Binding daily work order for all departments, listing call times, locations, and technical requirements.
Definition
The Call Sheet is a binding production document created daily before each shooting day. It informs all crew members, actors, and department heads about the exact schedules, times, and requirements of the upcoming workday. It is legally binding and documents working hours.
Components of a Professional Call Sheet
A complete Call Sheet contains the following information:
Basic Data
- Production Title and Season/Episode
- Shooting Day Number in the production schedule
- Date and Day of the Week
- Shooting Location with exact addresses and GPS coordinates
- Arrival Times (differentiated by departments: Crew 06:30, Actors 08:00, etc.)
- Shooting Day Start (if later than arrival time)
- Weather Forecast with temperature, precipitation, sunrise/sunset
Cast and Scenes
- Actors with arrival times and makeup/wardrobe buffer
- Scene Numbers and script pages
- Scene Order (often not identical to script order!)
- Scene Description (INT/EXT, DAY/NIGHT, scene description)
- Extra Requirements with exact numbers (e.g., "20 background workers")
Technical Requirements
- Special Equipment Requirements per department
- Vehicles and Transport with arrival times
- Catering Information and meal times
- Parking and Staging Areas with access routes
- Emergency Contacts and local information
Workflow and Creation
The Call Sheet is created according to the following standardized process:
Phase 1: Schedule Finalization (2-3 Days Before Shoot)
- Production Manager finalizes scene order
- Optimization for locations, lighting, cast
- Efficiency over dramatic order
Phase 2: Department Coordination (1-2 Days Before Shoot)
- Gaffer communicates lighting equipment requirements
- Special Effects, Stunts, Animal Handlers confirm requirements
- Locations confirm access and parking
- Catering organizes provisions
Phase 3: Cast Integration (1 Day Before Shoot)
- Casting Office coordinates actor arrival times
- Makeup/wardrobe buffer based on complexity
- Extras Agency confirms background talent
Phase 4: Finalization and Distribution (Evening Before Shoot)
- Printing and physical distribution to all crew
- Digital distribution via email to departments
- Final Call Sheet sent at 06:00 AM the next morning for changes
Practical Workflow Examples
Example 1: Dramatic Interior Film – Emotionally Heavy Scenes
SHOOTING DAY 12 – Wednesday, March 15, 2024
Location: Large Living Room (Studio Build C, Babelsberg)
ARRIVAL TIMES:
- Crew, Camera, Lighting, Sound: 07:00 AM
- Makeup Department: 07:30 AM
- Actor Marcus (Lead): 08:30 AM (Makeup 07:45 AM)
- Actor Eva (Supporting): 09:00 AM (Makeup 08:30 AM)
- Catering/Traffic: 06:30 AM
SCENES BY SHOOTING DAY ORDER:
1. Sc. 47 (p. 32): INT LIVING ROOM DAY – Marcus enters (Marcus approx. 3 min.)
2. Sc. 48 (p. 33): INT LIVING ROOM DAY – Dialogue confrontation (Marcus + Eva, approx. 4 pages)
3. Sc. 49 (p. 34): INT LIVING ROOM DAY – Violence scene with glass (STUNT! approx. 2 min.)
REASONING FOR ORDER:
- Morning: Simple scene for warm-up (Sc. 47)
- Midday: Intense dialogue scenes, full concentration required (Sc. 48)
- Afternoon: Stunt scene when both actors are tired, needs fewer takes
SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS:
- Stunt coordinator present, insurance confirmed
- First aid on set, ambulance on standby
- Gaffer: Heavy lighting for daylight window front (approx. 8 x 5K HMI)
- Special makeup for bruises after violence
- Psychological support for Eva recommended after shootingExample 2: Location-Heavy Action – Exterior Chase Sequence
SHOOTING DAY 8 – Thursday, March 10, 2024
Location: Old Factory, Friedrichshain (Exterior + Interior)
ARRIVAL TIMES:
- Production Safety + Standby Ambulance: 06:00 AM
- Crew + 1st Camera Unit: 06:30 AM
- 2nd Camera Unit (B-Roll/Steadicam): 07:00 AM
- Gaffer + Lighting Crew: 06:30 AM
- Lead Actor: 08:00 AM (Makeup 07:45 AM)
- Extras (20 people, factory workers): 07:30 AM (Costume 07:15 AM)
- Vehicle Coordinator + 4 Stunt Drivers: 06:00 AM
SCENES BY SHOOTING DAY ORDER:
1. Sc. 23 (Ext): EXT FACTORY ENTRANCE DAY – Car chase sequence (Lead + 4 vehicles, approx. 2-3 min. screen time)
2. Sc. 24-26 (Int): INT FACTORY WAREHOUSE DAY – Foot chase inside (Lead + 10 extras, approx. 3 pages)
RATIONALE:
- Exterior chase first: Needs daylight, optimal 08:30-11:00 AM before midday shadows
- Interior after chase: Can be lit flexibly, possible at any time of day
TRANSPORT & EQUIPMENT:
- 4 vehicles with professional stunt drivers (requested 3 days prior)
- Drone for overhead shots (drone pilot to report at 07:30, requested separately)
- Steadicam operator with equipment loader
- Crane for high-angle chase shots (48-hour rental)
- Medical team + ambulance directly on location (not just standby!)
SAFETY:
- All 4 drivers must show stunt certificates
- Lifeguards present (old factory has water tanks)
- Fire department on standby (Phone: +49 30 XXXX)
- Local authorities informed, road closures requestedExample 3: Multi-Location Shoot – Efficiency Optimized
SHOOTING DAY 5 – Monday, March 4, 2024
Shooting day split between two locations
LOCATION 1: INT APARTMENT LIVING ROOM (Schulstrasse 12, Prenzlauer Berg)
- Arrival: 07:00 AM
- Camera + Lighting Setup: 07:00-08:30 AM
- Shooting: 08:30-12:30 PM (Scenes 5, 6, 12)
- Pack-up: 12:30-13:00 PM
LOCATION 2: EXT STREET/PARK (Kollwitzplatz, 500m away)
- Arrival with equipment: 13:15 PM
- Camera + Lighting Setup: 13:15-14:00 PM
- Lunch Break: 14:00-14:45 PM (would be inefficient during location change time)
- Shooting: 14:45-18:00 PM (Scenes 9, 10, 11)
- Pack-up: 18:00-18:45 PM
ACTOR SCHEDULE:
- Actor A: Location 1 only (08:30-12:30 PM), can leave at 13:00 PM
- Actor B: Both locations (07:00 AM presence, active 08:30-12:30 PM + 14:45-18:00 PM)
- Extras (5 people): Location 2 only (13:30 PM arrival, arrival time more efficient)
RATIONALE:
- Early: Actor-expensive scenes at location with better light
- Late: Exterior scenes for Golden Hour (17:00-18:30 PM)
- Lunch during location change: Saves travel time in lunch planningIndustry Standards and Best Practices
Timing Standards for Different Scene Types
| Scene Type | Arrival Buffer | Makeup Time | Camera Setup | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dialogue INT (Normal) | 45 Min. | 30 Min. | 45 Min. | 2-3 pages/day |
| Action Scene EXT | 60 Min. | 20 Min. | 90 Min. | 1-2 min. screen time |
| Stunt Sequence | 90 Min. | 45 Min. | 120 Min. | highly variable |
| Special FX Scene | 45 Min. | 45 Min. | 120 Min. | variable |
| Intimate Scene | 45 Min. | 30 Min. | 60 Min. | very short |
Optimization by Daylight Cycle
Golden Hour:
- Morning: 06:30-08:00 AM (varies by spring/summer)
- Evening: 17:00-18:30 PM
- Plan exterior scenes here for optimal light!
Midday Phase (Harsh Shadows, Bad for Portraits):
- 11:00 AM-3:00 PM: Only interiors or generic exterior shots
- Or: Heavy diffusion for exteriors (takes time)
Night Shoot:
- Significantly earlier arrival (20 min. more lead time)
- 2-3x more lights needed
- Catering: Warm meals instead of sandwiches
- Psychological check-in (night is exhausting)
Scene Flow and Psychological Optimization
TYPICAL SHOOTING DAY FLOW (12-Hour Day):
06:30-07:15 AM | Crew arrival, equipment unload, camera test
07:15-08:30 AM | Lighting setup, actor arrival & makeup
08:30-09:00 AM | Tech rehearsal (actor run-through without camera)
09:00-11:00 AM | FIRST SCENE (easy, warm-up, 3-4 takes)
11:00-12:30 PM | SECOND SCENE (medium complexity, peak energy, 5-7 takes)
12:30-13:30 PM | LUNCH BREAK (mandatory!)
13:30-15:30 PM | THIRD SCENE (emotionally heavy, tired after lunch, 4-6 takes)
15:30-16:30 PM | FOURTH SCENE (easy, fatigue, 2-3 takes)
16:30-17:30 PM | Golden Hour: Exterior scenes (best time!)
17:30-18:45 PM | LAST SCENE (non-critical, crew tired, Martini shot)
18:45-19:00 PM | Wrap & pack-up
RATIONALE:
- Early Morning: Easy scenes (warm-up)
- Peak Energy (10 AM-12 PM): Most difficult, emotionally demanding scenes
- After Lunch: Fatigue, therefore emotionally heavy scenes (requires less energy than action)
- Golden Hour: Exterior, as it's visually time-dependent
- Late Day: Easy, non-critical scenes, as concentration decreasesCommunication and Changes
Call Sheet Distribution Schedules:
- First Draft: 48 hours prior (midday)
- Second Draft: 24 hours prior (evening 6:00 PM)
- Final Call Sheet: 06:00 AM on the morning of (last-minute changes)
- Breaking Changes: Immediately via phone, email + WhatsApp
Multi-Channel Communication:
- Email (formal, archivable)
- Paper printout (for on-set, no charging needed)
- WhatsApp (for emergency info)
- Production Management Apps (StudioBinder, Frame.io)
- Phone calls for critical changes
Emergency Contacts Always on Call Sheet:
- Production Manager (direct mobile)
- 1st AD / 2nd AD (backup)
- Production Office (phone)
- Location Manager (local contacts)
Special Scenarios
Night Shoot Call Sheet
PECULIARITIES:
- Start 6:00 PM instead of 7:00 AM (10 hours of sleep possible)
- Arrival 8:00 PM, shooting 9:00 PM-5:00 AM
- Buffer for lighting equipment: +30 min. (night requires more light)
- Plan for heaters for crew breaks
- Prioritize warm drinks/food (not sandwiches)
- Inform emergency services (roads less visible at night)
- Psychological support (night is exhausting)Multi-Unit Shoot
UNIT A: Main cast, dialogues
- Unit Lead: 1st AD
- Camera Setup: Master + Close-up
- Start: 07:00 AM
UNIT B: B-Roll, establishing shots, extras
- Unit Lead: 2nd AD or B-Unit Director
- Camera Setup: Steadicam, Drone, Crane
- Separate Call Sheet, but synchronized break times
COORDINATION:
- Shared catering (together at lunch)
- Shared location managers
- One crew manager oversees both units
- Equipment transport between units coordinatedWeather Emergency Call Sheet
ORIGINAL PLAN: EXT SCENES ALL DAY
EMERGENCY PLAN: INT SCENES TODAY, EXT TOMORROW
IF RAIN IS UNACCEPTABLE:
- 06:30 AM: Production Manager analyzes weather data
- 06:45 AM: Decision call (key crew brief meeting)
- 07:00 AM: REVISED CALL SHEET with INT scenes distributed
- 07:15 AM: Crew starts with changed plan
EMERGENCY NUMBERS ON CALL SHEET:
- Weather insurance hotline
- Production Manager emergency
- Alternate location with access rightsCommon Mistakes and Solutions
| Mistake | Consequence | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Incomplete contacts | Unreachability in emergencies | All mobile numbers + backup contacts |
| Ambiguities in scene numbers | Crew shoots wrong scenes | Clear "Sc. 23 (p. 32)" format with pages |
| Lack of preparation time | Late start, stress | Always factor in +30 min. buffer |
| Incorrect addresses | GPS chaos, late crew | Double-check GPS, QR code with map link |
| Unclear extra requirements | Wrong number, wrong types | Be specific: "20 male factory workers, 30-55 years old, robust" |
| Forgotten special requirements | Scenes cannot be shot | Checklist: Stunt? FX? Animals? Rain? |
| Overly optimistic timing | Overtime, exhaustion | Add +20% time buffer for each scene |
| Missing weather info | Actors in wrong costumes | Weather forecast and backup plan |
Professional Standards and Guidelines
Format and Design
- Format: DIN A4 (1x printable)
- Font: Minimum 10pt (even older crew can read it)
- Colors: White/yellow paper with black text (copyable without color toner)
- Layout: One-page ideal, maximum 2 pages for large productions
- QR Codes: Links to Google Maps, script pages, weather forecast
Legal Aspects
- Working Hour Documentation: Call Sheet is legally binding for working hours
- Safety Confirmations: Signatures from department heads confirm understanding of requirements
- Insurance Relevance: Document stunt permits on Call Sheet
- Data Protection: Actor addresses and contacts only in print versions
- Archiving: Minimum 3 years retention for audit purposes
Digital Solutions (Modern Best Practice)
Tools for Call Sheet Management:
- Movie Magic Scheduling: Automated creation from shooting schedule
- StudioBinder: Cloud-based, real-time updates, push notifications
- Frame.io: Collaborative, easy changes, version control
- Production Management Suites: Integration with budget, resources, casting
Digital Advantages:
- GPS Tracking: Verification of crew arrival
- Traffic Data: Automatic routing suggestions
- Weather Integration: Auto-updates upon forecast changes
- Version Control: Clear "Draft" vs "Final" vs "Hot List" distinction
- Archiving: All versions automatically saved
The Call Sheet is the backbone of an efficient, safe, and professional film production. It is not just an administrative document, but a strategic tool for optimization and risk management.