Yes, but I doubt her feature was shot in one take. It's nearly impossible to shoot a feature length film in two days--even if you pulled two all-nighters.
Creepsgirl:
The film you said was shot in two days...is that a feature? I would love to hear how you guys shot an 80+ minute movie in two days.
My suspicion is we won't see creepsgirl again.
I’ve directed three features shot in two and a half days and
crewed on about six.
Here in Los Angeles rental houses don’t charge for Sundays. So if
we pick up the equipment at the first available time - Friday at
either 3PM or 5PM - and return it Monday at 10AM we only pay for
one day rental.
If scheduled properly you can use up to four locations - I usually
try for two or three - and with a good crew can get 30 to 40 set
ups in a 16 hour day.
My schedule is usually a 6PM call at location one. I have a walk
around dinner ready and we are set up for the first shot by 7:30.
We’ll shoot for nine hours, getting between 12 and 18 set ups.
Saturdays call is noon and we shoot until 4AM. Then depending on
where we are on the shot list we’ll adjust the Sunday call time.
Knowing that we will shoot all night with the crew packing up no
later than 8:30AM.
So if all is going well the Sunday call will be 4:00 or 5:00PM.
Sometimes The Sunday call is a brutal 12 Noon (only an eight hour
turnaround) which makes a 20 hour last day.
If I think I might need a 20 hour day I’ll schedule that on
Saturday (11AM call), try to get a 10 hour turnaround which means
a 5PM call for a 16 hour last day.
With that schedule I can get about 100 set ups. Knowing that I’ll
likely get 80 I work on my shot list with that understanding. I
can do a couple of fight scenes and some blood efx, but mostly a
movie shot like that is going to be horror with little gore or a
thriller that relies on the psychological rather than on the
action.
Over the years I’ve learned to grab inserts, sneak in additional
close-ups quickly and do some ADR right on location to make the
movie a little better.
But I have no idea how you can make a feature for less than $100.