I keep seeing the same thing in recent projects: flat, diagrammatic staging where every face is visible, every gesture is spelled out, and the camera stays back like it's filming a 1950s sitcom. This approach is creeping back into film and advertising, and it is not because audiences suddenly prefer it. It is because too many people in management positions are weighing in, and the result is vanilla that offends no one but excites even fewer. Yes, I said it.
As a storyboard artist who has boarded sequences for indie features and TV, I see this pattern often. A strong idea gets diluted through layers of approval. The most interesting risks get booted because not every stakeholder can agree on them. What remains is functional, agreeable, and forgettable.
What Diagrammatic Staging Looks Like Today
Think of classic multi-camera sitcoms: wide shots, flat lighting, actors positioned frontally so everyone is readable, no deep shadows or bold angles that might hide an expression or create mystery. The camera rarely moves much because multiple operators need to cover the action simultaneously. It was efficient for live audiences and tight schedules.
Modern productions echo this for similar reasons. Sets get lit evenly to avoid noise or hotspots, killing dramatic contrast. Multi-camera or coverage-heavy setups favor static, wide frames that capture the whole scene at once. Studio limitations and fast turnarounds push for predetermined blocking on limited sets. The result is theatrical staging: actors in clear, pre-set positions, high-contrast but flat lighting for sensors, and compositions that prioritize clarity over mood.
Add motion smoothing on TVs, the "soap opera effect," and the look becomes hyper-smooth and artificial. Faces glow, shadows lift, everything centers. It feels like theater captured on video rather than cinema designed for the screen.
In advertising, this shows up as hieroglyphic commercials: every product benefit, every emotion, every character reaction crammed into one frame or quick cut. No subtlety, no trust in the audience to infer. Everything is diagrammed.
The Role of Design by Committee
This flattening often stems from design by committee. When too many decision-makers get involved… executives, clients, producers, focus group feedback…. etc. The vision compromises to satisfy everyone. Risky choices get vetoed because they might not test well or please the room. The process favors consensus over boldness, leading to banality and inconsistency.
In film, big-budget examples show how this plays out: reshoots to soften edges, added scenes to clarify what did not need clarifying, final cuts that feel patched together. The original director's intent gets watered down. In advertising, agency layers and client notes pile up until the spot is safe, polished, but lacks punch.
Pre-production suffers most. Instead of trusting artists to explore and propose, committees demand options that everyone can understand immediately. No room for the unexpected. The boards become diagrams rather than cinematic invitations.
AI and the Echo Chamber Effect
AI tools amplify this. Prompt "group scene in office" and it blends existing images: centered figures, even lighting, frontal poses. It pulls from what it has seen—millions of sitcom frames, stock photos, previous generations—and outputs flat Photoshop versions without originality. It never risks an off-center composition, dramatic shadow, or implied gesture because those are not average patterns in its training data.
AI gives what you ask for, but only within the bounds of the familiar. It cannot invent the bold leap that comes from a human artist observing life, questioning assumptions, or drawing from personal instinct. In visual development, that leap is what separates memorable frames from generic ones.
Trusting the Artist in Pre-Production
Audiences are not stupid. We do not need every face, every expression, every gesture visible at once. Subtlety works: a shoulder turn implies tension, a shadow suggests doubt, an off-screen glance builds mystery. Great cinema trusts viewers to connect the dots.
Strong pre-production planning lets artists build that trust into the boards. A single-camera mindset, even in coverage, allows for specific angles, intentional lighting, dynamic blocking. It creates depth, rhythm, and emotional truth that flat staging cannot.
When I board a scene, I start with the story's core feeling. What does the director want the audience to sense before dialogue starts? From there, I use composition, light, and movement to guide the eye without spelling everything out. Directors and producers who give space for that process get visuals that stand out. The ones bogged down by endless approvals end up with safe, diagrammatic frames that blend into the noise.
Wrapping It Up
The resurgence of diagrammatic, flat staging in film and advertising is a symptom of too many cooks and too little trust in creative vision. It produces work that is clear but lifeless, agreeable but unmemorable. Audiences deserve better: frames that invite them in, challenge them subtly, and reward close watching.
If you are directing or producing a project and want pre-production storyboards or visual development that avoid the committee trap and deliver cinematic truth, reach out. Let's plan visuals that take risks and honor the story from the start.
📩 Reach out: paul@paultemplestudios.com
🎨 Explore more: www.paultemplestudios.com
Want more blog posts on this topic?
1. When Iteration Becomes Overthinking and Hurts Your Story
2. Breaking Creative Ruts: Metaphor and Non-Linear Thinking in Visual Development
3. Camera Movement in Static Boards: Conveying Motion and Energy Without Animation