Golden Globe winner Sam Mendes on the making of '1917'

Could Sam Mendes' World War I film shake up the Oscars race?

Could Sam Mendes' World War I film shake up the Oscars race? We are just days away from the Oscar nominations. And there's big buzz around "1917," fresh off of three big Golden Globe wins. The film follows the story of two British soldiers during World War I who are sent on a mission to carry a message into enemy territory. Mendes talked to ABC News about his inspirations for the film.

Mendes said that he was also inspired by his own past to take a different approach to filmmaking, after directing two "James Bond" films.

"I'd found myself after the 'Bond' movies, kind of trapped in this multiple plot, multiple camera, plates spinning exercise that is making a giant franchise movie. And so some of it was a reaction against that, towards single camera, real time, very linear storytelling following just one figure rather than multiple characters," he said.

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Moviegoers may be stunned to see how the action plays out on screen. The film was shot to look like one continuous take, which was no easy task.

"The tricky stuff was rehearsals because we had to measure every step of the journey before we built the sets, before we constructed the landscape that they walk on," Mendes said. "So we started this process with them (actors) with scripts in their hands on empty fields, walking and planting flags and the ground floor where the trenches would be, where no man's land would be. And then getting into specifics, they turn left here, they turn right there, they stop here. There's a crater there, there's a trench there. And then you had to do that for every single step of the journey for quarries and farmhouses and canals and towns at night. And only then could you start constructing the set. So everything was built around the actors, everything was built around the narrative."

"1917" is in theaters everywhere.

Be sure to watch the full interview with Peter Travers and Sam Mendes in the video above.