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The ‘Survivor 50’ Camera Team Talks Behind The Scenes Cinematography

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There isn’t a Reality TV Super Bowl — yet. But arguably the closest we’ve come is “Survivor 50,” the epic fiftieth season of the competition series that has been challenging contestants to “outwit, outplay, and outlast” each other in far-flung locations around the globe for a quarter of a century now. The Super Bowl is what director of photography Scott Duncan, who has been with the CBS reality show since it first aired in 2000, had in mind as he started to prep for “Survivor 50.” Everything the show’s massive crew had honed and refined over 50 seasons of television had led to this moment.

“It was business as usual in the sense that every season, the entire crew and I always search for new ways to excel, but since it was 50, there was a celebratory feeling amongst the crew that this season should feel special and not only call back the 49 seasons prior but pave the way ahead for the future of Survivor to come,” Duncan told IndieWire.

For viewers watching “Survivor 50” unfold on screen, the picture is straightforward: Legendary host Jeff Probst guides the challenges and tribal councils for a record 24 returning cast members, on a picturesque but desolate strip of land in Fiji, the show’s longtime home base. The scale of Survivor’s production behind the scenes, though, is nearly impossible to comprehend from a viewer’s perspective.

At any given challenge, approximately 28 camera operators are positioned across the set while another 26 reality operators are deployed at tribe camps. The total crew exceeds 700 people, split between more than 300 international crew members and roughly 400 local Fijian crew working across transportation, marine operations, construction, security, camera support, and catering. Amongst the hundreds of crew members are camera operators and cinematographers who specifically work to ensure that every blindside, breakdown, moment of tragedy, and team triumph are captured with the visual intentionality of a scripted drama. To pull off such a feat requires a vast and meticulously coordinated operation.

For Season 50, the camera team leaned further into immersive POV coverage than ever before. Duncan estimates they deployed around 30 GoPro-style cameras on the marooning day alone, rigged inside boats, embedded within challenge builds, and even mounted in positions that most fans watching at home would never be able to imagine, including underwater scuba camera operators that handle water challenges and wildlife specialists that handle specialty B-roll. Mini-camera teams also build lenses directly into challenge infrastructure so editors have angles that feel genuinely experiential rather than observed from a distance.

“Reverse the Curse” – Back from tribal, tensions rise following the exit of a particularly historic player. The final five immunity challenge ends in a showdown and features one of the closest finishes the show has ever seen. Jeff reveals the outcomes of the remaining in-game fan votes and how they impact the final stage of the competition. Then, one castaway will be crowned Sole Survivor and awarded the $2 million prize, during the three-hour live season finale, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, May 20 (8:00-11:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live and on-demand for Paramount+ Premium plan subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the episode airs)*. Jeff Probst serves as host and executive producer.  Pictured L to R: Aubry Bracco, Joe Hunter and Jonathan Young  Photo: Robert Voets/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
‘Survivor 50’Robert Voets/CBS

“If a contestant jumps in a boat during an ocean challenge, we have cameras inside the boat capturing them picking up their paddles,” Duncan said. “Every shot has the potential of creating a big story moment.”

The goal is to make Survivor feel less like a competition show being documented and more like a first-person journey being shared. “These small details cut with wide sweeping drone shots really take the viewer inside the world of the players,” Duncan said.

One of the more obvious difficulties that came with filming Survivor 50, as with any season of the show, is the unpredictability of the weather, with Duncan calling it “a main character in the storytelling of the show.” John Tattersall, who’s been a camera operator since filming the second season of Survivor, said that unless weather conditions become dangerous, they shoot through any and everything.

“Sometimes it rains for days, and everything is wet. Clothes, shoes, gear, everything. Other times it’s brutally hot, and you have to manage dehydration and exhaustion,” Tattersall told IndieWire. “For me personally, Tribal Council can actually be the toughest. There are open flames, smoke, heat, and long hours in tight positions. Some camera spots are right in the middle of that environment.”

Despite the way in which the surrounding elements can be brutal on camera gear, Tattersall said the crew’s technical team works tirelessly to maintain, repair, and rebuild their equipment. In addition to the care that goes into servicing and protecting the important camera equipment, Tattersall explained that, for what it’s worth, obstacle-filled weather conditions often make for a better show. “Rain flying in Jeff’s face, players battling through storms, chaos on the beach,” he said. “That’s drama you can’t fake.”

“Reverse the Curse” – Back from tribal, tensions rise following the exit of a particularly historic player. The final five immunity challenge ends in a showdown and features one of the closest finishes the show has ever seen. Jeff reveals the outcomes of the remaining in-game fan votes and how they impact the final stage of the competition. Then, one castaway will be crowned Sole Survivor and awarded the $2 million prize, during the three-hour live season finale, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, May 20 (8:00-11:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live and on-demand for Paramount+ Premium plan subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the episode airs)*. Jeff Probst serves as host and executive producer.  Pictured: Jonathan Young  Photo: Robert Voets/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
‘Survivor 50’ Robert Voets/CBS

Since its earlier seasons, the visual language of Survivor has evolved significantly from using handheld cameras into a much more layered operation. Now, the crew uses advanced equipment like gimbals for long-lens storytelling and for more of a cinematic, compositional approach. Duncan, who has been the primary architect of that evolution, is explicit about the ambition behind it.

“This is not just a reality show anymore; this is not just coverage. This is a cinematic reality filmmaking journey,” he said. “All operators are creating pleasing compositions, looking for how and where to shoot while in the moment. I want the visuals to feel emotional by spending some more time capturing facial expressions and having the camera spend time capturing quiet reflective moments.”

The challenges on Survivor 50 have been some of the more pivotal scenes for fans to watch at home. According to Duncan, “blocking out the challenges is a machine in itself.” That challenge is all up to veteran Survivor Director David Dryden, who leads whiteboard sessions each morning, mapping out camera positions, challenge movements, and contestant entrances in great detail. “The players do what they want to do, which can completely throw out what you visually had in mind,” Duncan said. “Like filming a sporting event with athletes, we are documenting players giving it their all.”

Tattersall described those morning planning sessions as the backbone of how the crew functions in the field. “We have to be prepared because everything that happens is happening in real time in front of us,” he said. A typical day can run anywhere from 13 to 16 hours, and once contestants arrive, there’s no cutting or resetting.

“Reverse the Curse” – Back from tribal, tensions rise following the exit of a particularly historic player. The final five immunity challenge ends in a showdown and features one of the closest finishes the show has ever seen. Jeff reveals the outcomes of the remaining in-game fan votes and how they impact the final stage of the competition. Then, one castaway will be crowned Sole Survivor and awarded the $2 million prize, during the three-hour live season finale, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, May 20 (8:00-11:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live and on-demand for Paramount+ Premium plan subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the episode airs)*. Jeff Probst serves as host and executive producer.  Pictured L to R: Rizo Velovic, Joe Hunter, Jonathan Young, Tiffany Ervin  Photo: Robert Voets/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
‘Survivor 50’ Robert Voets/CBS

What makes the entire operation function, both Duncan and Tattersall said, is trust. During most daytime shoots, there isn’t a traditional video village where producers monitor every feed, so camera operators are expected to follow the story unfolding in front of them, anticipate behavior, and make creative decisions on their own in real time. “We’re not just recording events. We’re actively thinking like storytellers while we shoot,” Tattersall said. “That trust creates efficiency, but it also creates pride. Everyone feels ownership in making the show great.”

While “Survivor 50’s” contestants sleep on the beach in the open-air shelters they built for themselves amidst all the potential elements, crew members take refuge on a nearby resort island that doubles as a production base. “It’s beautiful, but it’s also a serious working environment,” according to Tattersall. “There are rooms, bungalows, offices, technical areas, catering spaces, post-production spaces,” he said. “The whole island transforms into a functioning production headquarters. Everything is built around keeping the machine running.”

This hasn’t always been the case, Duncan joked, for crew members who have been around since the show’s inception. Back then, everyone slept in tents and built their own version of a production “town” where the crew lived and worked. “Still not as grueling as what the players experience, but there was certainly a level of authentic survival skills that came into play,” Duncan explained.

“Reverse the Curse” – Back from tribal, tensions rise following the exit of a particularly historic player. The final five immunity challenge ends in a showdown and features one of the closest finishes the show has ever seen. Jeff reveals the outcomes of the remaining in-game fan votes and how they impact the final stage of the competition. Then, one castaway will be crowned Sole Survivor and awarded the $2 million prize, during the three-hour live season finale, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, May 20 (8:00-11:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live and on-demand for Paramount+ Premium plan subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the episode airs)*. Jeff Probst serves as host and executive producer.  Pictured L to R: Jonathan Young, Joe Hunter, Aubry Bracco  Photo: Robert Voets/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
‘Survivor 50’ Robert Voets/CBS

“Survivor 50” has only just finished its run, but Duncan and Tattersall are already back in Fiji filming the next season. The show must go on. Tattersall said he hopes that as audiences watch, they feel the same joy and connection that the crew feels while making this behemoth of a television program. “That’s what Survivor has always been about,” he said. “The bonds between players, between families watching together, and among fans who share a love for the game.”

“Many of our crew have been together for decades. There really is a ‘family’ energy, and we all know what it takes to bring the show to life,” Duncan said. “There is something magic [sic] about filming ‘Survivor’ for 25 years.”

“Survivor 50” is available to stream on Paramount+.

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‘The Birthday Party’ Lands 12-Minute Ovation At Cannes Premiere

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Léa Mysius’ latest feature The Birthday Party (Histoires de la Nuit) earned a 12-minute ovation Friday evening at the Cannes Film Festival following its debut screening in the Grand Théâtre Lumière. It marked the last world-premiere screening in this year’s 22-strong competition lineup.

The audience broke into cheers twice during the screening of the home-invasion thriller before giving the French pic wildly enthusiastic applause as the lights went up.

Adapted from Laurent Mauvignier’s bestselling novel of the same name, The Birthday Party follows Thomas and Nora and their teenage daughter Ida, who live on a remote French marshland where social contact is limited. Monica Bellucci plays their only neighbor, Cristina, an Italian painter.

The official synopsis continues: As the two households plan a surprise birthday party for Nora, strange disturbances begin to occur, and unease rolls over the marsh.

Director and actress Hafsia Herzi, who was in Cannes last year with her own film The Little Sister, and actor Bastien Bouillon (The Count of Monte Cristo) play the couple. Benoît Magimel, Bastien, Tawba El Gharchi and Paul Hamy also star.

The ovation included a moment when Cannes boss Thierry Frémaux insisted that El Gharchi, who plays Ida, be allowed to address the audience, which was raving about her performance.

RELATED: ‘The Birthday Party’ Clip: First Look At Monica Bellucci In Cannes Palme D’Or Contender

The Birthday Party is the third feature from Mysius, who was previously in Cannes with Ava and The Five Devils, and who shared an Oscar nomination with Jacques Audiard and Thomas Bidegain for the screenplay for Emilia Pérez. The film is produced by Paris-based F Comme Film and sold internationally by mk2 films.  

The festival ends Saturday with the presentation of the Palme d’Or and the rest of the awards. 

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Emile Hirsch on the Legacy of Speed Racer

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“Speed Racer” is finally getting its due.

The 2008 film, written and directed by “The Matrix” visionaries Lana and Lilly Wachowski and based on the beloved late-‘60s Japanese animated series, is one of the boldest and most uncompromised films ever released by a major studio (in this case Warner Bros.) – compelling and audacious, on both a visual and narrative level, that also continues the Wachowskis’ thematic concerns about the dangers of Capitalism and their interest in the essential power of a found family. It was unlike anything that had ever been released and is still unlike anything released since.

“We wanted to experience action that was more of a feeling, we wanted to create paintings in the abstract but imbue them with the emotional narrative that was driving the whole thing,” said Lilly in a new documentary included on the new, must-own 4K Blu-ray (out this week).

“We wanted to detach narrative from time and space,” Lana added.

But at the time that “Speed Racer” was released, it widely dismissed. It wasn’t just underappreciated; it was downright despised. Critics found it a cacophonous eyesore (it currently holds an abysmal 37 on Metacritic). A.O. Scott’s review for the New York Times called it “busy and incoherent.” J. Hoberman in the Village Voice called it “a cathedral of glitz.” David Edelstein, for New York Magazine, sneered that the film was “a shambles, with incoherent action and ear-buckling dialogue.” The New Yorker’s Anthony Lane referred to “Speed Racer” as “Pop fascism.”

“Yes, the colors are hot, the set design is cool, and the sidekick chimpanzee is cute, but the action sequences – the hyperreal video-game kineticism on which the Wachowskis’ reputation for virtuosity has rested – are chaotic and nonsensical,” Scott wrote. It was a sentiment shared by many.

“Speed Racer” was just as disappointing commercially, collecting just $93.9 million worldwide on a budget of $120 million. Plans for a franchise, including two sequels, were abruptly canceled. (The Wachowskis wouldn’t make another movie for four years, finally returning with the independently produced “Cloud Atlas,” which they directed with German filmmaker Tom Tykwer.)

Over time, though, the response to the movie shifted from mild bemusement (and outright distain) to appreciation, particularly on social media and with a new group of more savvy film fanatics, who praised the film in newsletters and blog posts. If not heralded as an ahead-of-its-time masterpiece, there seemed to at least settle in a consensus that it should be heralded as a risk-taking rulebreaker that still seems as outrageous today as it was in 2008. (Crucially, on Letterboxd, it has a 3.6. The kids are indeed all right.)

“Films, especially in corporate monetized structures, they become these things that roll through these factories and they all start to look alike. ‘Speed Racer’ sticks out like this flower in a gray-scape,” said Lilly in the documentary.

After the 4K remaster premiered at Beyond Fest in Chicago earlier this year (to a rapt, highly attentive audience), “Speed Racer” even made a brief, unlikely return to IMAX theaters last month. Pretty good for a movie Lane in The New Yorker dismissed as “of no conceivable interest to anyone over the age of ten.”

As the collective attitude towards “Speed Racer” changed, so too did the attitude of its star Emile Hirsch. At the time of “Speed Racer’s” release, he was on the cusp of major superstardom. After the movie failed to meet expectations, there were reports that he got rid of his representation (he now says that this change was unrelated to “Speed Racer’s” box office performance). Over the years, though, he painted a series of illustrations inspired by “Speed Racer” and spoke openly about the film on social media. When the movie played the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, he attended in costume and stopped to take photos with fans. Emile Hirsch is Speed Racer. And Speed Racer is Emile Hirsch.

“Emile is so great in the movie. He’s in this tender space. He’s kind of a boy but kind of cool,” said Lana in the new documentary.

Hirsch had grown up watching “Speed Racer” reruns on Cartoon Network and first got the call about the film while he was shooting Sean Penn’s “Into the Wild,” where he played Chris McCandless, a young man who died tragically in the wilderness.

“I was like, Oh my gosh, this sounds amazing. And I’ve got a beard and I’m skinny, and I’m like hearing this and it couldn’t be more different than ‘Into the Wild,’ which I was shooting right then and there,” Hirsch told TheWrap.

After Hirsch had wrapped “Into the Wild,” he had to prepare for “Speed Racer” auditions. Hirsch had auditioned unsuccessfully for the two “Matrix” sequels (we’re assuming for the role of The Kid, eventually played by Clayton Watson). Hirsch was only 15 or 16 at the time.

“I wasn’t really experienced enough to handle them as filmmakers in a certain sense. I don’t think I quite got the direction in the right way and I was just new to the game,” Hirsch said. But he had just been through the wringer on “Into the Wild,” directed by a filmmaker who also happened to be one of the greatest performers of his generation. This time, he was ready for the Wachowskis.

“I remember really working a lot on the auditions and putting in the time to really figure out exactly what the right tone for the scenes was and whose Speed was. From the beginning, it felt like it went well,” Hirsh said. “It was a series of auditions that culminated in getting the part.”

Hirsch said that at the time he remembered news articles about the worldwide casting call that the producers of “Speed Racer” had put out.

“It wasn’t like they just saw a few people, they saw everyone. And part of me was like, what are the odds I get it, just like numerically, I mean, there’s like 10,000 people submitting? But it worked out and I was beyond excited and thrilled and a little intimidated, even just because of the size of the of the production.”

Did the Wachowskis ever tell Hirsch why they chose him? After all, they had seen thousands of actors, watched hundreds of auditions and yet they picked him. Hirsch said no but that “I’m almost glad they never told me.” Now, he can only guess. “I think that there was just something there, that Speed had a certain set of qualities that I think maybe they felt lined up with me. I don’t know though,” Hirsch said.

Hirsch wasn’t sure how “Speed Racer” was going to look, but he had an idea. “I think due to my own lack of imagination, I just assumed it would be the same dark visual aesthetic as ‘The Matrix.’ I remember thinking, But ‘The Matrix’ is an R-rated movie and this has a kid with a chimpanzee, you can’t make that dark. Weirdly enough, that would be more ridiculous,” said Hirsch.

After the Wachowskis showed him storyboards for the movie, Hirsch remembers thinking, Oh this is completely different. It made him more excited to do the movie, particularly because they were borrowing elements from the “Speed Racer” television series and translating them for the big screen.

To achieve this look, the Wachowskis employed a number of different methods, including extensive use of computer-generated imagery from companies like Industrial Light & Magic, Digital Doman and Sony Pictures Imageworks and shooting the actors individually and then composing them together later in an effort to maintain an image with very little depth; one that could mimic the look of a traditional, “flat” hand-drawn animated series.

“There was a lot of acting in rooms with stuff that wasn’t there and I got used to it pretty quick because they had a lot of storyboards, so I could imagine the world that we were in,” said Hirsch. “Then to see all those scenes that you shot, now with this completely believable wild colorful world, it really made me appreciate just how much the Wachowskis had planned and envisioned it prior.”

When we wondered how Hirsch felt about the movie now – and about how his response to it has maybe changed over the years, Hirsch said that he “always loved the film because I love the Wachowskis.”

“We were obviously all super bummed out when it came out and when it didn’t get the reviews that we thought it should have gotten, or the public wasn’t going to see it, e everyone was sad in a way, because everyone had worked so hard on it,” Hirsch said.

He’s not sure when the reappraisal started to happen, although he cites Film Crit Hulk’s essay as a turning point (it was published in 2015). Slowly, Hirsch realized, the tide was turning.

speed-racer
Warner Bros.

“It was such an organic thing that was not manufactured. This is just people thinking and deciding for themselves how they felt about a work of art and reassessing it and that, that to me, was cool. Ever since the film came out, every year it gets more and more popular,” Hirsch said.

Six years ago, Hirsch saw the film at the New Beverly, a rep theater that Quentin Tarantino owns in Los Angeles. It was a midnight screening. He remembers that the film was playing well but in the Grand Prix scene, Hirsch said, something else happened.

“I could hear everybody in the theater crying. And this was adults, these are cinephiles. And I could hear the crying, I remember going, Wow, there’s very few movies where I could hear the audience crying at a point in the movie,” Hirsh said.In that moment it really clicked why it was this timeless classic, because it reconnected people to their that childhood sense of wonder and sense of being able to do anything you put your mind to. I think that it’s that heart that has really created the enduring legacy of Speed Racer. I’m very, very, very grateful to have been in a film that people feel so strongly about.”

Hirsch was originally signed on for three films, but the only thing he knows about the sequel is that Lana told him that he “had to get rock hard abs and put more muscle on.” “I could see him getting a little more muscle, a little more bulk,” said Hirsch.

In some ways, the curvature of acceptance for “Speed Racer” is keeping within the legacy of the animated series, which lived far beyond its brief television run.

“I think it’s a film that followed the fate of the cartoon, where the cartoon came out and it only ran for two seasons, and then it got more and more popular, and became cooler and cooler, to the point where Kurt Cobain had ‘Speed Racer’ stickers on his guitar. It attained a level of cool,” said Hirsch. “And I feel like the movie, even though didn’t do well when it came out, it has continued this journey of picking up where the cartoon left off and became one of these one of these things that’s just cool. There is something to it there that isn’t necessarily marketed, it’s just come naturally. And the audience has naturally got there.”

“Speed Racer” is now available on 4K UHD.

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CAA Moebius Film Festival 2026 Lineup

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The 11th edition of the Moebius Film Festival, Creative Artists Agency’s annual screening series showcasing graduate student filmmakers and their work, has unveiled the lineup for this year’s May 27-28 run.

CAA Moebius will screen short films directed by student filmmakers from top film schools, including the American Film Institute Conservatory, New York University, Columbia University, Chapman University, the University of Southern California, Florida State University and the University of Texas at Austin.

The first night showcase will feature Columbia graduate Greta Diaz Moreau with Loquita Por Ti; Becoming, from Chapman graduate Aidan Forte; NYU graduate Harold Kahane’s The Alternative Resolution; UT-Austin graduate India Opzoomer’s Poster Boy; and Dongmei, from NYU graduate Rubing Zhang.

The second night screenings have booked Club Rats, by AFI graduate Grace Godvin; Aayat, from USC graduating director Sonia Bhatia; AFI graduate Alex Bush’s Beware The Wolves; Norheimsund, from NYU graduate Ana Alpizar; and Kumquat, from FSU graduate director Lex Lee Morales.

CAA Moebius will this year introduce Moebius Labs, a series of workshops and informal conversations allowing participating filmmakers direct access to key film and TV creatives, producers and executives. This year’s participants include screenwriter Julia Cox in conversation with Liz Suggs; producer Jessie Henderson; filmmaker David F. Sandberg and CAA Motion Picture literary agents.

The showcase will also see appearances by Palm Springs filmmaker and Moebius alum Max Barbakow and a yet-to-be-announced Oscar-winning writer and director. Each will host an evening and deliver opening remarks to celebrate the next generation of storytellers, according to CAA.

CAA Moebius was launched by CAA motion picture agents Christina Chou, Zach Kaplan, Pete Stein and Lingie Park, who said in a joint statement on Friday: “Over the past 11 years, Moebius has continued to grow alongside the filmmakers who have come through the program. With the introduction of Moebius Labs, we wanted to create a more direct exchange between emerging filmmakers and established creatives working at the highest levels of the industry. This year’s lineup reflects an incredible range of voices, ambition and cinematic perspective, and we’re proud to continue building a platform that champions the next generation of storytellers.”

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