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How ‘Extraction’ Filmmakers Pulled Off That Sick 11 Minute


Chris Hemsworth in Extraction

If you simply completed watching Chris Hemsworth in “Extraction” on Netflix and questioning how the hell they pulled off that 11-minute single take, TheWrap has obtained you lined.

The scene in query occurs throughout the center of the film and takes place when Rake (Chris Hemsworth) is pursued by Ovi (Rudhraksh Jaiswal) on a fascinating chase that first begins inside a automotive, then a foot chase ensues which spills out onto the streets, then Rake and Ovi go mano-a-mano inside a tenement constructing earlier than returning again into the streets of Dhaka. Those are simply the broad strokes because the shot is far more detailed than that. How is how they put it collectively.

“Yeah, we termed that sequence the ‘one-er’ because it was put together of a sequence or a series of long takes that made it look like one 11-and-a-half-minute continuous take,” director Sam Hargrave advised TheWrap.

“We were restricted by certain technical and location limitations where some of the…your ego wants to do one continuous take, I would love to do all fight scene, 11 minutes without cutting the camera but we had to move locations. Sometimes when you’d go in one door from one spot into another that was 10 miles away, so you couldn’t actually do that. And then you’d have to build up the buildup of damage that they would get as they went through these action sequences, you had to be true to that until you stop and apply more blood or a larger tear in the wardrobe or whatever it might be.”

The ‘oner-er’ scene in Dhaka was improvised by Hargrave and his group because it initially wasn’t written that approach. “So necessity broke it up, but in the movie, it comes off as one 11-and-a-half-minute sequence and the… It never actually started that way, as written, it was this big action set piece that reading it your eye eyes were wide” added Hargrave.

“Every time I read it I was like, ‘Man, this is exciting.’ As big as any James Bond or Jason Bourne movie. And I remember being like, ‘… this is going to be tough to do on our schedule and budget.’ How can I take this without losing the excitement of it? How can I make it my own and make it unique to this movie without losing the excitement?”

Traditionally, to drag off a shot like that might take two manufacturing groups. The first unit with Hemsworth for per week and a second unit group for 3 weeks. However, as Hargrave tells TheWrap they didn’t have time to shoot it the normal approach, and as an alternative needed to run and gun with a prepared Hemsworth who was sport.

“So I was like, ‘Well, if we didn’t have to break it up into two units…’ Because it’d be… In my experience, main would take it for seven days, second unit would have it for three weeks. I was like, ‘We don’t have that kind of time, so how do we do this?’ And Chris is very skilled physically, so I was like, ‘Wow, what if he did most of this stuff?’ And we built it around his skills and we followed him and it kind of came out of that, this necessity and a desire to… Because this part of the world hadn’t really been seen much before in Western cinema, hasn’t been, I was like… It’d be really great for audiences to be on board a real time extraction in this location, that you kind of feel what that’s like and see the world, feel the environment, hear the sounds,” Hargrave stated.

Ultimately, it took Hargarve and the filmmakers virtually two weeks to drag off the ‘one-er” with weeks of rehearsal earlier than capturing. It clearly paid off.

“So once I pitched it that way to the my fellow filmmakers, everybody was on board and it took… I mean we shot it over the course of 10 days, but rehearsed it for many, many weeks. It was months in the making of what you guys see in the final product.”

“Extraction” is at present taking part in on Netflix.



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