The focus of this chapter is on defining storyboarding, materials used to create it, and what it depicts, why it is needed, who creates it, and how, where and when it is created.
Types of storyboarding:
Editorial Storyboarding
Key Frames
Production Illustration
Commercial Boards
The list goes from simple sketches for the editorial Storyboarding to highly rendered color images for commercial spots.
Focus of this book is on Editorial Storyboarding.
Scenes that have priority in being storyboarded:
1- Special Effects Shot
2- Stunts and pyrotechnics
3- Crowd Scenes
4- Action
5- Complex Camera Movements
6- Montage Scenes: Montage sequences often appear in the written script as no more than a sentence or two that instructs the director to describe a passage of time using a whirlwind of images with little or no dialogue.
7-Opening and Closing Scenes
Thursday, February 4, 2010
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