Lined scripts give editors a quick view of all available coverage at a glance, so that he or she can make quick editing decisions without having to sort through all the footage repeatedly. The lined script is used by the film editor as a reference to what coverage was shot and to changes made to the script during production. The lines on a script are just a visual way of letting you know what coverage you have per scene. If a straight line is not covering a piece of dialogue then you have no coverage of this dialogue on camera. Only for the Script Supervisor to quickly prompt them that a piece of dialogue has no coverage on camera (we know this because only wiggly lines pass through that dialogue) I have had directors before stand up and announce to the crew that we have finished filming the scene. ![]() ![]() It is hard to remember during a long day on set what you have covered.
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