1) Block
– determining where the actors will be on the set and the first camera position
2) Light – time for the DOP to light the set and position the camera for the first shot
3) Rehearse – camera rehearsal of the first set-up with the actors and crew
4) Tweak - make lighting and other adjustments
5) Shoot - shooting the first scene (then repeat the process)
2) Light – time for the DOP to light the set and position the camera for the first shot
3) Rehearse – camera rehearsal of the first set-up with the actors and crew
4) Tweak - make lighting and other adjustments
5) Shoot - shooting the first scene (then repeat the process)
Blocking is the
first, and most crucial, aspect of this 5-part sequence. When you first start
directing, blocking a scene can be one of the hardest – and most embarrassing –
parts of your job. Get it wrong here, and you could waste valuable shooting
time trying to get out of the mess you created!
Director Prep –
Before you step onto any film set, you need to first do your homework on Script
and Character Analysis. In the last two articles, we talked about Understanding
the Script (what the story is about; the themes; the story points) and
Character Development and Analysis (the development and objectives of the
characters).
Blocking a Dramatic
Scene – The first thing I do when the actors arrive for a blocking is to get
them in a group and read the scene: no moving, no “acting” – just reading the
scene through. This makes sure everyone is on the “same page”. (Sometimes
actors do not have revisions and this is a good time to find that out.) Also,
by reading together, the actors start to feed off each other – and you get to
watch the process.
After the actors
read the scene, I ask them to show me what they want to do. I just step back
and let them go for it. If it is a set no one has been in before, I take a few
moments to discuss the physical lay out of the room – the door an actor will
come through; a window they can walk up to; which desk they can sit at etc.
The actors then
begin their first walk through – they read the scene and walk around the set to
get a feel of what they want to do and where they want to be. During this
initial blocking, I try not to make any suggestions to the actors – it is
important that they show me what they have in mind.
Remember, this is
the first time the actors have been together on the set and they need their
time to explore. As you watch the actors, you get a feel for what they want to
do, where they want to go and how they are relating to each other.
On the next
blocking, you begin to make your changes. Maybe you want an actor to sit in a
chair by the window instead of on the couch; you ask an actor if it would be
okay to pace beside an actor and not infront of him so you can save a set-up;
you make a suggestion to an actor to move across the room instead of standing
by the door etc.
Once you have
discussed the scene, and everyone agrees with the suggestions, the actors do it
again. This time, you begin to figure out your camera placement based on their
movement and what you first had in mind.
As the actors go
through the scene, you walk around them looking at all your camera positions.
Usually the DOP is with you to discuss camera set-ups and positions. This is
also a time where you can stop-and-start the actors – move them around to get a
better background. During this blocking, a camera assistant will place marks on
the floor whenever the actors stop.
When everyone is
satisfied, the actors leave and you discuss the first set-up in more detail
with the DOP and the camera operator. When the DOP begins to light, you go over
all your set-ups with the First AD and the Script Supervisor.
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