This document discusses potential risks and solutions for an outdoor film shoot. It identifies risks from bad weather, actor injury/illness, insufficient lighting, and low camera battery/memory. To address these, the filmmakers will redo their shooting schedule if weather prevents outdoor filming, use replacements or reschedule if actors cannot film, add filters to ensure dark lighting, and check camera battery and memory before each shoot.
1. Risk?
What Scenes?
What I can do to fix it?
Weather-bad weather could put our
filming schedule in jeopardy and stop
us filming.
Outdoor shoots
Injury/illness- to an actor could stop
us from filming our scenes as we might
not have any replacements.
All
Lighting- if the lighting is light it might
take away from the spookiness of the
film.
All
Camera battery/Memory Card – if we
don’t have enough memory we could
lose some of our scenes. And if there is
not much charge in the camera we
wont be able to film for long and it
could cut out mid scene.
All
If the weather is not on our side an
that mean that we are not able to
shoot our scenes we will then have to
the redo our shooting schedule and
move some of our indoor shoots to the
time when we where suppose to do
our outdoor ones.
If the worst comes to the worst and
either the actors or I become ill or get
and injury that will prevent them/me
from acting/filming I will then have to
either bring in replacements or redo
our shooting schedule in order to be
able to shoot our scenes.
Our film requires us to have dark
lighting in order to create tension and
fear to the audience, to make sure that
we get our film to feel dark and spooky
we will add such things as filters to
create the darkness that will create
tension.
Some of our footage could get lost due
to there not being enough
memory/battery to store/film it on the
camera, to combat this and stop it
from occurring we will check the
amount of memory/battery before
each shoot so we know whether or not
we have enough.