Category
page 1One-shot films

Birdman
2014 film by Alejandro González Iñárritu

1917
2019 film by Sam Mendes

Russian Ark
2002 fictional historical film by Alexander Sokurov filmed in the Winter Palace in one take without stopping the camera

Enter the Void
2009 film directed by Gaspar Noé

Victoria
2015 film directed by Sebastian Schipper

U – July 22
2018 film directed by Erik Poppe

Boiling Point
2021 film directed by Philip Barantini

Bushwick
2017 film by Jonathan Milott and Cary Murnion

The Silent House
2010 film by Gustavo Hernández Pérez

Paint Drying
2016 protest film directed by Charlie Shackleton

Carter
2022 film directed by Jung Byung-gil

Timecode
2000 film by Mike Figgis

Silent House
2011 film by Chris Kentis and Laura Lau

One Shot
2021 film directed by James Nunn

Ana Arabia
2013 film by Amos Gitai

Lost in London
2017 film by Woody Harrelson
one-shot film
genre of full-length movies filmed (actually or apparently) in a single shot

Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes
2020 film directed by Junta Yamaguchi

PVC-1
PVC-1 is a 2007 Colombian drama thriller film directed and co-written by Spiros Stathoulopoulos. The plot was inspired by a true story about an improvised explosive device (IED) being placed around the neck of an extortion victim. The name came from the PVC pipes used for the explosive device. This directorial debut premiered at the Cannes International Film Festival in 2007 as an official selection of the Directors' Fortnight. The 84-minute film was shot in one single continuous take without cuts using a Glidecam Smooth Shooter and a Glidecam 2000 Pro camera stabilization system. The film won

Homework
1991 film by Jaime Humberto Hermosillo

Mads
2024 film directed by David Moreau

Corona
2020 film directed by Mostafa Keshvari

The Punishment
2022 film directed by Matías Bize

Fish & Cat
2013 film by Shahram Mokri

Running Time
1997 film by Josh Becker

One More Shot
2024 film directed by James Nunn

Shttl
Shttl (, ) is a 2022 Ukrainian–French one-shot drama film written and directed by Ady Walter and starring Moshe Lobel and Saul Rubinek. The film depicts the lives of a Jewish shtetl on the eve of Operation Barbarossa. It was filmed in Ukraine six months before the 2022 Russian invasion.