logo
Real-time narratives are pushing the limits of TV storytelling

Real-time narratives are pushing the limits of TV storytelling

Yahoo02-05-2025
In the final stretch of Max's hit medical drama 'The Pitt,' a mass casualty event at a music festival blitzes the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. Under the fluorescent, windowless glow of the emergency wing, exhausted surgeon Michael Robinavitch (Noah Wyle), his overextended resident and student doctors, and the rest of the nursing and security staff race to save the dozens of severely wounded gunshot victims who are funneling onto their floor. They roll out gurneys, distribute blood bags and perform rapid surgeries, shouting out diagnoses and pinballing between patients to form a kind of hyper-intensive and chaotic ballet.
At first glance, this high-stress test might feel like an 'ER' redux. But unlike those of its foundational predecessor, each of the 15 hour-long episodes of 'The Pitt' unfolds in real time, depicting the unpredictability and relentlessness of a single, all-consuming hospital shift. There are no breathers, no scene breaks between shifts, no musical cues to buffer the action. Just a guiding principle: total, uninterrupted immersion — fueled by long takes, precise editing and a cacophony of overlapping clinical jargon.
'Time is a really big part of the emergency room experience,' series creator R. Scott Gemmill says. 'What we decided was to bring the audience into that experience, that environment, and not let them leave.'
'The Pitt' isn't alone in this pursuit. This spring, a few shows are tinkering with television's temporal and cinematic limits. On Netflix, 'Adolescence,' a riveting four-part British miniseries, chronicles the ripple effects of middle-school violence within a family and community using a bold narrative device: each hour-ish episode is a 'oner,' filmed in a single, unbroken take. Meanwhile, Apple TV+'s 'The Studio,' Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg's satirical take on Hollywood execs, follows a similar maxim — nearly every scene (and its entire second episode) plays out in one continuous shot. Even 'Severance,' this year's buzziest show, starts its second season with a no-cut cold open, echoing the technique's usage in other prestige hits such as 'Barry,' 'The Bear' and 'Succession.'
With enhanced computer-generated imagery and featherweight camera technology, and fragmented audiences who are more distracted than ever with second-screen options, it's no wonder showrunners are expanding their narrative palettes and rethinking TV's stylistic and structural capabilities. If the goal is to obtain eyeballs, how can audiences look away when they don't know what's coming next?
That premise has informed the oner and other real-time narratives for decades on the big screen — just consider Alfred Hitchcock's 'Rope,' Orson Welles's 'Touch of Evil' and Martin Scorsese's introduction to the Copacabana in 'Goodfellas,' touchstones that redefined the way camera movement could toy with tension and perspective. More recently and prominently, however, the oner has been used (and sometimes abused) by auteurs and action directors looking to flex and adrenalize the complicated choreography of a Broadway production in 'Birdman,' or shootouts, hand-to-hand combat and warfare in shows such as 'True Detective' and films like 'Atomic Blonde,' 'Black Panther' and '1917.'
The oversaturation — and occasional self-indulgence — of these technical achievements has made their usage a bit predictable and one-dimensional, but has inevitably sparked innovation. What if, instead of presenting a soldier's trek through a war zone without blinking, the camera trailed a frantic Hollywood executive keen on instigating office shenanigans and brokering bonkers backroom deals?
In 'The Studio,' Rogen and Goldberg do just that, writing precisely timed walk-and-talks between colleagues in unbroken takes that help send up the absurdity of their Hollywood peers and their easily wounded egos. This is most prominently on display in the show's meta second episode, appropriately titled 'The Oner,' which tracks — all in one shot — a disastrous set visit by Rogen's studio head to a film attempting to pull off its own oner during magic hour.
'We wanted the show to have an immersive, manic energy to it,' Rogen told Esquire this year. 'Because that's our experience, being in these rooms with people yelling at each other. We wanted to throw you into it and create this sort of unpredictable, uneasy energy.'
There's a similar, palpable energy throughout 'Adolescence,' which wrings tension out of its episode-length oners without relying on intense showdowns and surprises. Created by Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham (who also stars), the miniseries opens with the real-time detainment and interrogation of Jamie (Owen Cooper), a 13-year-old accused of killing his classmate. The first episode's fluid structure explores the full scope and slow churn of an active investigation, observing the mundane procedures and crisscrossing movements of a police station, along with Jamie's (and his parents') real-time reactions to each stage of his arrest.
The one-shot approach invites even more emotional insight during the show's fourth episode, when Jamie's dad, Eddie, attempts to celebrate his birthday as his son's trial approaches. As he spends the morning at home and then runs an errand with the family, the camera captures a full life cycle of grief — Eddie switches between good spirits and unbridled anger, mood swings that eventually result in a teary breakdown. Rather than drumming up drama, the continuous take provides an unflinching time capsule of a broken man searching for answers.
Though Gemmill dabbled with oners while cutting his teeth on 'ER,' he ultimately refrained from implementing them in 'The Pitt.' The decision 'really comes down to what serves the story,' he says, a sentiment that veteran television writer and producer Robert King shares. A fan of the real-time phenomenon, he finds that the lyricism of 'The Pitt's' editing structure and its layered tableaux give it a vividness, energy and point of view that the more objective, observational oners in 'The Studio' and 'Adolescence' can't always achieve. 'You still have the crosscutting that is a requirement for any ensemble work,' King says, 'but what's great with 'The Pitt' is you can see that other level of action behind the foreground.'
None of these structural choices work without great actors, months of rehearsals and smart set design. The advances in equipment (such as drones, Go-Pros and lightweight Steadicams) have also allowed directors to more easily diagram handoffs between camera operators and enable an entire cast to operate like a real, synchronized medical team — or chaotic movie studio. Gemmill reveals that his team designed 'The Pitt's' stagelike set — with its numerous doors, wide hallways and open sight lines — before hashing out any scripts so that writers could take its geography into visual consideration. 'Everything was designed to be able to keep that movement and that visceral [element],' he says.
The ultimate goal is attention. Right now, it often feels as if there are two dimensions within the television landscape — shows that are designed as background noise with predictable narratives and shows that withhold plot to build suspense and cultivate week-to-week conspiracies to keep audiences theorizing. As 'Adolescence' director Philip Barantini explained in Netflix's press notes recently, these days, 'All of us — and especially the younger generation — are so used to watching short clips on their phones or on YouTube and getting a quick fix.'
But this latest trio of real-time shows offers the opposite: an opportunity to slow down, be present and embrace the uncertainty of every moment unfolding on screen. And in an era of endless dopamine distractions, that kind of sustained engagement might just be their boldest trick.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Netflix Says 50 Percent of Global Users Now Watch Anime, Reveals Expanded Slate
Netflix Says 50 Percent of Global Users Now Watch Anime, Reveals Expanded Slate

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Netflix Says 50 Percent of Global Users Now Watch Anime, Reveals Expanded Slate

Netflix doubled down on its global anime strategy over the weekend, unveiling a slate of new titles and fresh footage during its showcase at Anime Expo in Los Angeles. The company also shared updated viewership data highlighting just how far Japanese anime has come in expanding from its former niche into a powerhouse global content category. According to Netflix, more than 50 percent of its members — amounting to over 150 million households, or an estimated 300 million viewers — now watch anime. The company says anime viewership on the platform has tripled over the past five years, with 2024 marking a record-breaking year: 33 anime titles appeared in Netflix's Global Top 10 (Non-English) rankings, more than double the number in 2021. More from The Hollywood Reporter Dakota Johnson Gets Karlovy Vary Award and Love, Calls Celine Song "Probably the Best Filmmaker of Our Time" Dakota Johnson Wants to Direct Her First Feature, Avoid "Toxic Sets" and Play a Psychopath 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' TV Series, Told Through the Eyes of Chief Bromden, in the Works The streamer also revealed that anime content was viewed over 1 billion times globally in 2024, and that 80 to 90 percent of users opt to watch anime dubbed. To capitalize on the demand, Netflix has begun offering anime titles with dubbed audio and descriptions in up to 33 languages. Leading the streamer's upcoming slate is Sakamoto Days, the hitman-turned-family-man action series based on the popular manga. The first season of the title spent 10 weeks in Netflix's Global Top 10 and charted in 54 countries, including Japan, Korea, France, and Argentina. New weekly episodes will begin streaming on July 14. Another high-profile release is Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2, a sequel to the acclaimed 2022 dystopian series from Studio Trigger, set in the gritty universe of CD Projekt Red's Cyberpunk 2077 video game. At Anime Expo, Netflix debuted a first teaser and new key art for the follow-up. For global fans of kawaii culture, Netflix will premiere My Melody & Kuromi on July 24. The stop-motion series brings Sanrio's beloved characters into an original adventure where they must save their homeland, Mariland, from a looming threat. Additional upcoming anime titles teased at Anime Expo included Record of Ragnarok III, Beastars Final Season and The Fragrant Flower Blooms with Dignity. Netflix emphasized the genre's continued growth across demographics and regions, noting that recent anime hits have spanned action (Jujutsu Kaisen, SPY x FAMILY), sci-fi (Gundam: Requiem for Vengeance), fantasy (Delicious in Dungeon), and slice-of-life romance (My Happy Marriage, Pokémon Concierge). Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise

Lena Dunham strives to showcase 'different voices' in TV work after 'Girls' criticism
Lena Dunham strives to showcase 'different voices' in TV work after 'Girls' criticism

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Lena Dunham strives to showcase 'different voices' in TV work after 'Girls' criticism

Lena Dunham is not the voice of her generation, and that's OK. The actress and writer, best known for the 2010s comedy "Girls," opened up about criticism of the HBO series in an interview with The Independent published on July 5. "One of the profound issues around 'Girls' was that there was so little real estate for women in television that if you had a show called 'Girls,' which is such a monolithic name, it sounds like it's describing all the girls in all the places," Dunham told the British outlet. "And so, if it's not reflecting a multitude of experiences, I understand how that would be really disappointing to people." Lena Dunham speaks out: Actress makes rare public speech in support of transgender rights The coming-of-age dramedy revolved around four twentysomething women in New York — Hannah (Dunham), Marnie (Allison Williams), Jessa (Jemima Kirke), and Shoshanna (Zosia Mamet) — as they navigated work, dating, and the harsh realization that they maybe shouldn't be friends after all. The show, which drew controversy for its frank portrayal of womanhood and predominantly white cast, ran for six seasons and picked up a pair of Primetime Emmy Awards. While recent reappraisals of "Girls" have recognized the series as a satire of millennial narcissism, Dunham said she "liked the conversation around 'Girls,'" including criticism of its racial diversity. Dunham has applied the feedback to her current work. The television mogul serves as writer, director, and executive producer on the Netflix series "Too Much," a romantic comedy starring Will Sharpe, Megan Stalter, and Aylin Scott. "The thing I have really come to believe is that one of the most important things is not just diversity in front of the camera, but it's diversity behind the camera," Dunham said. "As a producer, one of my goals is to bring a lot of different voices into a position where they can tell their story." Lena Dunham interview: 'Girls' star looks back on show criticism In a June 2024 interview with USA TODAY, Dunham reflected on the often-toxic discourse surrounding "Girls" and what it taught her as a creative. "The biggest lesson that I learned is that once your work is in the world, people are going to have the conversation they're going to have," Dunham said. "I try to hear when people have something valid to say, but also to disconnect from it enough that I can continue to make my work." Contributing: Patrick Ryan, USA TODAY

Lena Dunham on fatphobia, dating advice and her new London rom-com
Lena Dunham on fatphobia, dating advice and her new London rom-com

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Lena Dunham on fatphobia, dating advice and her new London rom-com

Lena Dunham is almost synonymous with New York City. The US actress, writer and director rose to fame with her award-winning semi-autobiographical series Girls, which followed four 20-something women as they navigated love, life and friendship in the Big Apple. But her latest project - a Netflix rom-com loosely based on her life over the last few years - is set on the other side of the Atlantic. Too Much follows Jessica (Megan Stalter), who moves from New York to London after breaking up with her boyfriend, and falls in love with punk musician Felix (Will Sharpe). Just as Dunham did when she moved to London in 2021, Jessica quickly learns the important things about the UK: everybody loves Paddington, the Jaffa Cake debate is highly contentious (it's definitely a biscuit) and a "housing estate" isn't the sprawling gardens of a lavish manor house. Dunham tells the BBC that while Too Much has "superficial similarities" to her life and is "about 5% autobiographical", she didn't see herself ever playing the show's protagonist in the way she did in Girls. "I didn't consider Jessica to be me - she's inspired by my life but is her own character and was written with Megan in mind," she says. Megan Stalter says Girls "was all about sex and Too Much is about falling in love", which is a similar to how Dunham sees the show. There was also another reason she chose to step away from the spotlight. While filming Girls, in her 20s, Dunham's body was heavily scrutinised and last year, she told the New Yorker she "was not up for having my body dissected again". She explains that body shaming was part of the reason she stepped further behind the camera. "Just being perceived was overwhelming," she says. Dunham has spent the past few years focusing on writing projects that don't centre her as an actor. She believes society has made some strides towards being more body positive, but says the culture we live in is still "so deeply fatphobic, misogynistic, racist and ageist and that informs our dynamic with our body". The 39-year-old has been vocal about challenges she's faced with her health, particularly her endometriosis, which led her to have a hysterectomy aged 31. Asked how her relationship with her body has changed since then, she says she's developed a new love for how she looks. "I've been able to have a relationship with my body that exists outside of the cultural pressures and I feel lucky for that." As well as reflecting on how her self image has changed, Dunham also says she's learned a lot since her 20s. Having been in the spotlight for more than decade, the actress has had her fair share of controversies. In 2017, she defended Girls writer Murray Miller when he was accused of sexual assault. Dunham later apologised, saying it was "absolutely the wrong time" to share her perspective. Miller vehemently denied the claims and was not charged. She also apologised for a "distasteful joke" she had made on a podcast saying she wished she'd experienced a termination when discussing the US abortion. "I thought, back then, it was important to just keep going and be tough no matter what happened," she reflects. "I was so focused on work and not letting any of the noise in but I wish I had allowed myself to take more time and space. We all have to acknowledge our own complexities and sensitivities but it's hard to wrap your head around that when you're in your 20s." Dunham's new 10-episode series stars Hacks actor Megan Stalter and Will Sharpe, best known for playing Ethan Spiller in The White Lotus and films such as A Real Pain. Sharpe, 38, says he relates to the challenges his character faces, as "everyone carries baggage from their previous relationship" and feels vulnerable when they enter a new one. Stalter relates to her character too. The 34-year-old says she often "felt like she was too much" in her 20s but with time, has come to be proud of her who she is. Written with Dunham's husband, musician Luis Felber, Too Much focuses on the evolution of one romantic relationship. It's refreshing in its realness - from serious conversations between Jessica and Felix to the fact Jessica's media salary stretches to a housing estate in east London rather than a Bridget Jones-esque flat in Borough Market. I ask Dunham if she has any dating tips for women in their 20s, given she's been through the rollercoaster of trying to find a life partner. She says the concept of dating has changed over the years, and back in the late noughties, it was "considered a last resort or a strange thing to meet someone online". Looking back, Dunham wishes she would have allowed herself to understand what she really wanted rather than just seeing the cultural expectations that were placed on her. "If I was letting myself understand my own desire, my 20s would have looked really different romantically." Too Much is released on Netflix on 10 July. Lena Dunham pulls out of directing Polly Pocket Lena Dunham 'sorry' for defending writer Lena Dunham criticises 'diet tips' cover Lena Dunham sorry for abortion joke

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store