7.5

Table Of Contents
9 Script-Based Editing
284
Lined Script Basics
The conventional lined script — which evolved during decades of trial and error in
Hollywood — provides assistant editors and chief editors with a road map that helps them
find the coverage they need to edit scenes in a film or television show.
Traditionally, the continuity person creates the lined script on the set at the time of shooting.
All notes are handwritten. The following is an example of a scene from a lined script:
Lined Script Symbols
Each vertical line drawn through the scene represents a single take from the moment the
director says “Action” to the moment the director says “Cut.” Each scene might require
several camera angles and positions, with one or more takes, all of which are lined and
identified alphanumerically.
33/1
33A/1
33A/2
33B/1
33B/2
33B/3
33C/1
33C/2