Priority
Separate essential coverage from optional shots and pickups before the day gets compressed.
Feature
Protoron helps teams keep scene context, shot priorities, production requirements, and review decisions visible in one workspace, so coverage planning stays connected to creative intent.
A shot list is not only a checklist. It is a bridge between the story and the shoot. When a team knows why a shot exists, it can make better decisions if schedule, weather, location, or performance constraints force a change.
Protoron supports a scene-centered approach: keep the shot, scene purpose, production notes, and review context close together. That way the team can protect essential coverage and understand what can be changed without damaging the sequence.
Separate essential coverage from optional shots and pickups before the day gets compressed.
Keep prop, sound, continuity, lighting, and location details attached to the scene plan.
Understand whether a missing or changed shot creates edit, pickup, or approval work later.
Good shot tracking helps a team make tradeoffs. If daylight is disappearing or a location is no longer available, the team needs to know which shots protect the scene and which shots are optional. Protoron keeps that information near the scene plan so production can respond without turning every change into a guess.
After the shoot, the same context helps review. A missing angle, alternate take, or changed setup is easier to evaluate when the team can see the original scene purpose, shot priority, and production note that shaped the plan.
Show whether a shot is planned, captured, replaced, skipped, or needs pickup work after review.
Record whether the shot supports emotion, geography, continuity, reveal, action, performance, or client approval.
Keep notes about timing, location access, equipment, sound, safety, talent, or continuity near the shot itself.
Use the shot list template as a starting structure.
Launch Protoron and connect scene planning with production and review.