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The Bad Sleep Well (1960) - The Geometry of a Scene

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    Hi my name is Tony and this is a
    quick Every Frame a Painting.
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    Maybe you get this. Sometimes I’m
    watching a scene and I just get so bored
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    Instead of being staged uniquely, the
    scene is just this: standard coverage.
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    Nobody moves, everybody gets a close-up,
    and we’re stuck here
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    for five minutes cutting back and forth.
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    --It’s like a lot of films one
    sees today. They’re what I call
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    photographs of people talking.
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    And bears no relation to
    the art of the cinema.
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    So here's one alternative from
    Akira Kurosawa: instead of going
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    to standard coverage, stage the
    scene in simple geometric shapes.
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    This scene comes from The Bad Sleep Well
    and it focuses on two things
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    squares and triangles.
    Here, Nishi hands the case to Shirai
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    and as he sits down again,
    we get a very simple triangle:
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    two sets of eyes and the
    bag with the stolen money.
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    Notice that Kurosawa doesn’t
    cut between reactions.
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    Instead our eyes naturally look at
    one person’s face, then the other.
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    As Shirai grows afraid, the triangle
    stretches out.
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    Even though we’re not thinking about it,
    notice that the door is
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    always in frame in the background,
    to prepare us for when...
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    As Moriyama approaches, the camera
    reframes to trap Shirai inside a square.
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    And as the shorter man backs up...
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    we get this great composition:
    three men, three sets of eyes.
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    Even though the verbal drama happens
    between the two standing men,
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    its Nishi’s face closest to center frame
    because we need to see his reaction
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    and make sure his cover isn’t blown.
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    Kurosawa breaks the triangle with a hand
    and then a reveal.
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    Notice how just by moving his eyes,
    we pay attention to Nishi.
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    And the triangle has subtly changed.
    The two men on the left
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    have been brought closer together,
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    while the man on the right breaks
    away to focus on the money.
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    We get one last attempt at forgiveness
    but it doesn’t work.
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    Shirai hesitates for half a second
    and the scene ends
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    much as it began, with one person alone
    planning his next move.
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    Even though he never says a word,
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    Toshiro Mifune owns this scene with
    just his posture and his eyes.
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    And Kurosawa, by staging it
    in triangles and squares,
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    gives our eyes multiple points
    to focus on, and a complete story
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    in two and a half minutes.
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    There’s even a geometric beauty about it
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    1 person, then 2, then 3, 2, 1.
    Its a masterpiece of visual storytelling
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    If you liked this exercise, try
    studying any other Kurosawa.
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    For each film, he found bold,
    simple, visual ways to tell the story.
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    Seven Samurai has circles
    and groups of seven.
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    Yojimbo has horizontal rows
    and diagonal lines.
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    And the Hidden Fortress has
    triangles and more triangles.
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    So the next time you have
    multiple characters in a scene,
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    don't just shoot generic close-ups.
    Be creative
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    and see what kind of
    shapes you can make.
Title:
The Bad Sleep Well (1960) - The Geometry of a Scene
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
03:11

English subtitles

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