1927's
Napoléon, directed by
Abel Gance, is considered the first example of the POV technique in film. The camera was wrapped in sponge padding and mounted on a breastplate worn by main cameraman
Jules Krugerg. Gance wrote in the technical scenario that the camera "defends itself as if it were Bonaparte himself... as if it were human. A punch in the lens. Arms at the side of the camera as if the camera itself had arms. [Krugerg] falls on the ground, struggles, gets up."
Alfred Hitchcock used POV shots extensively in his films, often to explore the subjective psychology of the characters. His film
Rear Window (1954) famously employs this technique to position the audience in the voyeuristic role of the main character witnessing a crime from his window. In
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931), director
Rouben Mamoulian uses a beginning point-of-view shot. The long running British sitcom
Peep Show is filmed entirely in POV shots. At a 2015 preview screening of the final series, David Mitchell half-jokingly said: "Filming things POV is a
stupid way to film things. It's much harder to do than the normal way of filming. It could not be clearer to me after all these years why no other programme is filmed that way." The film
Friday the 13th often portrays the killer's perspective, and the killer is not revealed until the end. Introducing the killer through their point-of-view is a common trope in horror and thriller movies. The film
The Silence of the Lambs (film) (1991) utilizes the killer POV trope, and contains a large number of shots shown from protagonist Clarice Starling's (
Jodie Foster) POV, adding suspense.
The Plainclothesman, an early US television series, assumed the title character's POV.
Enter the Void (2009) by
Gaspar Noé is shot from the first-person viewpoint, although in an unusual way, since most of the movie involves an
out-of-body experience. The action film
Hardcore Henry (2015) consists entirely of POV shots, presenting events from the perspective of the title character, in the style of a
first-person shooter video game. Nearly the entire film
Maniac is shot from the murderer's point of view, with his face being shown only in reflections and occasionally in the third person. The season 5 premiere of
Broad City, titled "Stories", is almost entirely filmed in a point-of-view (POV) style, specifically resembling a social media story captured on iPhones. The documentary ''
I Didn't See You There'' (2022) is shot from the physical perspective of director Reid Davenport, largely from his electric wheelchair. The film expands the scope of point-of-view cinema towards a disabled aesthetic generated by Davenport's embodiment. The Australian films
Australian Rules (2002),
Romulus, My Father (2007), and
True History of the Kelly Gang (2019) each use a point-of-view shot to illustrate the perspective of a young boy protagonist. ==See also==