What would you learn about your favorite movie if you could see the entire thing as one picture? How is that even possible? Sculptor Jason Shulman has already done the work for you, developing a process to record each and every one of a film’s 130,000 frames (typical of a 90-minute feature) and merge them into a piece of art.   

How did he do it? According to American Photo, “Using a high-resolution computer monitor, Shulman began playing out the entire length of various films, training his camera’s lens on the screen and leaving its shutter open for the entire duration of the movie.”


“Hitchcock is all about character, whereas Kubrick was preoccupied with structure.”

The resulting images of classics like Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey and The Wizard of Oz reveal what Shulman calls the “genetic code” of each film—and insights into their directors, too. Shulman told Wired that “Blurred human figures emerge in the Hitchcock films, whereas what stands out in the photographs of the Kubrick [film]s is symmetry, or some kind of formal composition.” He continued, “I don’t know if you can really draw conclusions from this, but to me it says that Hitchcock is all about character, whereas Kubrick was preoccupied with structure.”

Aside from being a visual treat, the images become an object lesson in cinematic tone, texture and palette, giving us a new way to analyze some of the all-time most beloved and successful films. If you happen to be in London, you’re in luck: new large-scale versions of the images are showing at the Photo London festival until May 21 and at London’s Cob Gallery through June 4. The rest of us can get a little taste below:

A Clockwork Orange

Stanley Kubrick, 1971

Aclockworkorange1971Credit: Jason Shulman

Close Encounters of the Third Kind

Steven Spielberg, 1977

Closeencounters-1977Credit: Jason Shulman

Rear Window

Alfred Hitchcock, 1954

Rearwindow-1954Credit: Jason Shulman

The Shining

Stanley Kubrick, 1980

Theshining-1980Credit: Jason Shulman

The Silence of the Lambs

Jonathan Demme, 1991

Thesilenceofthelambs-1991Credit: Jason Shulman

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

Tobe Hooper, 1974

Texaschainsaw-1974Credit: Jason Shulman

Featured image of 'Inferno' (1980) by Jason Shulman