
Manhattan. July 26, 1990. 15:45 ~ 16:45.
One Hour
One of the longest handheld tracking shots in film history, It’s Real documents an hour in the street life of downtown Manhattan. Not only is it a unique record of a particular time and place—July 26, 1990, from 3:45 to 4:45 p.m. in the Lower East Side near Robert Frank’s studio (we note in a Daily News headline that after some 20 years the Zodiac killer still hasn’t been identified)—it’s also an experiment in fragmentary language, gesture, and life caught unawares. Snippets of dialogue captured in passing at phone booths and crosswalks, in alleyways, subways, and diners—chance encounters, only presumably, with people going about their day—have something of the aleatory cut-up technique of the Dadaists in the 1920s and William Burroughs and Byron Gysin in the 1950s, an effort to divine new and deeper meanings in ordinary life. — Museum of Modern Art
Top Cast
More Like This

Naqoyqatsi
2002

As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty
2000

The Irishman: In Conversation
2019

Heart of a Dog
2015

Thought Crimes
2015

Public Speaking
2011

We Live in Public
2009

To Be Takei
2014

Evil Influencer: The Jodi Hildebrandt Story
2025

The Walking Dead: The Return
2024

Avatar Spirits
2010

Sherman's March
1985



