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Scene 1 Shot 1 |
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Night: New York Skyline "Legwork" text in blue keyed over skyline |
upbeat "Legwork" theme tune |
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Scene 2 Shot 1 |
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MS (midshot) of actor woman detective walks down street-camera to follow MS |
New York background sounds |
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Scene 2 Shot 2 |
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OS (overshoulder) Pilot View from within helicopter as detective chases villain in other chopper, then fires missiles and blows villain up |
Helicopter engine sounds suspenseful music intercom chatter explosion |
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Scene 3 Shot 1a |
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LA (low angle) MS detective decides to lead a quiet life and works for Disney in a feature film |
Song "Beauty & the Beast" |
All right, a bit of fun, but you get the general idea. Storyboards help to convey not only the order of the shots, but how they will look on screen, so that actors know where the edge of the shot is, cameramen know how to frame the shot and sound crew know what visuals are going with what sound effects.