10 Greatest Long Takes Ever Filmed

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There’s something magical about a one-shot scene — where the camera rolls and never looks away from the subject. No safety net of nervous cuts, no place to hide — just pure, unadulterated immersion. It can be exhilarating, tense, stunning, or even outright terrifying, pulling you so in to the narrative that you almost forget you’re watching a movie. Here’s our countdown of the 10 most gasp-inducing one-shot scenes of all time.

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10. 1917 (2019) – A War Told Without Blinking

Sam Mendes’ World War I saga is constructed to resemble one continuous take, the two soldiers racing across no man’s land to deliver a message of life or death. The sophisticatedly hidden cuts make it seem so, but it’s the timing that’s the genuine masterstroke — the detonations, the camera movements, the acting all perfectly timed. It’s not a technical gimmick — it makes you experience the entire mission in real-time. 

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9. Victoria (2015) – 138 Minutes, Zero Cuts

This is not only an imposter to the throne as a one-shot — it is. It took 138 straight minutes of filming to capture a night of crime in Berlin involving a young woman. The acting’s so good you’ll forget the camera’s even present, and the suspense mounts never to release. Watching Victoria is like being inserted into someone’s life for a memorable one-night stand.

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8. Birdman (2014) – Stepping the Tightrope of Reality

Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman exploits the dichotomy between stage and screen into a false impression, constructed to appear to have been filmed in one continuous take. The uninterrupted camera movement mirrors the fractured mind of a former actor clinging to the hope of reminding us of his genius on Broadway. The illusion is flawless — the whole production is done as if it is one endless fever dream, alternately comedy, tragedy, and spectacle.

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7. Russian Ark (2002) – A 300-Year Dance

Alexander Sokurov’s Russian Ark is 96 minutes of unflinching filmmaking hubris — one take, no edit, in one place, the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg. The camera wanders through Russian centuries past, floating over extravagantly costumed extras and historical recreations with balletic grace. It must have been a logistical nightmare to do it, but the result is mesmerizing.

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6. Oldboy (2003) – The Hammer Hallway

Park Chan-wook’s since-classic hallway fight scene is a ballet of brutality. The camera stays with Oh Dae-su in a side-scrolling position as he battles dozens of attackers with a hammer and sheer willpower. No glamour here — every punch is substantive, every stagger genuine — and that’s what makes it so memorable.

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5. Children of Men (2006) – Ambush in a Moving Car

Alfonso Cuarón’s dystopian thriller is replete with incredible long takes, but the car ambush scene is the one that blows away. The camera pivots and spins inside the jammed vehicle as the world outside collapses in chaos — gunshots, shattering glass, screams — all without ever cutting. It’s so seamless you barely recognize the technique until your heart rate returns to normal.

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4. Touch of Evil (1958) – Tension in Real Time

Orson Welles starts Touch of Evil with a ticking time bomb and one suspenseful shot following it down a crowded border town. It’s an impressive technical feat — but it also sets the tone and the stakes of the movie before any word of dialogue is spoken.

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3. Rope (1948) – Hitchcock’s Real-Time Experiment

Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope isn’t truly a single take, but it’s one of the earliest and most ambitious attempts at creating that illusion. Each reel lasts about ten minutes, with cuts hidden in clever ways — usually by panning into darkness. The result is a tense, claustrophobic thriller that feels like you’re trapped in the room with the characters.

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2. Goodfellas (1990) – The Copacabana Entrance

The legendary “Copa shot” follows Henry Hill and Karen past the back door of the Copacabana, curved along kitchen and service corridors before exploding out into the nightclub’s light. It’s a Steadicam tutorial in choreography, narrative, and mood, capturing Henry’s swagger and the charm of his universe perfectly.

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1. The Shining (1980) – Tricycle of Dread

Stanley Kubrick uses the Steadicam as an instrument of terror as we move along with boy Danny on his bicycle riding down the endless corridors of the Overlook Hotel. The fluid, unbroken movement swings you into a rhythm — until you realize something can be hiding around the next bend. The shot is absolute suspense, built with restraint and control.

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One-take scenes are more than flashy tricks — they’re high-wire acts of coordination, trust, and storytelling. They demand that every person on set be perfect in the moment, because there’s no fixing it in the edit. When they work, the result is cinematic lightning in a bottle.

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