SHOT LIST:
Overhead shot of files being thrown onto desk. HIGH ANGLE.
Close up of nameplate on desk, detective sitting in chair. CLOSE UP. FOCUS ON NAMEPLATE THEN DETCTIVE SHIFTING THROUGH FILES.
Detective going through files.-MID SHOT.
Detective freezes and focuses on one sheet. CLOSE UP OF HANDS. DESK LEVEL.
Gets up and gathers files. MID SHOT.
Knocks chair over and runs from desk. LOW ANGLE? MID SHOT?
Runs out of door into hallway. MATCH ON ACTION. LONG SHOT? MID SHOT?
Running down hallway, dropping files and gathering them. LOW ANGLE.
Runs out of hallway through door. MID SHOT.
Entering stairwell, heading for stairs. LONG SHOT.
Running down stairs- LOW ANGLE then HIGH ANGLE. MATCH ON ACTION.
Runs into main office and runs through desks. LONG SHOT.
Exit’s the building into parking lot. MID SHOT.
Detective looks around parking lot panicked. CLOSE UP.
Jogs to car, straightening himself. LONG SHOT.
P.O.V From shadows watching detective walk. LONG SHOT-P.O.V
Detective fumbles for keys to car- MID/CLOSE UP.
Heels stalk out of shadows and across parking lot- CLOSE UP.
Gun is highered and shot. CLOSE UP.
Detective falls to ground and heels stalk away.- LOW ANGLE/CLOSE UP.
Shot of CCTV camera- CLOSE UP.
L2 - incomplete
ReplyDeleteagain this is difficult to make sense of - look at the template and layout as per example
a Shot List has numbers next to it relating to the storyboard so we know which shots they are