Last year I watched Victoria (2015), a German crime thriller film which was shot in a single continuous take.
Cinephiles love to nerd out over long takes. There's a famous one at the start of Orson Welles' Touch of Evil (1958). We see someone set a time-bomb to just over three minutes and place it in a car. The camera then loosely tracks the car in real time until, just over three minutes later, the bomb goes off. The scene was referenced in another long take shot from In Bruges (2008).
Two of my favourite long takes:
1. At the start of the short film, Les Bicyclette de Belsize (1968) – also because I love bicycles, and the film makes me feel nostalgic about London.
2. At 25:40 of The Cranes Are Flying, a 1957 Soviet war drama. I'm not even sure if it counts as a long take, because it's not that long (less than a minute) and I've seen some comments saying there's an invisible cut at 26:00 as Veronika is running through the crowd, when the camera is presumably transferred to a crane. But I love the camerawork and choreography of the scene.
While we are on the subject of single-take, I have to mention One Cut of the Dead, a hilarious Japanese indie film from 2017. I believe it's on Shudder, and depending where you live, you may be able to watch it with a free 7-day trial. Highly recommended!

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