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One-Shot
Editing

One-Shot

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Scene shot in one continuous take—no cuts, no camera angle changes. Demands choreographic precision and multiple rehearsals for the perfect run.

You need a scene that runs completely without cuts — from the first frame to the last. This is the one-shot, and it presents you with entirely different demands than classic editing. It's not about editing rhythm here, but about spatial continuity in real-time. The camera moves, the actors navigate the space, light and sound must follow seamlessly — all in one take or at least a single shot.

Practically, this means: you don't shoot multiple camera positions to cut them later. Instead, you shoot until the entire action runs perfectly — or you consciously accept multiple takes and choose the best one. The effort lies in the preparation. The acting choreography must be precise, like a dance. Camera movements — whether Steadicam, dolly, or free-hand — must synchronize with the talent's positions. Lighting cannot simply be changed between takes; you need consistent lighting that holds throughout the entire action. This makes shooting planning the critical point: floor plans, movement rehearsals, multiple camera dry runs before the first roll.

The advantage? Enormous spatial clarity. The viewer never loses their bearings because they experience the spaces in real-time. There are no hidden cuts that paper over logical problems. At the same time, tension arises from the knowledge that nothing was post-produced here — every mistake is visible in the take. This can be used intentionally: a one-shot conveys authenticity, presence, sometimes even a loss of control, if the choreography deliberately remains fragile.

Related to this are concepts like real-time editing (where multiple camera perspectives are cut live, but the dramatic time remains real) or the long-take philosophy, where long takes are not necessarily uninterrupted, but cuts remain minimal. The one-shot is the more radical variant: absolute continuity without hidden transitions. This requires patience in shooting, precision in preparation — and an editor who has little to do later.

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