: To capture the feel of 1967, driving scenes use intentionally obvious rear projection , and camera movements are kept simple to avoid modern Steadicam or crane looks.
: The visual language explicitly parodies Alfred Hitchcock —including a climax atop the Christ the Redeemer statue that riffs on North by Northwest and Vertigo . OSS 117: Lost in Rio image
: Cinematographer Guillaume Schiffman used a "flattened-out" lensing technique and a muted blue-brown-maroon color palette to evoke the look of a yellowing '60s postcard. : To capture the feel of 1967, driving
A standout feature of is its meticulous, high-effort recreation of 1960s Eurospy cinema aesthetics . Rather than just telling jokes, the film uses specific vintage filmmaking techniques to parody the era's style: A standout feature of is its meticulous, high-effort
: The film heavily employs split-screen effects and multi-dynamic image techniques (popularized by films like The Thomas Crown Affair ) to display several panes of action at once.
: Shot on 35mm film (Kodak Vision2) using an anamorphic process, it maintains a native 2.35:1 widescreen aspect ratio —a hallmarks of the "Scope" thrillers of that time.