-fashioned and internal and then Dean Charles Chapman food plays Blake it's a wonderful instinctive actor it must be something big if the generals here you have a brother in the second Battalion yes sir they're walking into a trap your orders are to deliver a message calling off tomorrow morning's attack fundamentally it's a very simple story two men have about eight hours to get from one part of the western front to another we've got to cross into enemy territory on a resurgence time to deliver a message that will see 1600 lives let's talk about this for a minute why if we're not clever about this no one will get to your brother I will Blake is the heart of the film it's Blake's love for his brother which accelerates the story and gets them moving in many ways the movies about that friendship and what happens to it they help each other but in ways they don't really fully comprehend if you don't get there in time it will be a masochist good luck from the very beginning I felt this movie should be told in real time every step of the journey breathing every breath with these men fell integral and there is no better way to tell this story than with one continuous shot from the first moment I've talked to Sam about the idea as a one-shot movie I knew it was going to be really immersive stay low it's meant to make you feel that you are in the trenches with those two young men and the camera never ever comes away from the two characters sometimes you have a camera being carried by an operator hooked on to a wire and the wire carries it across more land and it's unhooked again that operator runs with it then steps onto a small Jeep which carries him in another four hundred yards and he steps off it again and goes round the corner there's always that sort of get out of jail card that you have of the movie well you know we might be able to cut around there so we might take that scene out that's not possible on this film the dance of the camera and the mechanics all have to be in sync with what the actors doing there's like a piece of theater every take once it starts it can't stop there's something that goes wrong you just have to keep going and there were so many sayings that are just completely got lost in orders from the German sometimes the saint was six minutes long and when they call cut I would completely forget who I was and I was like if you told it in a conventional way don't think you would have felt the energy you're always moving forward you never go back and the planning was absolutely key [Music] the challenges of prepping this movie are the challenges of prepping a normal movie times about five we had to measure every step of the journey in the early days of free arcing menschell Sam and Roger turnt up to this open field that was pretty much nothing there other than grass and we had the script in around and we literally just walked and talked every single scene to say how long it took us to get from A to B the scene has to be the exact length of the land and the land cannot be longer than the scene and the scene cannot be longer than the land and so you have to rehearse every line of dialogue on location and that's where overlaps with doing theater because the world has to be crafted around the rhythm of the script we are a lot of group conversations about the sets whether it was over models or illustrations that Dennis have done we wanted to understand the physicality of what we had to build we built over a mile of trenches to dig it was quite a task when we were digging we were still doing rehearsals we were still staking out the trench lengths so that we could hone in the exact distances that we needed you almost have to change the way you think about how we view movies as a viewer and how we make movies as a filmmaker the art department more than anyone has been really affected just figuring out the scale of how large these sets need to be this is a highly choreographed piece so every inch has to be accounted for it was an amazing amount of work every place that we went was a magnitude of problems to solve you have all these locations that are basically just ground and you have to create something out of it Roger and Dennis had to work together to figure out a set that can incorporate where the camera needed to be making sure it felt natural and organic within the scene with the timeline and the picking clock when you start the film there's no turning back and the myriads of problems that come up everything will hit you and everything did hit us in order to create the spaces that we did this film does not take place in a series of interiors this is endless exterior no location ever repeats - you're constantly moving through landscapes being such a exterior movie we're very dependent on the light and the weather and we kind of realized well for a start you can't really light it because you know if you were running down a trench and turning around 360 degrees there's nowhere to put a light anywhere and because we were shooting in story order we have to shoot in cloud to get the continuity from scene to scene so some mornings when the Sun would be out and we couldn't shoot so we would rehearse were rehearsing and it would be waiting around everyone with their eyes up in the sky trying to see how long it take for the Sun to move behind the cloud in as soon as it comes over you've got this 5-minute window everyone would be like come on go go go so you are also in the lap of the gods one of the key elements in realizing this film has been Roger Deakins input from the very early days Roger was right by Sam's side working out exactly what it was that Sam was looking for any time I shoot a film I want to put the audience in this world whether it is a fantasy world or real world like 1917 there's a scene with bad all these flares going up over the top of the town and those flares were lighting up the whole scene so we needed to figure out how much time the flares needed to be in the air to get the look we were after they had this model where they were testing which way the shadows moved what was key was the way the light fell through the windows to create the shadow and the layers of light they almost feel that their ground beneath his feet is moving because the light is moving there's something nightmarish about it and strange what roger vacanze has done with his film is amazing some of the camerawork just blew my mind Roger is always so inventive it was like no other form of filmmaking that I've ever experienced before you have to construct a journey for the camera that's every bit as interesting as the journey of the actor what I wanted was one ribbon like a snake moving forward in which the information that you needed happened to fall in front of where the camera was pointing the fact that we're moving always forward it does have a compound effect the gradual growing menace and that constant sense of threat of what isn't seen what might be around the corner is baked into the DNA of dis movie there is only one way this warrant Last Man Standing it's really important that we don't forget the people who fought in the First World War there's a duty to remember them and remember what they did those things that these soldiers go through are horrendous it's intimate in a way that I don't think any other war movie I've seen it until you actually see it on a screen you don't really realize how immersive it is and how that technique kind of draws you into that for me engagement is very important and that is behind the way in which we've decided to shoot in this film at the end of the day you just hope you made something special that people feel personally about when you achieve that it's really beautiful and exhilarating [Music]
Info
Channel: IMDb
Views: 3,320,189
Rating: 4.9633451 out of 5
Keywords: Sam Mendes, 1917, World War I, 1917movie, Colin firth, Benedict Cumberbatch, roger deakins, George Mackay, Dean-Charles Chapman, 1917 movie, roger deakins cinematography, roger deakins 1917, roger deakins lighting, roger deakins behind the scenes, sam mendes 1917, andrew scott, 1917 featurette, 1917 behind the scenes, 1917 film, behind the scenes, 1917 wwi drama, movie featurette, 1917 sam mendes, sam mendes movie, sam mendes movies
Id: ypvd2LJCJHg
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 11min 23sec (683 seconds)
Published: Tue Dec 10 2019
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