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Pickup Shot
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Pickup Shot

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A shot filmed after the main shoot to fill in missing details or correct continuity errors.

Technical Details

Pickup shots require exact technical continuity with the original material: identical camera settings, focal lengths, exposure values, and color temperature. The shoots are usually done with the same camera equipment at ISO values between 800-1600 to match grain and look. Three main types are distinguished: Insert shots (detail shots of objects), Reaction shots (subsequent reaction shots), and Coverage pickups (additional camera positions for existing scenes). The exposure tolerance must deviate from the original by a maximum of ±0.3 f-stops.

History & Development

Pickup shots originated as early as 1915 in the silent film era, when D.W. Griffith added detail shots retrospectively for "The Birth of a Nation." With the introduction of the studio system in the 1930s, standardized pickup units were established. In 1975, George Lucas revolutionized the process with "Star Wars" through systematic test screenings that specifically identified the need for pickups. The digital revolution from 1990 onwards enabled precise color matching of subsequent shots through LUT-based workflows.

Practical Use in Film

"Mad Max: Fury Road" (2015) shot 18 pickup days, mainly for close-ups of the actors in the moving car. Marvel Studios typically plans 15-20 pickup days per film to implement test screening feedback. Typical workflow: rough cut → test screening → pickup list → 3-7 shooting days → integration. Advantages include narrative refinement and technical corrections; disadvantages are higher costs, actor availability issues, and potential continuity errors with changed locations or seasons.

Comparison & Alternatives

Pickup shots differ from reshoots by their supplementary nature – while reshoots re-shoot entire scenes, pickups specifically add material. Additional Photography encompasses both concepts as an umbrella term. Insert units often work without main actors, while pickup units require them. Modern alternatives include CGI additions and digital face replacements, which replace physical pickups in cases of availability issues. VFX pickups cost 40-60% less than traditional shots with a full cast and crew.

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