Yesterday's shooting made me realize that we had worked too much on the storyboard and shot list, as most of what we had planned was cut out of the filming process altogether. I hadn't taken into consideration all the shots that we wanted to incorporate in the two minutes and how long they were going to take. We hadn't realized that 3, 4, 5 seconds videos put together could actually add up to being a long final product. Due to this realization, we had to simplify our shot list and story board.
Here's a picture of the old storyboard that I had recently finished.
And here are the changes we've made to it that we are going to adapt.
For our dialogue, we decided to take a somewhat lax approach towards it after all the changes we made. As seen in the bottom right hand corner of the edited story board, we decided that our theme would remain ambiguous, with no questions answered whatsoever. Therefore, we created limited dialogue that would be required in the scene and then left it to the actors to get into character and change around what they felt would fit the particular scene.
Here is the basic outline that we followed using this website.
"The Origins and Formatting of Modern Screenplays." FilmmakerIQcom. N.p., n.d. Web. 03 Apr. 2016. <http://filmmakeriq.com/lessons/the-origins-and-formatting-of-modern-screenplays/>.
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