Guile & DanteCrow
We need to pull the script together before the cameras roll. A solid plan keeps the actors safe and the action believable. How do you approach building a fight scene that feels real but still runs on time?
Keep it simple, no fluff. Outline the beat sheet first: who hits who, when, where, what the point is. Rehearse with the stunt guys, lock in safety moves, then shoot in quick, tight shots so the crew can keep the pace. Don’t over‑talk the action; a single clean punch on a set beat is enough to keep the audience on edge and the schedule on track.
Good plan. Keep the timing tight and the safety moves locked. Stick to the beat sheet and focus on each punch. No fluff, just clear action and discipline. Keep the crew on track and the audience on edge.
Got it, no time wasted on chatter. Keep the punches crisp, the guards tight, and the clock in your head. If someone drags, pull them back. The audience’s nerves are our cue, not the extra coffee. Let's keep it real and move fast.
Understood. Keep the guard up, the strikes clean, and the clock ticking. Any lag will be corrected. The audience is the metric, not a coffee break. Stay focused and move fast.
You read the beat. Lock it in. Keep the guard high, the strikes tight, and never let the clock breathe. That's the rule of the game.
Got it. Lock it in and stay sharp. No breathing room for errors. Let's keep it tight.