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Storyboard

Storyboard. Digital Wizards Adapted from Filmmaking: Creating and Organizing the Story By Elizabeth Pringle. Let’s get it started!!. You are creating a visual story. The camera is your bridge to the audience. . Verbal Dialog.

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Storyboard

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  1. Storyboard Digital Wizards Adapted from Filmmaking: Creating and Organizing the Story By Elizabeth Pringle

  2. Let’s get it started!! You are creating a visual story. The camera is your bridge to the audience.

  3. Verbal Dialog • Create an outline of the story by writing down the main points of action, listing action as opposed to description or states of being. Have a beginning, middle and end. • The verbs you use are very important. • Action is what drives a story. Points should be brief and specific.

  4. Example • On a beautiful day Sally works in her garden. • Jonathan enters, looking sad. He tells Sally that they can no longer be friends. • Sally, now angry, stomps off. • Jonathan, looking cautiously around, plucks Sally’s most prized rose from the garden, hides it in his coat, and runs from the garden. • And so on.

  5. The Board • The Storyboard A storyboard is the visual outline of the story. It will look a little like a comic strip. • It is used to tell the visual story and give an idea of how the film should look. Within each frame decide what shots to use, where the camera might be placed in relation to the action, and the action of the scene. It is fine to use stick figures. • Suggest camera shots of your characters.

  6. Camera Shot • Long shot – to establish where we are – what location and at what point in the action.  • Medium shot – who is in the scene, we learn about character  • Close up – what are emotions of the characters as revealed through the face

  7. Example • Sequence# • Dialog • Camera shot • Transition in • Audio • Transition out • Notes

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