Coverage

Entertainment Film Production

The variety of camera angles and shots captured to provide editing options for a scene.

Definition

Coverage refers to the collection of different shots captured during filming that give the editor options for assembling a scene. Standard coverage includes master shots, medium shots, close-ups, and reaction shots from multiple angles.

Adequate coverage ensures the editor has the material needed to construct a coherent, dynamic scene without continuity issues.

Why It Matters

Insufficient coverage can doom a scene in post-production, leaving editors with no options to fix pacing problems or performances. Experienced directors balance getting enough coverage with the time constraints of production.

Over-coverage wastes time and resources; under-coverage creates unsolvable editing problems.

Examples in Practice

A director shoots a dialogue scene with a wide master, two medium shots (one per actor), and close-ups of each character, plus insert shots of a phone and doorway.

An editor pieces together the scene using the master for establishing, cutting to close-ups during emotional moments, and using reaction shots to pace the dialogue.

A scene runs long in the edit until the editor finds a cutaway shot that allows removing thirty seconds while maintaining continuity.

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