ORGANIZATION PART I -
Shot Lists: From Pre-Production through Post Production
By Peter John Ross
www.sonnyboo.com
Like so
many of us with a desire to eventually make movies for a
living, I like to view my little DV shorts (aka
Microcinema) as a training ground. Even when making a 5
minute camcorder short, the kind where you are the
writer/director/producer/cameraman/editor, you can still
prep for bigger shoots, and develop good habits. One of
these habits is creating and maintaining a shot list.
A shot list
is a list of all the camera angles for a shoot,
including coverage and cutaways. This can be done from
the script, on the fly during a shoot, or even AFTER the
shoot, using the footage and just naming the shots that
were obtained.
Shot lists
in pre-production usually only blueprint a shoot. A
basic shot list of MASTER SHOT, CLOSE-UPS (aka CU’s), et
al help plan for time & basically outline what the shoot
will consist of. Part of directing is deciding what
shots best tell your story and elicit the emotional
reaction from a viewer. Storyboards are a great second
step for a shot list, but not everyone can draw or get
storyboards, so a written list of shots can still
achieve the real goal (which is organization).
Making a list of
those shots from the script usually winds up being
different than when you get there on the day and do the
shoot. New shots can come up, two shots get fused into
one, or you just don’t have time to get them all. During
a shoot, LOGGING the shots can be a valuable tool for
post-production (thinking ahead).
A “script
supervisor”, the person watching the shot list and the
script verifying everything from the script got shot,
can scratch off each shot as they are completed, and
take notes about each take and each shot. Details like
which take the director liked, merged or changed shots,
audio problems, time code, and as much as possible for
notes for post production. Having a person doing this
function can greatly increase the speed and organization
of post-production.
Now after the shoot,
and either the editor or the person who is doing it all
need to be able to take all these shots and make editing
choices from them. Again, if this is a small, simple
shoot with the same person
writing/directing/shooting/editing, you may not have
made a shot list, but now that you have a tape full of
shots that now have to be captured to the hard drive –
you have to name the files and the shots in the computer
in order to edit them. So, no matter what you still have
a “shot list”.
Now, if you had
created a shot list from the script, you can carry the
same names through pre-production all the way through
post-production. It can be any way you feel like
organizing. I can’t tell you how to best organize your
shoot, but the only thing that matters is that everyone
understands it from writer to cameraman to editor. A
basic shot list can consist of just saying “scene 04,
take 02 Camera A” and abbreviated “S04T02A”, or any
variation therein. Make up your own systems, whatever
ways seem best to you.
The reason
to be so detailed and to make consistent notes is
because as your projects get bigger and more people get
involved, there is a system in place for everyone to
know what everything is in every department. You can
find out where you are in the screenplay based on a shot
list, or if one shot needs a title, or there was a
slightly different angle – all of that information is
systematically (and subsequently anally) organized and
easily found.
Having
worked as a post-production supervisor and lead editor
on a feature film, I was dealing with a director who was
the only person who had the notes and shot lists, but
they existed in his memory. When capturing & trying to
synch audio to his 16mm film transfers, I was trying to
find shots like “George gets in car” or “Jenny at
apartment”. So where in the script does that happen? How
many times is George in a car? It became impossible to
do anything without the director present at all times.
We then devised a system and naming and assigned scene
numbers, and shot lists after the fact and we were able
to synch audio for the entire movie.
On the big
movies & TV shows, the whole production team
synchronizes by a shot list and all the way to the end.
Even when you’re doing it all yourself, you can prep for
eventually delegating to people like a different editor
or cameraman by being organized with a shot list, and
making it something everyone can understand. It makes it
possible for everyone to be on the same page.