Here’s a 7-Hour Trailer For the Longest Movie Ever Made

Birdman was pretty impressive, wasn’t it? That whole single-take schtick stretched over two hours made for a trippy, singular cinematic experience. But what if you made a single-take movie that lasted 30 days? Would it still be as engrossing, or would it just get obnoxiously boring? Swedish director Anders Weberg is attempting to answer that question with his latest project, and so far, all signs are pointing to the latter.

Weberg’s upcoming experimental film, Ambiancé, is purportedly the longest movie ever made, with a total running time of 720 hours. Last year, the filmmaker released a 72-minute teaser of the film, and he’s followed that up today with a trailer that clocks in at a whopping 439 minutes — or just over seven hours.

On its Vimeo page, the movie is described as “a Bergman-esque comment on the absurdity and randomness of existence in the scenes; life/quest/power /death/escape/rest/love.” It sounds a lot like something your burnout buddy would say after taking a few too many shrooms, which makes sense given that the only way one could feasibly expect to sit through a seven-hour trailer featuring two performance artists cryptically moving across a beach would be under the influence of several psychedelics.

Supposedly, Weberg plans to release another trailer in 2018 that will run for 72 hours, before putting out the entire film in December 2020. We’ll do our best to contain our excitement.

H/T: Business Insider