Enter it once.
It flows.
Tag an element in the breakdown and it fills its list. The scene carries through to the shot list, the schedule and the call sheet. Same information, the way you already think about it, never typed twice.
One scene, top to bottom.
Tag the fishing boat and it fills the props list. The scene it sits in carries the rest of the way: a header on the shot list, a strip on the schedule, a row on the call sheet.
same scene, top to bottom. zero re-typing ✓
Change it once, too.
Entering it once is half the story. Plans move every day on a production, so the links have to survive the changes. They do.
Move a scene, the day follows
Drag a strip to another day and the call sheet rebuilds from the schedule. Zero re-typing, and nobody shoots from yesterday’s plan.
- The call sheet is built from the schedule. Reorder the day and the sheet already knows.
- Rows can’t drift, versions can’t fork. There is one schedule, not five copies of it.
One set of people and things
Cast, crew and locations live once. Every tool reads the same record, so the list you check on set is the list you built in prep.
- No duplicate lists. The crew list and the call sheet read the same people.
- No copies to reconcile. Update the record and every tool is already current.
Not an integration.
Integrations move copies between apps, and copies drift. Curtyn doesn’t sync anything because there is nothing to sync. One workspace, one file system, one set of people. Every tool reads the same files, lists and people.
That’s why the plan holds together from prep to wrap. Tag it once and it flows. Change it once and everything follows. And when it’s time to hand off, export any tool to a clean PDF.
The breakdown feeds the schedule. The schedule feeds the call sheet. It all stays connected. →
The rest of the binder.
Get in early.
Curtyn is in open beta and free to use. Every tool, one project, and the people who need to see it. Start free and bring your production in.