Inception mirror scene

This:

How did they film this scene without showing the camera’s reflection?

Wow, great question. Digitally remove the camera?

It’s a great effect and like a lot of the best effects, not one you think about during the movie.

Quick guess: Like most of that movie they aren’t really outside and those aren’t really mirrors. It’s all green screen. The reflections in the mirrors are computed based on the positions of the few objects & people actually on the green-screen set, the reflected backgrounds are just CGI like the regular backgrounds. Makes ma head hurt…

Vampire camera.

What I was going to say, but after watching the video, it seems there is a slight angle in the shot. That would be sufficient to avoid getting the camera’s reflection in the mirror.

My guess is greenscreen, as well. Whenever you’ve got two mirrors facing each other, the reflections *always *veer off one direction or another- because it’s impossible to make the mirrors exactly parallel to each other. Even the slight divergence will become more apparent the “deeper” you look into the reflections, resulting in a very apparent “curving” of the images.

There’s no divergence in that shot- you could take a ruler and draw a straight line down the depth of the reflections. Gotta be fake.

Probably just digitally erased the camerman from the scene. If you can erase Gary Sinese’s legs from forest Gump in 1994 it’s probably pretty easy to erase an entire camerman in 2010.

First done in Citizen Kane. Angles and one way mirror.

Here’s a description from seeing the scene being filmed:

So it sound’s like they used actual mirrors, not green screens.

I also think there’s sufficient angle between the center of the mirror and the camera’s viewpoint so that the camera just doesn’t show up.

There’s certainly some green screen involved (my guess is that the scene has been CGI’d up the wahoo). Notice at 28 seconds in where Ariadne takes care to step over something that isn’t there (I actually think she’s doing it at ten seconds in as well, with the other mirror, but it’s not as obvious).

Wow, I did I not notice that before? I wonder what she’s stepping over

i’m guessing it is a sill to stop the “mirror”. so that’s either a real mirror or something else heavy she’s pulling.

I too have found this set report, I’ve been looking into how they did, nothing official yet! I feel there are a number of different techniques used, but using one way mirrors and filming the cast through them would have been one. Rotoscoping out the camera op is also a possibility, this being made easier when the mirrors are stationary.

also, this;

No, there is not enough room. At :12 into the clip, the camera is almost in line with the leftmost paint line. When that mirror runs flat, the camera is well in that line of view of the mirror. Similarly, in the clip from :23 tpo :29, the mirror swings and exposes the full area to the right of Leonardo. There is no space for a camera to hide.

Interesting catch. I agree she appears to be stepping over something that is not visible in the final version.

How does that one way mirror work again? Remember, mirrors like that in police lineup rooms work by lighting - bright lights on one side and dim light on the other. The bright light causes that side to work as a mirror, where dim lighting on the other is dim enough to be overwhelmed by the light passing through from the far side. How would that work in this scene, filmed outdoors?

Now look at the video in the link by bomtarker.

At around 1:04 you see a big green sheet on the right, and a smaller green screen on the far left.

At 1:29 you see one of the big mirror panels being assembled, with a pattern of blue dots across the face. I’m thinking those are target dots used for tracking the mirror surface location. I’m sure the mirror images are digitally corrected if not digitally generated.

She steps over it at 18 seconds as well on the way to the second mirror

One of the YouTube comments from the OP’s link says this: