Entry tags:
Frankenstein
I'm still a bit stunned, nearly three hours after the lights came up at the end of National Theatre Live's production of Frankenstein.
So let me ease into it. It's filmed live during the stage performance in London and delayed some unspecified time for viewing in various places around the world. The filming is a separate production in itself, with cameras positioned to capture angles that the live audience isn't privy to (directly overhead, for instance, and close-ups of the actor's faces), and the whole thing has been edited together to direct the viewer's gaze in certain ways.
So while it retains much of the power of a live performance (actors sweating, audible audience responses, and a theatrical pace), it sits simultaneously in a cinematic niche--filmed, edited, projected on a movie screen, watched in a darkened cinema). An interesting hybrid.
( So much for form. Now for the substance. )
If you can see it, do. It's amazing.
So let me ease into it. It's filmed live during the stage performance in London and delayed some unspecified time for viewing in various places around the world. The filming is a separate production in itself, with cameras positioned to capture angles that the live audience isn't privy to (directly overhead, for instance, and close-ups of the actor's faces), and the whole thing has been edited together to direct the viewer's gaze in certain ways.
So while it retains much of the power of a live performance (actors sweating, audible audience responses, and a theatrical pace), it sits simultaneously in a cinematic niche--filmed, edited, projected on a movie screen, watched in a darkened cinema). An interesting hybrid.
( So much for form. Now for the substance. )
If you can see it, do. It's amazing.