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Joel & Ethan Coen - Shot | Reverse Shot

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    Hi my name is Tony
    and this is Every Frame a Painting.
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    The most basic thing we have
    in film grammar is probably this:
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    Shot
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    Reverse shot
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    Nearly everything you watch
    is going to be
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    Nearly everything you watch
    is going to be filled with it.
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    And most filmmakers seem to use it
    as a quick way to record dialogue.
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    Keep the actors still,
    use multiple cameras
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    shoot ten takes,
    and then make decisions in post.
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    But I think shot | reverse shot is still
    powerful when it's done precisely
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    And a good example of that
    is the work of Joel & Ethan Coen.
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    -"We thought you was..."
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    -"...a toad."
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    Because the Coens are masters of the dialogue scene
    and they’ve done it by keeping their shots simple but precise.
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    -"Can I share something with you?"
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    So today, let’s reconsider
    shot | reverse shot.
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    What can we learn from
    the way the Coens use it?
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    -"But let me ask you a question..."
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    -"Would an imbecile come up with this?"
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    One of the first things
    you notice about the Coens is that
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    they like to film dialogue from
    inside the space of the conversation.
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    And that means the camera is
    usually in between the two characters
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    so that they each get separate shots.
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    -"Do I make myself clear?"
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    In other words,
    they shoot a lot of singles.
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    -"I’m sorry. I wasn’t listening."
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    Other filmmakers, like Paul Greengrass,
    prefer the camera behind the characters
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    Usually on a very long lens,
    so you feel like you’re spying
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    -"I want to know what happened"
    -"What happened?"
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    -"Jason Bourne happened.
    You got the files."
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    -"Then let’s cut the crap."
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    The Coens and Roger Deakins
    don’t do this.
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    In fact, they film
    almost exclusively on wide lenses
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    -"Well I’ve got a very strong feeling
    about lenses and personally..."
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    -"...I’m sitting here talking to you and
    you’re filming me from over there..."
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    -"...on a shoulder on probably a single.
    Where, I’d rarely do that."
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    -"Cause I think, you know, the camera
    wants to be..."
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    -"To me,
    I would shoot singles inside here."
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    And if you do this, switch to
    a wider lens and bring the camera closer
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    it feels like…
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    -"It’s different right? You know,
    there’s a sense of presence..."
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    -"You’re right there with somebody,
    as opposed to being…"
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    -"...I think psychologically,
    it’s a totally different effect so…"
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    But what is the psychological effect?
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    If a long lens feels like you’re spying,
    then how does this lens make you feel?
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    -"Look, look, something is very wrong!"
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    -"I don’t want Santana 'Abraxas.'"
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    -"I’ve just been in
    a terrible auto accident!"
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    I would say it’s two feelings:
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    kind of uncomfortable…
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    and kind of funny.
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    And it fits.
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    Because the Coens
    like to isolate individuals
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    trapping them in situations that
    they really have no control over.
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    And because the lens is right here...
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    -"Now we had a deal here.
    A deal’s a deal."
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    -"Is it Jerry? You ask those three poor
    souls up in Brainerd if a deal’s a deal"
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    You’re trapped with them.
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    The other effect is visual.
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    The Coens shoot mostly
    on a 27mm or 32mm lens
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    and they often push in to exaggerate
    some part of an actor’s face.
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    -"Frank Raffo, my brother-in-law,
    was the principal barber."
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    -"And man, could he talk."
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    Using wide lenses doesn’t just
    exaggerate the face...
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    ...it also exaggerates forward camera
    movement, like dollying into a close-up.
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    -"Also a sense of action."
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    -"Like if I bring my hand closer or
    further from the camera..."
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    -"...the wide-angle lens is going
    to have much more effect."
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    -"And even if I’m shifting, like this."
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    -"Maybes don’t make it so."
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    -"It’s going to feel more alive,
    more edgy."
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    -"What, are you kidding?
    We got us a family here!"
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    But the third effect of
    shooting singles this way...
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    ...is environmental.
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    Shots like this have a nice balance...
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    ...between the character
    and everything around her.
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    -"I’d be very surprised
    if our suspect was from Brainerd."
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    -"Yah."
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    And it helps us get a quick read
    on very minor characters.
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    Think about how well you know this woman
    just from her clothes and her workspace.
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    -"We can’t give out no information."
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    But what really distinguishes the Coens
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    ...is the rhythm of their editing.
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    -"We depress the stock."
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    -"To the point where we can buy 50%"
    -"51."
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    -"Not counting the mezzanine."
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    -"It could work!"
    -"It should work!"
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    -"It would work!"
    -"It’s working already!"
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    Many people think the rhythm
    comes from their dialogue.
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    But the rhythm is actually nonverbal.
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    Sometimes, to feel the rhythm,
    you have to see it done badly.
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    This is a film they wrote
    but didn’t direct.
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    Watch the awkward pause
    between two lines of dialogue.
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    -"Not that I judge."
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    -"How terribly interesting."
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    -"But is there a tournament of some
    description with rowdy goings-on?"
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    It just feels "off."
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    Now watch this moment,
    directed by them.
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    -"Cigarette?"
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    -"Right."
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    And this rhythm is what underlies
    so many of their scenes...
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    and it’s how they find nonverbal moments
    that other directors don’t look for.
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    But what do all these choices add up to?
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    I think it creates a particular tone.
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    Because on one level, the Coens
    want you to laugh at these people.
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    After all, they use the wide lens
    to exaggerate the face
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    and they time the scene for humor.
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    But on another level, the Coens want you
    to empathize with these characters.
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    They frame wide enough
    so you can see the environment
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    ...and they put the lens right
    next to people at their lowest point.
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    -"I am dying."
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    -"Do something. Help me!"
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    There's an old saying:
    Tragedy is a close-up.
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    Comedy is a long shot.
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    But for the Coens
    those distinctions are jumbled.
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    They play both tragedy and comedy
    in intimate singles.
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    -"I miss Mike."
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    And that's the fascinating thing.
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    Because dialogue scenes aren't
    just about recording the dialogue.
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    They're also about
    the nonverbal behavior.
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    -"I don’t guess
    this means much to you."
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    -"Hell yeah,
    I could tell you some stories…"
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    -"And that’s the point!
    That we all have stories..."
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    And by placing the camera here,
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    using a wide lens,
    and following their particular rhythm
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    the Coens have found an interesting
    approach to the most basic tool.
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    Shot
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    Reverse shot
Title:
Joel & Ethan Coen - Shot | Reverse Shot
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
07:05

English subtitles

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