Preparing
My Demo Reel
step
one / step two / step
three
1. What Do You Want Your Reel To Look
Like?
Design Demo: a.k.a. The PV Approach. We
edit and design the demo to a rough draft for you, then you tweak it.
Mapped Demo: You
design your demo, we edit it, then you tweak it.
One person should drive the session until a rough version
has been edited. At that point, you can tweak your demo until
you're happy. 50/50 collaborations from the start don't work
very well and can keep you on the clock for much longer.
2. Choose Your Best Acting Scenes.
Go through all your taped work and select up to 8 of
your best acting scenes. These scenes should represent your
range and show you at your best.
Types of tapes: We
can digitize from DVD, VHS, SVHS, 8mm, HI8, BetacamSP, DVCam, MiniDV,
DVCPro, and 3/4"SP.
We CANNOT use Digital8, CDRom or D2. We can get you a DigiBeta deck for $250
a day or transfer tapes to BetacamSP (call a week before for price and
scheduling).
VHS note: If
you're going to record your show from TV, please make sure
your VHS deck is in SP mode for best quality.
2b. Hosting Clients Only.
Important: Please click
here to view a .pdf file which goes into much
more detail on how to prepare for a host reel. To download
to your desktop, "right-click" (windows)
or "option-click" (mac) this link or
call us so we may fax you (323) 651-3600.
3. Look For Montage Shots.
Good montage images are any shots where the camera
is mainly on YOU and you're NOT talking. You could be laughing,
crying, fighting, looking damn good, turning away from or to
the camera, etc.
Not everyone should have a montage. It's a good idea to consider one if you
are very sexy and/or glamorous, if your look changes drastically from project
to project, or there are emotional qualities in montage shots that aren't covered
in your scene choices (and, of course, if you have the footage to support a
montage). Where it goes is dependent on the rest of your material.
4. Don't Under Estimate Small Scenes!
Depending on where you are in your career, you may
want to include any small scenes, one-liners on network TV
or on film, and any student films that you've done. We may
be able to tweak bad sound or video, so bring 'em!
5. Cue Up Your Tapes and Time the Distance
Between Scenes.
This is VERY important and will save you a lot of time
(and money) in the editing bay. If there is more than one scene
on any tape, cue to the first scene, and calculate the time
before the next scene, etc.
0:(hour)00:(minutes)00(seconds) My
first scene with Vin Diesel where he says he's scared of
my power.
0:21:37 My second scene where Vin and Ben Affleck try to impress me with a
monologue from King Lear.
1:53:13 Montage shot of me dying from boredom.
The best way to do this is with a real-time counter which displays an actual
elapsed time, (i.e. you fast-forward the tape five minutes from the start
and the counter says 0:05:00) NOT one that displays 00000 to 99999. If
your VCR doesn't have a time counter, you could use a stopwatch and write the
times down between scenes as it plays in real time.
6. Wrapping Your Package With Music.
-
Bring no more than 3 choices of music that describe you, your product,
the image that you're trying to sell. We will probably only use one as that
helps with the packaging quality.
Having trouble deciding? Come up with three adjectives to describe yourself
as an actor, then find a song that embodies these words. It can be old or new,
with lyrics or without. If it does have lyrics, does it describe you, your
attitude? Avoid Top-10 hits, as most people will learn to hate those songs
in time.
Move to STEP
TWO
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