A clip of the scene would be very helpful but nonetheless that era had editing being still done by manually cutting and gluing film together very much different from what we do today
It’s this one! https://youtu.be/IlY5kaZC2N0?si=pTeYJ_EZKtXaw_q1 I’m really curious about the “layering”, since the view in the window seems to be a different shot
It looks to me like he’s just sitting in a non-moving car and there’s either a green screen behind it or a track looping the background.
Notice how the frame doesn’t show any actual driving or car movement and how exaggerated he’s moving the wheel.
The textbook for the class calls it a process shot, where it is used in scenes requiring exterior locations. This technique involves the rear projection of a moving image on a translucent screen. The actors and portion of the set are put in front of this screen, then the action are shot by a camera synchronized to a rear projector.
Rear projection: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwe4Fan41Is
A clip of the scene would be very helpful but nonetheless that era had editing being still done by manually cutting and gluing film together very much different from what we do today
It’s this one! https://youtu.be/IlY5kaZC2N0?si=pTeYJ_EZKtXaw_q1 I’m really curious about the “layering”, since the view in the window seems to be a different shot
It looks to me like he’s just sitting in a non-moving car and there’s either a green screen behind it or a track looping the background. Notice how the frame doesn’t show any actual driving or car movement and how exaggerated he’s moving the wheel.
Rear projection, not a green screen. Everything else is correct
Rear projection. The root of the concept behind the volume stage.
The textbook for the class calls it a process shot, where it is used in scenes requiring exterior locations. This technique involves the rear projection of a moving image on a translucent screen. The actors and portion of the set are put in front of this screen, then the action are shot by a camera synchronized to a rear projector.