Production board
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A traditional production board or production strip board is a filmmaking term for a cardboard or wooden chart holding colour-coded strips of paper, each containing information about a scene in the script. A modern version will probably be printed using computer software, such as OpenOffice.org Calc or Microsoft Excel. Some filmmakers also choose to use more dedicated software, such as MovieMagic to create the board and strips.
[edit] References
- Film Scheduling by Ralph S. Singleton (2nd Ed, 1991)
- Film Production Management by Bastian Cleve (2nd Ed, 2000)
- The Complete Film Production Handbook (3rd Ed, 2001)
- Production board in Microsoft Office Excel by Eddy Grabczewski (2004)
- Production board in OpenOffice.org Calc. Dedicated to the public domain. (2006)
[edit] See also
| The Filmmaking Paper Trail: | Pre-production: Screenplay | Breaking down the script | Script breakdown sheet | Production strip | Production board | Day out of Days | One liner schedule | Shooting schedule | Film budgeting | Production: Daily call sheet | Daily editor log | Daily progress report | Film inventory report (daily raw stock log) | Sound report | Daily production report (DPR) | Cost report |

