Playback  /  The Royal Tenenbaums

The Royal Tenenbaums · 2001

Bus Scene

A symmetrical slow-motion dolly and 'These Days' turn a reunion into an elegy.

Watch for

  • The slow motion on Margot as she steps off the bus — time stretches so we feel the moment the way Richie does.
  • The steady dolly and locked, symmetrical framing that hold the two of them like a portrait.
  • How camera, music and slow motion work together to turn a plain reunion into something aching and romantic.

A worked reading · COCA

CContention
Anderson uses slow-motion camerawork to flood an ordinary action — a woman getting off a bus — with Richie's suppressed longing.
OObservation
Margot is shown in slow motion in a steady, symmetrical tracking shot, isolated from the crowd as Richie watches from the dock.
CConnotation
Stretching time makes a routine arrival feel momentous and dreamlike, privileging Richie's inner experience over real-world pace.
AAudience
We are pulled into Richie's point of view and made to feel the weight of a love he cannot act on, before a single word is spoken.

Your turn

  1. What does slow motion add here that normal speed could not? How does it change the meaning of an everyday action?
  2. The framing is almost perfectly symmetrical — how does that composition shape the way you read the moment?
  3. The song 'These Days' plays under the shot. How do image and music work together to build the mood?
For teachers

A gentle, accessible example of slow motion and camera movement creating subjective emotion — strong for Year 9–10. Pairs with the Camerawork page and links naturally to a lesson on the music 'needle-drop'.

Up next ▸ The Staircase — The Shining (1980)

See also

Related scenes