ZACH Multimedia Gallery

ZACH Multimedia Gallery Sight, Sounds, Musings and Postcards from some far-flung corners of the world.

 DesiderataBy Max Ehrmann (1927)Go placidly amid the noise and haste,and remember what peace there may be in silence.As ...
27/04/2025



Desiderata

By Max Ehrmann (1927)

Go placidly amid the noise and haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible without surrender
be on good terms with all persons.

Speak your truth quietly and clearly;
and listen to others,
even the dull and the ignorant;
they too have their story.

Avoid loud and aggressive persons,
they are vexatious to the spirit.
If you compare yourself with others,
you may become vain and bitter;
for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself.

Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans.

Keep interested in your own career, however humble;
it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.

Exercise caution in your business affairs;
for the world is full of trickery.
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is;
many persons strive for high ideals;
and everywhere life is full of heroism.

Be yourself.
Especially, do not feign affection.
Neither be cynical about love;
for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment
it is as perennial as the grass.

Take kindly the counsel of the years,
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.

Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.

Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.

You are a child of the universe
no less than the trees and the stars;
you have a right to be here.

And whether or not it is clear to you,
no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.

Therefore be at peace with God,
whatever you conceive Him to be,
and whatever your labors and aspirations,
in the noisy confusion of life, keep peace in your soul.

With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams,
it is still a beautiful world.

Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.

Wikipedia - Desiderata: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desiderata

  If You Are A Real Movie Buff, A Fan Of Awesome World Cinema - From Almost Every Country, You Should Check Out, Subscri...
17/04/2025



If You Are A Real Movie Buff, A Fan Of Awesome World Cinema - From Almost Every Country, You Should Check Out, Subscribe To MUBI.

GRAND TOUR | Official Trailer | On MUBI April 18

Grand Tour Is On MUBI On 18 April 2025.

Rave Reviews.

Efe Cakarel Jason Ropell Lilly Riber Sophie Ollivier Meghan Wurtz Cate Kane Bobby Allen Kevin Chan Natalie Ralph

===

"Grand Tour review – engaged couple’s sweet, strange colonial era hide-and-seek

"Miguel Gomes’s beguiling and bewildering story follows a jittery fiance fleeing his intended across the British empire, and her hot pursuit

Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian, 22 May 2024

(This article is more than 10 months old)

"Once again, Portuguese auteur Miguel Gomes delivers a film in which the most complex sophistication coexists with innocence and charm. It is at once very worldly and yet unworldly – in fact almost childlike at times. It is elegant, eccentric and needs some time to be indulged. The British characters are played by Portuguese actors speaking Portuguese, except for a few rousing choruses of the Eton Boating Song, which is in English. (There is more literal casting for other nationalities.) And yes, it is six parts beguiling to one part exasperating. But quite unlike any other film in the Cannes competition, it leaves you with a gentle, bemused smile on your face.

"The story, co-written by Gomes, could be adapted from something by Somerset Maugham, but is in fact an original screenplay. (I was also reminded of Jane Gardam’s colonial novels or Evelyn Waugh.) In colonial Burma during the first world war, Edward (Gonçalo Waddington) is a minor British functionary in Rangoon, unhappily waiting for the arrival of the London boat, on which is the woman to whom he has for seven years been engaged: Molly (Crista Alfaiate). But Edward gets cold feet and before Molly arrives, he flees to Singapore, where he runs into his fiance’s rackety cousin in the bar of the Raffles hotel, and allows this seedy and excitable man to believe that his own extraordinary, furtive behaviour has something to do with spying.

"Living like a hobo, Edward goes on to Bangkok, Saigon, Manila and Osaka, from where he is expelled by Japanese authorities for his suspected connection with US naval intelligence. Then he goes to Shanghai, Chongqing and Tibet where he sees pandas in the trees and meets an opium-addicted British consul who tells him the empire is finished and that westerners will never understand the oriental mind. But the formidable Molly is hot on his trail and not to be deterred.

"The movie’s first half is Edward’s perhaps rather somnolent story but the second half belongs to Molly’s more eventful, even sensational quest narrative. We have time to get to know this complicated, determined woman with her odd, spluttering laugh and a predisposition to faint in public which may be epilepsy. The voiceover narration is in the various languages of each of the places the story is set and, in keeping with Gomes’s docu-realist approach to fiction, the tale is interspersed with scenes of the modern-day cities in which each scene takes place. These are a framing device, partly, but Gomes might almost be playfully suggesting that these documentary scenes are the film’s whole point and it’s the story that should be in the background. They are largely in colour, whereas the story is in black-and-white – but this isn’t a hard-and-fast rule. And in fact, though there is a good deal of “documentary” footage in the first half, the Edward half, Molly’s half of the film is almost all story – which, it should be said, gives the movie a welcome energy boost.

"Grand Tour looks to be a romantic, extravagant and comic epic – with some accumulating suspense as Molly begins, against all odds, to catch up with her timid fiance (who clearly doesn’t deserve this remarkable woman.) Are we going to be treated to a gorgeous reunion of lovers? Well, maybe that’s how David Lean would play it and Lean would have made much more of the scene where Edward meets the Thai crown prince at an official reception. (It’s a comparison that has already occurred me here in Cannes for the competition’s other Asian sundered-lovers drama, Jia Zhangke’s Caught by the Tides.) Gomes of course approaches it far more obliquely: there is melancholy and a feeling that the world is a big and confusing place in which individuals can get lost and their hopes and dreams come to nothing. We are left with a poignant farewell, and a self-aware gesture at the idea that this is a fiction, so we shouldn’t be too sad. Grand Tour is a unique and valuable experience.

[Grand Tour screened at the Cannes film festival and is out in the UK on 18 April.]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lz0j-5OSiIg&t=3s

https://www.theguardian.com/film/article/2024/may/22/grand-tour-review-cannes-film-festival

GRAND TOUR by Cannes Best Director winner Miguel Gomes is a breathtaking odyssey of romance, escape, and pursuit. In 1917 Burma, a British civil servant aban...

   Choppers Waiting To Ferry Tourists Over And Around The Magnificent, Humbling Geological Wonder, The Grand Canyon.That...
12/04/2025





Choppers Waiting To Ferry Tourists Over And Around The Magnificent, Humbling Geological Wonder, The Grand Canyon.

That Is A Spectacular Ride Indeed.

Photo By Zacharias Joseph At Maverick Helicopters, Grand Canyon
107 Corsair Dr, Grand Canyon Nat. Park Airport, Arizona - 31 January 2012

    Sorry, Dave Mustaine, Kiko Loureiro, Looks Like This Needs A Rethink And Rehash Now. 😁Self-Inflicted Though, But Not...
10/04/2025





Sorry, Dave Mustaine, Kiko Loureiro, Looks Like This Needs A Rethink And Rehash Now. 😁

Self-Inflicted Though, But Not By Those Whom You Blame. 😁

Things Are Pointing To The Order That Visionary Thinker And Writer Fareed Zakaria Alluded To In His Eponymous Book Published In May 2008. 😱

===

We see each other through different eyes
Segregating ourselves by class and size
It's me against you in everything that they do
This planet's become one big spinning disaster

If you don't like where we're going
Then you won't like what's coming next

What will we look like
In a post American world?
Why cower to all those who oppose the American world?

When you walk away from that which makes you strong
You only fool yourself, you only weaken your cause
There's creeping hate if you resist the false narrative
Crushing all the dissenters who still think for themselves

If you don't like where we're going
Then you won't like what's coming next

What will we look like
In a post American world?
Why cower to all those who oppose the American world?

If you don't like where we're going
Then you won't like what's coming next
Now, now!

What will we look like
In a post American world?
Why cower to all those who oppose the American world?

Official video for Megadeth's "Post American World," from the album Dystopia. Megadeth's new album The Sick, The Dying… And The Dead! is now available everyw...

  "Bruce Springsteen will release seven new albums in June"The singer announced the June 27 release of “Tracks II: The L...
05/04/2025



"Bruce Springsteen will release seven new albums in June

"The singer announced the June 27 release of “Tracks II: The Lost Albums” and dropped the track “Rain in the River.”

By Samantha Chery, Washington Post, 3 April 2025

[Image - Bruce Springsteen performs in Clarkston, Georgia, in October. (Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post)]

"Bruce Springsteen plans to unlock a treasure trove of his music — seven “lost” albums spanning 35 years, including songs with country and “mid-century noir” influences.

"The singer announced the June 27 release of “Tracks II: The Lost Albums” on Instagram and previewed a track on streaming platforms Thursday morning. The music has been long rumored to exist by fans of Springsteen, who has previously hinted at his stockpile of unreleased music. The mega release will include 83 tracks recorded between 1983 and 2018 — 74 of which have not been heard before.

"“I often read about myself in the ’90s as having some lost period or something. And I really, really — I was working the whole time,” he said in a video. “During the pandemic, what I did for that period of time was I finished everything I had in my vault.”

"To go with the announcement, Springsteen released the song “Rain in the River” from one of the albums — “Perfect World” — which his website describes as having an “arena-ready E Street flavor.” Stately, muscular and calling back to the rowdier examples of the singer’s ’80s heyday, the track finds the Boss invoking a familiar motif to lament, among other things, a love that washed away like so much rainfall.

"The project will be released on streaming platforms and is being offered as a nine-LP box set for $349.98 and as a seven-CD box set for $299.99, with distinct packaging for each record. The sets include a 100-page clothbound, hardcover book with archival photos, liner notes on each lost album and an introduction on the project from Springsteen, according to a press release.

"Companion sets — on two LPs for $39.98 or one CD for $14.98 — will feature 20 highlights from across the collection.

"The release is said to provide context to Springsteen’s songwriting and home recording over the 35-year time frame.

"“The ability to record at home whenever I wanted allowed me to go into a wide variety of different musical directions,” Springsteen said in a statement. The press release also states that “throughout the set, that sonic experimentation takes the form of film soundtrack work (for a movie that was never made) on ‘Faithless,’ country combos with pedal steel on ‘Somewhere North of Nashville,’ richly-woven border tales on ‘Inyo’ and orchestra-driven, mid-century noir on ‘Twilight Hours.’”

"“I’ve played this music to myself and often close friends for years now,” Springsteen said. “I’m glad you’ll get a chance to finally hear them. I hope you enjoy them.”

[Jonathan Fischer contributed to this report.]

Bruce Springsteen announced the June 27 release of “Tracks II: The Lost Albums” on Thursday, and dropped the track “Rain in the River.”

  The Boss Is Back. The Latest Single: Rain In The River==="The Washington Post: " Bruce Springsteen will release seven ...
05/04/2025



The Boss Is Back.

The Latest Single: Rain In The River

===

"The Washington Post: " Bruce Springsteen will release seven new albums in June"

"The singer announced the June 27 release of “Tracks II: The Lost Albums” and dropped the track “Rain in the River.”"

https://www.washingtonpost.com/style/2025/04/03/bruce-springsteen-will-release-seven-new-albums-june/

===

Down at the water, I held my Marie
She said, "Now Johnny, your love means no more to me
Than rain in the river
Than rain in the river"

[Verse 2]
In bloody boots, I stood on shadow ground
Her long black hair beneath me, falling down
Like rain in the river
Like rain in the river

[Instrumental Break]

[Verse 3]
Last night, I put on my jacket and I went for a ride
Smelled sweet mustard fields, had my C**t at my side
Like rain in the river
The rain in the river

[Outro]
The rain in the river
Oh, the rain in the river
Thе rain in the river
Oh, the rain in thе river
Rain in the river
(Hey!) The rain in the river
Rain in the river
(Hey!) The rain in the river
(Hey!)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClXE2QbF9aI

"Rain in the River" is the latest single from Bruce Springsteen, released on April 3, 2025, as part of his upcoming box set, "Tracks II: The Lost Albums," sc...

  "Neil Young: dual citizen claims Trump could jail him"The 79-year-old singer and fierce opponent of the president says...
05/04/2025



"Neil Young: dual citizen claims Trump could jail him

"The 79-year-old singer and fierce opponent of the president says he fears the same fate as other dissidents barred from the US — or worse

By Joshua Thurston, The Times, 2 April 2025

[Neil Young performing at Farm Aid 2024. Neil Young became a dual Canadian-American citizen in 2020 - GARY MILLER/GETTY IMAGES]

"Neil Young has told of his fears that he may not be able to return to the United States after his European tour this summer, suggesting he could be “barred or put in jail” by a “spineless” Trump administration.

"The Canadian-born dual citizen alluded to the recent detentions of political activists and deportations of illegal immigrants and said that his criticism of the president could mean he is treated the same way.

"“If I talk about Donald J Trump, I may be one of those returning to America who is barred or put in jail to sleep on a cement floor with an aluminium blanket,” the 79-year-old singer wrote on his website, the Neil Young Archives.

"“That is happening all the time now. Countries have new advice for those returning to America … If I come back from Europe and am barred, can’t play my USA tour, all of the folks who bought tickets will not be able to come to a concert by me.”

"In recent weeks, the British punk band UK Subs and at least one French scientist have been detained and denied entry to the US after criticising the Trump administration.

"Despite becoming an American citizen in 2020, Young suggested he, too, might face issues re-entering the US after the European leg of his Love Earth tour, which starts in Sweden in June. The Heart of Gold singer is due to headline Glastonbury on June 28 and play Hyde Park with Cat Stevens and Van Morrison two weeks later.

"“If you say anything bad about Trump or his administration, you may be barred from re-entering USA if you are Canadian,” Young claimed. “If you are a dual citizen like me, who knows? We’ll all find that out together.

"“If the fact that I think Donald Trump is the worst president in the history of our country could stop me from coming back, what does that say for freedom?

"“It seems to me that if you voted for Kamala Harris over Trump, that makes it possible for you to go to jail or be detained, punished in some ways for not showing allegiance to what? How spineless is that? Trump is not able to stand up to anyone who does not agree with his ideas?”

"Last week Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish student in Massachusetts, was approached by six plainclothed Homeland Security officials wearing masks, detained and flown more than 1,500 miles away to an ICE staging facility in Louisiana, in an apparent crackdown on pro-Palestinian demonstrations at universities.

[Image - President Trump in the Oval Office pausing USMCA tariffs.
Neil Young has been outspoken in his dislike of President Trump
AL DRAGO/CNP/SPLASH]

"The Trump administration has also deported 238 Venezuelans under an 18th-century law, alleging they belong to the Tren de Aragua, a transnational criminal gang.

"On Wednesday it emerged that a Mexican band, Los Alegres del Barranco, had had their US visas revoked for “glorifying a drug kingpin”. The band had projected an image of Ruben Oseguera Cervantes, known as El Mencho, a wanted suspect in both Mexico and America, onto a screen at a recent concert in Guadalajara, Mexico.

"The band emblazoned the face of El Mencho, the leader of one of the most powerful cartels in Mexico, across the stage at a concert in Guadalajara

"President Sheinbaum of Mexico was among those who criticised the band but the US State Department went further, with Chris Landau, the US deputy secretary of state, adding: “I’m pleased to announce that the State Department has revoked the band members’ work and tourism visas.

"“In the Trump Administration, we take seriously our responsibility over foreigners’ access to our country. The last thing we need is a welcome mat for people who extol criminals and terrorists,” he said.

"The UK has recently revised its advice for citizens travelling to the United States to include a warning that anyone found breaking its entry rules could face arrest or detention.

"Last month Denmark updated its US travel advice and advised transgender travellers to contact the US embassy in Copenhagen before departure to ensure there would be no issues with travel documents at the border.

"Young, who has a catalogue of politically charged songs, condemned Trump in an open letter in February 2020 and called him a “disgrace to my country”.

"Later that year Young filed a copyright infringement case against Trump’s re-election campaign for the use of his songs Rockin’ in the Free World and Devil’s Sidewalk at rallies.

"In the filing, Young called Trump’s re-election run an “un-American campaign of ignorance and hate.”"

The 79-year-old singer and fierce opponent of the president says he fears the same fate as other dissidents barred from the US — or worse

  [Paris Noir is at the Pompidou Centre until 30 June.]"Basquiat to Delaney: inside the exhibition honouring 50 years of...
04/04/2025



[Paris Noir is at the Pompidou Centre until 30 June.]

"Basquiat to Delaney: inside the exhibition honouring 50 years of art in Black Paris

"The vast show at the Pompidou highlights how the French capital became a haven for creatives from across the diaspora

By Jason Okundaye, The Guardian, 2 Apr 2025

Hello and welcome to The Long Wave. I was in France at the weekend to check out the Paris Noir exhibition at the Pompidou Centre, an odyssey through the generations of Black artists from across the world who found a complicated sanctuary in the city. This was supplemented with a walking tour on the life of the artist Beauford Delaney, guided by the company Entrée to Black Paris, and finished off with a mind-blowingly delicious Senegalese dinner. Yes, I’m trying to make you jealous.

In depth: A voyage to Paris Noir

[Image - A view of the exhibition at the Pompidou. Paris Noir features the work of 150 artists of African heritage. Photograph: Luc Castel/Getty Images]

"You’re invited into Paris Noir by the frank, sobering gaze of its lead exhibition image: a self-portrait by the South African artist Gerard Sekoto completed in 1947. A modernist, expressionist work with bold, contrasting colours seeming to convey unease, reflection and solemnity, Sekoto painted it days before travelling to London as a self-imposed political exile from South Africa. That year, he would arrive in Paris where he faced difficult living conditions, finding employment as a jazz pianist and singer of South African melodies and Negro spirituals at the nightclub l’Échelle de Jacob (Jacob’s ladder).

"Of the 150 Black artists across 350 works exhibited, many of them have stories like Sekoto’s – coming from the US, Caribbean, South America and Africa to find an artistic refuge in Paris. The scope of the exhibition is expansive, an excavation of artistic movements from Afro-Atlantic surrealism to Parisian syncretism. There’s paraphernalia from Présence Africaine, the pan-African culture magazine founded by the Senegalese writer and editor Alioune Diop in the 1940s (to which Sekoto contributed), theological meditations in the Ivorian sculptor Christian Lattier’s 1957 work Le Christ, and subversions of US racial stereotypes in advertising and comics abstracted into a collage by the French-Haitian artist Hervé Télémaque.

"What emerges from this vast collection is a beautiful sense of the Black Atlantic. Of artists and writers and thinkers pouring in from across the globe, finding a haven in which aesthetic expressions, debates and dialogues were forged in a world contending with decolonisation through pro-independence movements in Africa and the Caribbean as well as western civil rights struggles. They often documented these times: Bob Thompson depicted US lynchings and the violent quashing of civil rights protests; Sekoto covered the tragic revolutionaries in Zimbabwe (then Southern Rhodesia).

[Image - A detail from The Struggle, 1963, by Bob Thompson. Photograph: Courtesy of the Michael Rosenfeld Gallery]

"But political art was not only of the world outside France. In May 1967, in response to a racist attack, riots broke out in Guadeloupe, a Caribbean island that morphed from a colony to an overseas department. Protesters were violently suppressed by French police, who opened fire on striking workers in the economic capital, Pointe-à-Pitre. In 1975, the French Guianese artist José Legrand painted a photorealistic diptych of a scene from the demonstrations.

"In this Parisian Black Atlantic, the refining of method and a collaborative, artistic corpus flourish. Networks and friendships are formed. Black artists enter one another’s orbits and are moved to create even greater works. In the 1990s, the Senegalese artist As M’Bengue created a visual language in his paintings, with its graffiti, graphic art and anti-capitalist social criticism, inspired by the work of Jean-Michel Basquiat, whom he had met in Paris in 1988. Equally, the abstract, impressionist works of Ed Clark, which includes an untitled painting of three bold strokes created by a “big sweep” technique, are inspired by the works of his friend Beauford Delaney.

"If Sekoto is the face of the Paris Noir exhibition, then Delaney is its beating heart. The first piece in your line of sight when you enter the show is his 1968 painting Street Scene (Paris), a sunny, hazy vision of the city through thick, swirling yellow brushstrokes applied using his signature impasto technique, reminiscent of the style of Vincent van Gogh. Tennessee-born Delaney features in all corners of the exhibition, his work relevant to discussions of abstraction, representation, political resistance and portraiture.

[Image - Street Scene (Paris), painted by Delaney in 1968, © Estate of Beauford Delaney. Photograph: Centre Pompidou/Joseph Banderet]

"Delaney’s life was fascinating but tragic, as I learn from Monique Y Wells of Entrée to Black Paris, which provides guided walking tours of Black Parisian history, culture and contemporary life (and which I cannot recommend enough). Wells takes me on a stroll through Montparnasse, a neighbourhood steeped in history.

"As Wells tells me, Henry Ossawa Tanner, often described as the first famous African American painter, came to live in Paris in the late 19th century, which became a draw for other African American artists to arrive. After the second world war, US legislation provided a package of benefits including education funding, low-interest loans and low-cost mortgages for returning veterans to readjust to civilian life and access opportunities. As such, Montparnasse received a wave of African Americans travelling to Paris to attend art schools. Though Delaney was not a veteran, it was this pre-established enclave that he was welcomed into when he moved to Paris on the invitation of his friend James Baldwin in 1953.

"Wells tells me that Montparnasse was “in effect a slum” with ramshackle properties – meaning that poor artists such as Delaney could afford to live and create there. There were a number of bouillons, inexpensive restaurants, that Delaney would frequent, such as the Les Mille Colonnes. Wells also takes me to the site of La Bohème, a former club exclusively for white GIs who had imposed their racist attitudes on to post-second world war French proprietors. It was eventually taken over by Buttercup Powell, the girlfriend of the musician Bud Powell, who transformed the premises into Buttercup’s Chicken Shack - a space where musicians and artists could eat cheaply, and where the Trinidadian jazz pianist Hazel Scott played.

"In the Paris Noir exhibition, the affectionate relationship between Delaney and Baldwin is honoured. As Black gay men, with Delaney struggling with acceptance of his sexuality, their friendship was especially important in light of the hardships and social pressures they faced. Next to a Delaney painting of Baldwin is a quote by the Giovanni’s Room author: “I learned about light from Beauford Delaney: the light contained in everything, in every surface, in every face.” Delaney created more than a dozen works featuring or inspired by Baldwin, presenting him in different modes – from the majestic intellectual thinker to the compassionate source of warmth and intimacy he had come to know so well.

[Image - James Baldwin (left) and Beauford Delaney in Paris, in about 1960. Photograph: Courtesy of the Estate of Beauford Delaney and the Michael Rosenfeld Gallery]

"That intimacy is key to Delaney’s work, as is the prominence of colour and light – particularly yellow, a pigment for hope that, with the raised textures of impasto, captured a yearning for freedom and happiness in contrast to his real life circumstances. His textures seem to capture sound through image: he uses yellow impasto brushes to paint the contralto and civil rights figure Marian Anderson, reminiscent of Byzantine iconography. As the exhibition text reads, the portrait “vibrates like a strange music”.

"The tragic details of the artist’s life that I learned on the walking tour added a poignancy to his works. As Wells tells me, Delaney lived in poverty and struggled with mental illness for much of his life. He spent the final years before his death in 1975 in hospital “for the insane”

"Much like Delaney is threaded throughout the exhibition, he is also felt everywhere in this corner of Paris. There are numerous plaques for residences and restaurants he frequented, and so many cafés he would sit outside for hours, people watching and doodling - Le Dôme, La Select, La Coupole. At the end of the weekend I’m left with a sense that Paris, as a crossroads for the meeting of Black artists and cultures, has a strong claim for being one of the great Black diasporic cities – something Monique Wells tells me is under-discovered, and continues to surprise people.

"I finished my time in the French capital with a visit to Waly-Fay restaurant, which serves traditional Senegalese cuisine, and ate one of the best meals of my life – fish pèpè soup, suya skewers breaded in cassava flour and chicken yassa, washed down with a hibiscus drink. I wondered about the Black artists of today who come through here, making plans for radical work and sharing ideas over incredible food."

The vast show at the Pompidou highlights how the French capital became a haven for creatives from across the diaspora

    "Was Adolescence really shot in one take? Looking under the hood of Netflix's stunning new series"Netflix's hit mini...
03/04/2025





"Was Adolescence really shot in one take? Looking under the hood of Netflix's stunning new series

"Netflix's hit miniseries is a technical marvel. Here's how it came together.

By Randall Colburn, Entertainment Weekly, 25 March 2025

[Image - Adolescence. (L to R) Kaine Davies as Ryan Kowalsky, Ashley Walters as Detective Inspector Bascombe, in Adolescence.
'Adolescence'. Credit: Courtesy of Netflix]

> "Adolescence tells the story of a 13-year-old boy arrested for the murder of a female classmate.

> "Each of the four episodes unfolds in a single, unbroken take that immerses viewers and creates high tension.

> "Filming each episode required three weeks of intense rehearsal and intricate choreography that actors likened to a theater production.

"Adolescence isn't just an emotional marvel, but a technical one as well.

"The timely Netflix series centers around a 13-year-old boy, Jamie (Owen Cooper), who's arrested for the murder of a female classmate. It's told over four episodes, each of which unfolds in real time. In an effort to capture chaos, immediacy, and realism, the showrunners sought to create an unbroken visual experience with no cutaways. The result is bracing and intimate, sometimes uncomfortably so.

"Surely, though, this was accomplished through clever editing, right? After all, that's what Alejandro González Iñárritu did with 2015's Birdman, a "one-take" film that won Best Picture at the Academy Awards. Well, believe it or not, each of Adolescence's four episodes was filmed in a single, unbroken take.

[Adolescence ending explained: Unpacking whether Jamie killed Katie (and how the series is a warning to parents)]

"“There’s no stitching of takes together," cinematographer Matthew Lewis told Variety. "It was one entire shot, whether I wanted it to be or not."

"So, how was Adolescence shot in one take? How much preparation did it take? And how many times did they need to do it before getting it right? Read on for these answers and more.

"How was Adolescence shot?

[Image - Adolescence. (L to R) Faye Marsay as Detective Sargeant Frank, Jo Hartley as Mrs Fenumore, Ashely Walters as Detective Inspector Bascombe, in Adolescence. 'Adolescence'. Courtesy of Netflix]

"In a behind-the-scenes look at Adolescence, the cast and crew broke down the filming process, revealing that each episode was allotted three weeks for production.

"The first week was about walking through the episode "scene by scene," per actor Ashley Walters. Director Philip Barantini adds that the performers rehearsed each scene until it became "muscle memory."

"During the next week, the technical crew entered the picture. Speaking with Variety, Lewis likened the process of staging each episode, mapping transitions, and masking the crew to moving around puzzle pieces. "It’s a lot of planning. You can’t do a shot list, so we didn’t have one," he said. "We mapped the area we were using and looked at how the camera would move within it, and we rehearsed it like a dance, between me and the cast."

[Image - Adolescence. (L to R) Ashley Walters as Detective Inspector Bascombe, Faye Marsay as Detective Sergeant Frank, in Adolescence. 'Adolescence'. Courtesy of Ben Blackall/Netflix]

"Barantini elaborated in an interview with Screen Daily. "We had to plan way more in advance than you would do with a conventional show because the actors need to rehearse in the spaces and we need to know exactly where the camera can go," he said. "Me and [Lewis] had models of the police station and we used little figures and a little camera to map it out. When they were still building the studio but the walls were up, we would go down after everyone had gone home. Matt would have his iPad and then I’d play all the characters and we’d just be walking around and be like, 'Right we can’t go in that door, let’s try this one.'"

"Furthermore, Lewis said, rewrites were often necessary to suit the location and choreography. This resulted in screenwriter Jack Thorne reworking his original scripts to add motivation for movements necessitated by the technical demands.

"The final week was about bringing all the elements together to shoot the episode. "Before each take my heart is pounding, absolutely everyone feels it because everyone knows how important their job is," Lewis says in the Adolescence making-of documentary.

"Barantini adds, "There's not one person on that set who's not important."

"Impressive as they can be, single-shot media can run the risk of coming off as a gimmick. The creators of Adolescence, though, came to the project with intention.

""With Adolescence, I wanted the audience to go on an immersive journey that unfolds in real time just as it’s unfolding for the actors in real time," Barantini said in a recent interview. "[The single-take] creates a tension and forces a perspective on the audience to where they can’t look away, even if they feel anxious or awkward. [The one-shot] doesn’t lend itself to all genres, but for this show, we wanted to dip the audience in for an hour, and we pull them out. The next time, it’s a few days later or 13 months later, and it’s up to the audience to figure things out for themselves."

"Several of the actors likened the experience of filming Adolescence to acting in a theatrical play. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Stephen Graham, the series' co-creator and co-writer who also plays Eddie, described the project as a "marriage" of theater and TV.

""We have to work out how to move around the table and where because it has to be seamless and continuous," he said. "It’s just such a wonderful process, but it is the most zen as an actor I’ve ever been. You are in that character from the moment we say ‘action’ and start until the moment we say ‘cut’ and finish.”

[Image - Christine Tremarco as Manda Miller and Stephen Graham as Eddie Miller in 'Adolescence'. Courtesy of Netflix© 2024]

"Lewis told Variety that they shot Adolescence on the DJI Ronin 4D camera. "It had its limitations, but in the ways we needed it to work: being a small gimbal that you could pass between operators, one that you can hold out in front of you without having to attach it to a person, and at the click of a button, you can go handheld, or click it onto a drone," he said.

"In the making-of documentary, you can see the camera used in a variety of ways, including being hitched to a drone and locked onto a crane attached to a car.

How many takes did each episode of Adolescence take?

[Image Adolescence. (L to R) Amari Jayden Bacchus as Adam Bascombe, Ashley Walters as Detective Inspector Bascome, in Adolescence. - 'Adolescence'. Courtesy of Ben Blackall/Netflix}

"As Barantini explained, the plan was to do 10 takes of each episode — two a day for five days. That didn't always turn out to be the case, though. "Sometimes we’d have to stop and go again, and that was one take, so for some episodes we did up to 16 takes," he told Screen Daily.

"During a Q&A on X (formerly Twitter), Netflix revealed that episode 1 is the second take, episode 2 is the 13th take, episode 3 is the 11th take, and episode 4 is the 16th take.

"Adolescence's breathtaking second episode ending sees the camera taking flight outside Jamie's school, soaring over the town, and touching down in the lot where Katie was killed. There, we see Eddie laying flowers at her memorial. This was accomplished without disrupting the shot.

"The intricately choreographed sequence was accomplished by gently hooking the camera to a drone. "It was a last-minute request from the execs," Lewis told Variety. "We were originally going to take off and fly and stay up in the air, but they thought it would be a nice beat to go back and find Stephen Graham at the end of the scene, so we had a couple of days to work that out, but we got it."

"Thorne discussed the shot in Netflix's making-of documentary. "It was an example of the technical meeting the story and finding a fusion, which is actually better than anything that the story had come up with on its own," he says.

[All four episodes of Adolescence are streaming on Netflix.]

Netflix's 'Adolescence' captures heightened levels of chaos and intimacy with episodes that unfold in a single shot. But was it really filmed in one take? Here’s how the showrunners pulled it off.

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