A
split screen is a composite shot, or rather, two shots projected/edited simultaneously
into the same frame. This time-honored technique of the “split screen” has been
used often in cult-TV history so that characters can meet themselves.
And
by meet “themselves,” I mean encounter a doppelganger, twin, or self from an
alternate, future, or past chronology.
Split
screen shots were used extensively in the early first season Star Trek
(1966-1969) episode, “What Are Little Girls Made Of.”
There,
Captain Kirk (William Shatner) encountered an android duplicate of himself. Although
stunt doubles were also utilized, the illusion of “two” Captain Kirks was ultimately
sold through the use of split-screen effects, so William Shatner could be seen
acting…next to himself.
By
the time of Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994), the split-screen
shots were less obvious, or at least less quickly noticeable, and incorporated
more movement within the frame to hide the illusion. In episodes such as “Datalore” and “Time
Squared,” Enterprise crew-members interacted with themselves, walking down
corridors, sharing turbo-lifts, and so forth.
The
mirror universe episodes of Deep Space Nine (1993-1999) also
featured split-screens for the scenes in which Kira Nerys (Nana Visitor) met
her mirror double, the lascivious Intendant.
A
series such as Beyond Westworld (1980) was actually constructed on the premise
of android duplicates replacing their human doubles, so split-screen
photography was bound to play a significant role. In episodes such as “Brother’s
Keeper” (which saw Connie Sellecca’s character face an android double),
split-screen shots were crucial to the verisimilitude of the series’ very
formula.
The
same idea appeared in cult-TV far more recently, in Ringer (2011-2012), a
series which saw a woman played by Sarah Michelle Gellar impersonate her
wealthy sister in Manhattan. Although the two sisters did not meet often, when
they did, split screens were deployed. One such meeting scene set the opposing
sisters against a wall of mirrors so that we were seeing not just split screen
imagery, but an infinite regression of reflections.
The
old staple of the “evil twin” could not have been visualized, in classic
cult-TV without the split-screen technique. Just two examples: we have seen it in use in Man
from Atlantis (1978) in “Shoot Out at Land’s Ends,” and in Knight
Rider’s (1982-1986) “Goliath,” which introduced the world to Michael
Knight’s doppelganger and evil twin, Garth Knight (also played by series star David Hasselhoff).
John, fun subject.
ReplyDeleteHere's another one:
http://catacombs.space1999.net/main/images/spacehd/sod/spsod3089.jpg
SGB
I can still remember how remarkable it was when a Data and Lore had a conversation in the DataLore episode from Season 1 and how seamless the split screens were. It used to be that one character couldn't cross over the optical split but thanks to digital compositing, it was suddenly possible to have Data converse with Lore, have one leave the screen and the other exit in the same direction (using a movable optical split or else some very effective green screen compositing). It was then that I realized just how easily my eye could be fooled by something that used to be so difficult to do. Amazing work!
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