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Anatomy of a Shot

February 20, 2009

The Script
INT. SUBWAY STATION PLATFORM - MORNING
The last passengers are boarding the train. The doors chime and we see JEAN, 41, holding a cup of coffee and clutching a folded paper beneath her arm, standing on the edge of the platform looking rather disconsolate. The doors close and the train pulls away from the platform. Jean looks down at the rails, looks along the track, pauses then steps back from the edge.

The Intention
This film is about a woman, Jean, who is isolated in her own world to the point where she sees no options.  That world, during the course of this film, is slowly chipped away at by a complete stranger, Heather.

My first shot, shot A, is about establishing Jean, her emotional state and her world.  It is the shot when we are most intimately with her.

The Shot list
A - E/C/U Jean
B - Wide through train doors
C - Medium c/u of Jean through train window, also punch in for e/c/u
D - c/u Jean feet at ledge, train leaving
E - Jean pov of track - a bag blows
F - c/u Jean, train departs
G - e/c/u Jean, train departs (punch in from shot F)
H - wide, behind Jean, train departs
I - c/u of Jean, slow push in
J - C/U Jean, slightly from side moves to…
K - … head on c/u Jean
L - overhead wide of women for geography
M - c/u Jean, to Heather out of focus

You’ll notice that all of these shots happen before Heather enters.  This was decided because the film is about Jean, not Heather.  And what gives weight to the entire film are the moments Jean spends with herself before a word is ever spoken.  Nowhere else in this simple film is there nearly as much coverage.

The Overhead
(Heather, red, starts running up the stairs and lands next to Jean, blue.  Train moves from left to right.)

Overhead

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Storyboard

Storyboard Shot A

 

 

 

 

Art Department
Our color palette for Jean and, as this is her film, for her world was grey, silver, green and blue.  The major art department choice really was location selection.  Beyond that there were subtle tweaks here and there to enhance the environment.

If you look over Jean’s left shoulder you will see some blue and silver columns.  Those columns normally have very busy print ads on them that are primarily colored red.  My production designer found blue and silver fabric that she used to wrap the columns.  That brought us back to our color scheme, created additional reflections for the lighting department to play with (check out those bonus hot spots we got out of the bargain!) and simplified the background to keep our focus on the talent.

(By the way, this is a still taken from a still camera, not a screen grab.)

Shot A still

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wardrobe Specs
Although you can’t see it terribly well in this shot, Jean’s wardrobe was professional and conservative, falling within the color palette of the film.  The film is meant to take place on the East Coast in Fall.  She is wearing a navy suit with a light blue turtle neck, a trench coat, Burberry purse, brown leather shoes, a watch and simple pearl earrings.

Hair & Make Up
A touch I love that the Make Up and Hairstylist suggested, that Jean’s hair be nicely done but with one piece that just doesn’t sit right.  To illustrate that while she’s trying to fit in a certain world it’s just not quite working for her.  You’ll see that piece here on her forehead just above her left eye.

The Lens
We chose a lens that would keep Jean in focus and throw everything else out - which pretty much mimics her emotional state at this moment.

The Lighting
For this you’ll have to look at the moving shot below rather than the still.  The lighting evolves in this shot.  It starts out quite dark and becomes much brighter as the shot progresses.  This was important to tell the story of the train passing, to tell the emotional journey of Jean in the film and also to give us a visually interesting open.  At this point I imagine we’ll fade up from black onto this shot as our open.

The Camera Move
On set we decided to add another layer to this shot.  We began on an extreme close up (as in the above storyboard) but pulled out to a frame similar to the still above.  Thank goodness I had a DP that made the suggestion even though it required more work and an amazing grip team that was able to jerry-rig slider for us in no time.

It made sense to have this shot evolve because we’re moving with Jean from a state of complete isolation to something less so.  This shot opened up some room for that possibility.  We did not just add the move because it was cool.  I personally have a real disdain for unjustified tricky shots.  (Though fortunately, it did end up being quite beautiful.)

The Performance
Lily Knight, who played Jean, is amazing and the best thing I did to contribute to a good performance in this case was casting well and responding to what she was giving me.  But the key to the performance in this particular shot was keeping it appropriate to the frame size.  Technically, eyeline was also a question.

Shot A
So here it is.  (Sorry I can’t post a clip here unless I put it on youtube so here’s a link for now.)

This shot is raw from the camera, compressed so I could upload it here.  No color timing has happened and obviously no edit points have been chosen nor has any sound been added.  All of those things will change the perception of this shot dramatically but here’s what we have so far.  This is the worst this shot will ever look or feel because it is not finished.  (Thank you, my amazing DP, for not being a baby about me posting this.)

What you are seeing is the wind and lights from the train passing by.  If you can imagine all the wonderful screeches and squeaks that go along with that you should have a good idea of where I’m heading with this.

http://web.me.com/jjenred5/Site/TOUCH_Shot_A.html

In the end, will anyone other than you and my crew know any of this when they watch the film?  Nope.  And they shouldn’t either.  Because if I’ve done my job well the audience will just watch, and hopefully feel, the story and the characters.

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Comments

5 Responses to “Anatomy of a Shot”

  1. Elizabeth Ditty on February 20th, 2009 3:31 pm

    Thank you so much for this post! As a newbie writer, it’s absolutely fascinating and so informative to see what happens between the page and the actual shot coming alive. Thanks for letting us take a peak behind the scenes!

  2. Jason on February 23rd, 2009 11:44 pm

    This was fantastic. I loved seeing how the collaboration of all these elements brought the shot together; it really brings new perspective to what you’re watching. To echo the first comment, thank you very much.

  3. theindependentfilmmaker on February 24th, 2009 12:05 am

    I’m really glad to hear this was useful. Cheers! Jen

  4. theindependentfilmmaker on February 24th, 2009 12:06 am

    I’m so glad to hear this was useful. Cheers! Jen

  5. Norman Hollyn on March 3rd, 2009 6:36 pm

    Jen,

    This is a great distillation of both practice and thought process. As an editor, it’s sometimes amazing to me that anything gets shot and “into the can” by the end of the day. It’s even more wonderful when the results are good.

    What I have constantly found is that the better organized and thoughtful my directors are ahead of time the better those results are. This sort of preparation doesn’t throttle creativity and spontaneity. It allows it to happen in a useful way.

    Thanks again for a great post.

    Norman

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