• Home
  • Interviews
    • Yearly Top Tens
Menu

World of Reel

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Home
IMG_5591.jpeg
Ken Russell’s ‘The Devils’ Gets Uncut 4K Restoration at Cannes Classics From Warner Bros.
IMG_5583.jpeg
Nia DaCosta “Disappointed” by ‘The Bone Temple’ Box Office: “We Made a Great Film”
IMG_5511.jpeg
Star Wars’ Streaming Data Shows George Lucas Prequels Outpacing Disney Sequel Trilogy by a Very Wide Margin
IMG_5577.webp
Charlie Kaufman’s ‘Later the War’ Back on Track After Shutdown, With Channing Tatum, Sets 2027 Shoot
IMG_5576.webp
Jeff Nichols’ ‘King Snake’ Acquired by Neon — Sets 2027 Release
Featured
Capture.PNG
Aug 19, 2019
3-Hour ‘Midsommar' Director's Cut Screened in NYC
Aug 19, 2019

This year’s 12th edition of the Scary Movies festival at Film at Lincoln Center premiered Ari Aster’s extended version of “Midsommar” this past Saturday.

Aug 19, 2019

World of Reel

  • Home
  • Interviews
  • More
    • Yearly Top Tens

‘Mank’: David Fincher Had Amanda Seyfried Doing 200 Takes of the Same Scene

June 17, 2020 Jordan Ruimy

David Fincher is notoriously known for doing an obsessive amount of takes per scene, all just to make sure that he gets the best performance from all of his actors and the “perfect shot.” This is the same man who literally had to stop a take because a tiny thread was out of place on someone’s shirt on “Zodiac.” So, yeah, he clearly has a bad case of OCD as well. But so did Kubrick.

In “Mindhunter,” he shot 75 takes for one particular scene.

For “Zodiac,” he spent an entire afternoon trying to get a closeup of Jake Gyllenhaal's hand tossing paperwork inside his car. And you never see the actor's face in the final shot.

In “The Social Network,” in response to a question about how many laptops he broke during that famous laptop smash scene, Andrew Garfield stated that it took 13+ scenes to get the shot Fincher wanted (that’s a lot of wasted laptops).

Now we have Amanda Seyfried, who only has one scene in Fincher’s upcoming Netflix movie, “Mank,” but says that Fincher’s obsessive-compulsive behavior resulted in a week of shooting and 200 takes of that single scene before he was satisfied with the result.

…I was part of scenes with tons of people in it and we would do it for an entire week. I can’t tell you how many takes we did, but I would guess 200, maybe I could be wrong and could be way off. Um, I could be underestimating by five days of one scene when I didn’t have one line… ‘You think I can just relax?’ No, because there are probably about nine or 10 different camera angles that had been on me at one point.

Fincher wants to get a scene right, as he envisioned it. Much like Kubrick, Fincher is an obsessive perfectionist, and the movies speak for themselves. IndieWire claims that he seems to do on average a good 50 plus takes per shot. Regardless, this kind of obsessive attention to detail shows in his films, where every frame is so precisely calculated.

← The 12 Best African-American Movies‘Peninsula': Cannes-Selected ‘Train to Busan' Sequel [Trailer] →

FOLLOW US!

No results found

Trending

Featured
IMG_5398.jpeg
Warner Bros. Source Says ‘Horizon: Chapter 2’ Is “Frozen” With “No Plans” for Release
IMG_5393.jpeg
Mel Gibson’s ‘The Resurrection of the Christ’ Wraps Seven-Month Shoot With New DP Robrecht Heyvaert, $250M Budget
IMG_5374.jpeg
Is Steven Spielberg’s ‘Disclosure Day’ a Secret Sequel to ‘Close Encounters’?
IMG_5332.jpeg
Lynne Ramsay Says Joaquin Phoenix Arctic Epic ‘Polaris’ Is Her Next Film and Calls It Her ‘2001’

World of Reel RSS

Critics Polls

Featured
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘Vertigo’ Named Best Film of the 1950s, Over 120 Participants
B16BAC21-5652-44F6-9E83-A1A5C5DF61D7.jpeg
Critics Poll: Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Tops Our 1960s Critics Poll
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘The Godfather’ Named Best Movie of the 1970s
public.jpeg
Critics Poll: ‘Do the Right Thing' Named Best Movie of the 1980s
 

SEND NEWS TIPS

World of Reel tagline.PNG
 

Content

Contribute

Hire me

 

Support

Advertise

Donate

 

About

Team

Contact

Privacy Policy

Site designed by Jordan Ruimy © 2025