Glossary · The ABCs of Picture Cars

Picture Car Glossary

128 plain-English definitions of the picture-car, transportation, and film-vehicle terms used on set — from action vehicle to wrangler. Whether you're a production coordinator, a vendor, or a car owner, this is the language of the picture-car world, defined.

Last updated June 2026 · maintained by Revolution Picture Cars

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A

Action vehicle

An action vehicle is a picture car used for on-camera driving or stunts.

It typically features safety cages, reinforced chassis, upgraded brake systems, fire suppression, and four-point racing harnesses to protect performers and crew during high-speed or high-risk sequences. Action vehicles are coordinated by the stunt department and must comply with production safety bulletins.

Ad vehicle

An ad vehicle is a picture car used specifically for advertising or commercial productions, including TV spots, digital campaigns, and print shoots.

Ad vehicles are often required to be in showroom-perfect condition, may need detailed product placement compliance, and must meet the brand guidelines of the advertiser. Usage rights and clearances may differ from traditional film rentals.

Arm car or U-Crane car

An arm car or U-Crane car is a specialized camera vehicle fitted with a gyro-stabilized hydraulic crane arm.

It allows operators to execute dynamic, sweeping shots around moving picture cars circling, tracking alongside, or diving toward a vehicle at speed. The arm car is essential for dramatic chase sequences and automotive commercials where the camera needs fluid, articulated movement that a fixed camera car cannot provide.

Art department vehicle

An art department vehicle is a picture car whose appearance has been significantly altered by the production design team.

Changes may include custom paint, decals, period-correct badging, prop modifications, partial body conversion, or signage wraps to make the vehicle match the story's world, time period, or fictional brand identity. These modifications are almost always reversible upon wrap.

Atlanta Teamsters Local 728

Atlanta Teamsters Local 728 is the International Brotherhood of Teamsters local that represents transportation crew, picture car coordinators, wranglers, haulers, and drivers for film and television productions shooting in Georgia.

Productions using union labor in Atlanta and surrounding areas will work under Local 728's contract for all picture car transportation and staging services.

B

Background car

A background car is a non-featured vehicle placed in a scene to add environmental realism, depth, and period authenticity without drawing attention away from the main action or hero vehicles.

Background cars are selected and dressed by the picture car and art departments to be visually appropriate for the scene's era, location, and tone. They are rarely insured to the same level as hero vehicles and are typically the least expensive vehicles on a production.

base camp in picture car production

A base camp is the off-set staging area where cast trailers, crew services, and production support vehicles are parked during a shooting day.

For the picture car department, base camp is often where wranglers stage secondary vehicles, perform detailing between shots, carry out minor mechanical tasks, and wait on standby. The distance between base camp and the active set must be factored into vehicle movement timing to keep the shooting schedule on track.

base plate or speed rail rigging

Base plate or speed rail rigging is a modular aluminum and steel system used to mount cameras, lights, playback monitors, and other equipment to the exterior or interior of picture cars, insert cars, or process trailers.

Speed rail (also called speedrail or Interfit pipe) provides a flexible framework that grips to door jambs, roof gutters, trunk lips, and custom anchor points. Rigging configurations are designed and signed off by the camera department and safety coordinator before filming begins.

Boneyard

A boneyard is an off-set storage lot or facility where picture cars particularly multiples, stunt cars, and damaged vehicles are staged when not actively needed on camera.

Productions with large vehicle counts or long schedules use boneyards to keep sets uncluttered while maintaining fast access to backup and specialty vehicles when the shooting schedule calls for them.

Boston Teamsters Local 25

Boston Teamsters Local 25 is the International Brotherhood of Teamsters local whose Motion Picture Division represents drivers, transportation coordinators, and picture car crew on film and television productions across Massachusetts and New England.

Productions shooting in the Boston area under signatory agreements use Local 25 members for covered transportation and picture-car work, and vehicle owners hired under its jurisdiction should understand the local's rules on vehicle use, hours, and pay.

branded vehicle in film production

A branded vehicle in film production is a picture car carrying visible commercial markings, logos, or livery either authentic brand partnerships, fictional brand dressing created by the art department, or cleared trademarks approved for on-camera use.

Real brand logos on picture cars require clearance from the brand owner and may involve licensing fees. The production's legal department and the art director coordinate branded vehicle approvals together to avoid intellectual property issues in distribution.

breakaway vehicle

A breakaway vehicle is a picture car engineered with structural weak points or pre-scored panels designed to shatter, crumple, or separate cleanly on cue for a stunt sequence.

Unlike a standard stunt car that is reinforced for crew protection, a breakaway vehicle is purpose-built to collapse predictably so that the camera captures the correct visual result such as a door flying off, a roof collapsing, or bodywork peeling away. The extent of breakaway engineering is specified by the stunt coordinator and SFX team during pre-production.

Buck or body buck

A buck or body buck is a partial reproduction of a vehicle's interior or exterior shell typically built on a stage or set rather than on an actual car.

Bucks allow for controlled camera angles, lighting setups, and actor performances without the limitations of a real vehicle. Common uses include in-car dialogue scenes, commercials requiring impossible camera positions, and safety-critical sequences where a real running vehicle cannot be safely used on a closed set.

C

Camera car

A camera car is a purpose-built or heavily modified vehicle designed to film other vehicles in motion.

It carries camera operators, their equipment, stabilization systems (such as gyro-heads or remote heads), and the rigging infrastructure to safely position cameras at any angle relative to the subject vehicle. Camera cars are operated by experienced drivers who can match speed, maintain precise spacing, and execute complex choreography while the camera department works from the moving platform.

camera car tow arm

A camera car tow arm is a rigid or articulating steel extension mounted to the front of a camera car that physically connects to and tows a picture car during driving shots.

This setup allows a camera operator positioned on or ahead of the camera car to capture the picture car from a fixed, controlled perspective while the tow arm maintains safe and precise spacing between the two vehicles. It is commonly used for detailed hood and windshield shots during the apparent "driving" of a hero vehicle.

Car owner in film production

A car owner in film production is the private individual or commercial entity who owns a vehicle rented to productions for on-camera use.

Car owners may work directly with productions, through a picture car broker like Revolution.film, or list their vehicle on a dedicated marketplace. Owners typically receive a daily or weekly rate, retain access to insurance protection, and should document the vehicle condition thoroughly before any pickup or filming begins.

Car rental inquiry at Revolution

A car rental inquiry at Revolution is a formal request submitted by a production to rent picture cars for a project.

A complete inquiry includes production dates, shooting location, specific vehicle type or era requirements, usage description (background, featured, stunt, etc.), modification needs, and budget parameters. Revolution's coordinators match the inquiry with available inventory and qualified owners, returning options quickly so productions can confirm and schedule pickups efficiently.

Certificate of Insurance (COI) for picture cars

A Certificate of Insurance, or COI, is an official document proving that the production carries adequate insurance to cover liability and property damage involving the rented picture car.

The COI should name both the production company and the vehicle owner as additionally insured parties. Car owners should always obtain and review a valid COI before allowing their vehicle to leave their possession. Coverage amounts, deductible terms, and exclusions vary and should be reviewed with care before signing any rental agreement.

chase vehicle

A chase vehicle is a picture car used in a pursuit sequence either as the pursuing or fleeing vehicle that must perform at elevated speeds or through complex choreographed traffic scenarios.

Chase vehicles are almost always action vehicles with safety modifications, and their routes, speeds, and interaction with other picture cars are meticulously planned and rehearsed by the stunt coordinator before any camera rolls. Chase sequences on public roads require extensive permitting and traffic coordination.

Chicago Teamsters Local 727

Chicago Teamsters Local 727 is the International Brotherhood of Teamsters local that represents transportation drivers, picture car coordinators, wranglers, and related crew on film and television productions in the Chicago and Illinois market.

Productions shooting in Chicago on signatory agreements use Local 727 members for covered transportation and picture-car work, and owners renting vehicles to those productions work under the local's terms for vehicle use and scheduling.

clearance for a picture car

A clearance for a picture car is the legal authorization confirming that a specific vehicle, its identifying features, brand marks, or custom design elements can be used on camera without infringing third-party intellectual property rights.

Production clearance departments review picture cars for recognizable trademarks, copyrighted design elements, and any identifiable real-world branding before approving a vehicle for principal photography. Specialty or concept vehicles sometimes require manufacturer clearance letters before they can appear on screen.

concept vehicle in film production

A concept vehicle in film production is a fictional, one-of-a-kind picture car designed and fabricated specifically for a script with no real-world production counterpart.

Concept vehicles range from near-future modifications of existing cars to fully custom ground-up builds. They are typically designed by the production designer in close consultation with the director, then executed by a specialty fabrication shop. Iconic examples include the DeLorean time machine, the Batmobile, and the Tumbler all purpose-built concept vehicles for their respective productions.

conversion vehicle for film

A conversion vehicle for film is an existing production vehicle that has been partially or fully converted to represent a different era, type, or function than it was originally built for.

Common conversions include modernizing a vintage vehicle's drivetrain for reliability while keeping its period-accurate appearance, or disguising a contemporary vehicle under period bodywork. Conversions allow productions to access the drivability and safety features of modern vehicles while presenting the historical aesthetics required by the script.

custom fabrication for picture cars

Custom fabrication for picture cars encompasses building, converting, or heavily modifying vehicles to match the specific demands of a script.

This can include period-accurate body conversions, era-specific badging and trim, stunt rigging infrastructure, SFX integration points, hero interior builds, or creating entirely non-existent fictional vehicles from base donor cars. Fabrication work is coordinated between the production designer, stunt coordinator, and the fabrication shop and must be executed to both aesthetic and safety standards.

D

daily rate for picture cars

A daily rate is the standard price charged to a production for one day of on-set filming or prep use of a picture car.

Daily rates vary widely based on the vehicle's rarity, condition, era, required modifications, and current market demand. Most productions negotiate a reduced weekly rate for extended bookings. Daily rates are quoted exclusive of transport, insurance, and wrangling fees unless otherwise stipulated in the rental agreement.

Dallas Teamsters Local 745

Dallas Teamsters Local 745 is the International Brotherhood of Teamsters local that represents drivers, transportation coordinators, and picture car crew on film and television productions across Texas.

Local 745 has crewed major Texas shoots for decades, and productions working in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and statewide under signatory agreements use its members for covered transportation and picture-car services.

day player vehicle

A day player vehicle is a picture car rented for a single shooting day only, without any hold or run-of-show commitment from the production.

Day player vehicles are typically background or supporting cars needed for one specific scene or location. From the owner's perspective, day player bookings offer flexibility but less income security than weekly or run-of-show arrangements. Productions using day player vehicles should confirm vehicle availability and condition early in the week to avoid last-minute sourcing problems.

dolly shot with a picture car

A dolly shot with a picture car is a controlled camera move in which the vehicle either passes in front of a camera mounted on a dolly track, or the camera dollies alongside a stationary or slowly moving picture car to capture a smooth tracking shot.

Dolly shots are typically used for glamour reveals, parking or arrival sequences, and any scene requiring controlled, cinematic-grade camera movement around a vehicle at low or zero speed. The grip and picture car departments collaborate closely on dolly-to-vehicle spacing and timing.

Dress car

A dress car is a picture car that has been fully prepared with all period-accurate, branded, or story-specific set dressing applied including interior props, signage, special paint, stickers, custom license plates, and any other details required by the script.

A dressed car is camera-ready and approved by the director and production designer. The term is also used informally to describe the act of preparing any picture car for camera.

E

electric picture car (EV) on set

An electric picture car (EV) on set is a battery-powered vehicle used for on-camera production.

EVs present unique logistics considerations compared to combustion vehicles including charging infrastructure at the staging lot, range planning for driving sequences, and the absence of engine noise (which benefits audio recording but requires sound design to add engine sounds in post). Productions increasingly use EVs as featured vehicles for contemporary stories, and their silent operation makes them ideal for dialogue scenes where combustion engine vibration would interfere with on-set audio.

emergency vehicle package

An emergency vehicle package is a film-production-ready police car, ambulance, fire truck, tactical vehicle, or other emergency service vehicle configured for on-set use.

These vehicles carry all markings, lights, sirens, and equipment appropriate to their type, and are sourced and cleared for legal use on production. Emergency vehicle packages must comply with local jurisdiction rules regarding the display of badges, insignia, and operational lights while off duty and on a film set.

Era vehicle or period car

An era vehicle or period car is a picture car specifically sourced because its design, manufacture date, and appearance accurately represents a particular historical time period required by the script.

Era vehicles may require additional modification to remove anachronistic details (modern safety stickers, contemporary-style wheels) and must often be verified by the production designer and historical consultant before camera. Period cars demand extra care during use because their rarity and irreplaceability increases their value and raises insurance considerations significantly.

exclusivity clause in a picture car rental

An exclusivity clause in a picture car rental agreement prevents the car owner from renting the vehicle to any competing production, brand, or content creator during a specified period.

Exclusivity is most commonly requested for hero vehicles in major productions or for vehicles appearing in brand-sensitive advertising campaigns. Productions pay a premium for exclusivity rights, and the clause's duration, geographic scope, and competing content definition must be clearly negotiated and documented before signing.

expendables kit for picture car wranglers

An expendables kit for picture car wranglers is the collection of consumable supplies kept on hand by wranglers throughout the shooting day to quickly address vehicle appearance and minor issues on set.

A standard expendables kit includes microfiber cloths, glass cleaner, quick-detailer spray, tire dressing, black-out paint for chrome dulling, gaffer tape, touch-up paint pens, zip ties, and basic hand tools. Having a well-stocked expendables kit means wranglers can address any camera-ready issue between takes without leaving the set, preventing costly delays while the camera department waits for a vehicle to be dressed.

F

film permit for picture car sequences

A film permit for picture car sequences is an official authorization from a municipality, state, or federal authority allowing a production to use public roads, parking areas, or government property for vehicle-related filming.

Picture car permits typically specify the vehicles involved, the dates and hours of use, road closure or traffic control requirements, speed restrictions, and insurance minimums. The location manager handles permit acquisition in coordination with the picture car coordinator and transportation captain to ensure all vehicles are covered under the permit's terms.

fire gag vehicle

A fire gag vehicle is a picture car rigged with fuel lines, ignition systems, and controlled burn chambers by the SFX team to produce a specific on-camera fire effect such as a burning engine compartment, flaming exhaust, or full vehicle engulfment.

Fire gag vehicles are prepared in close coordination between the stunt coordinator, SFX supervisor, and fire safety officer. A fire safety officer and fire department standby unit are mandatory on set during any fire gag. The vehicle is never used as a fire gag vehicle without signed-off safety documentation and a full walk-through rehearsal.

fleet manager in the picture car department

A fleet manager is the crew member responsible for tracking, scheduling, and maintaining multiple picture cars across an entire production.

On large studio productions with dozens of picture vehicles, the fleet manager creates movement schedules, coordinates with the picture car coordinator and transportation captain, ensures vehicles are serviced between shooting days, and manages the paperwork and condition logs for every vehicle in the production fleet.

G

gag vehicle

A gag vehicle is a picture car specially prepared and rigged to perform a specific physical stunt or "gag" such as a controlled roll, a precision spin, a breakaway panel collapse, or a remote-controlled driving sequence.

Gag vehicles are engineered by the stunt coordinator and fabrication team, and may bear no resemblance to the finished on-screen vehicle once the shell or cosmetics are applied over the underlying mechanical build.

gimbal rig for picture cars

A gimbal rig for picture cars is a motion-controlled hydraulic or pneumatic platform onto which a picture car's body (or body buck) is mounted to simulate vehicle movement pitching, rolling, and yawing during stage filming.

Gimbal rigs are commonly used for in-car sequences where a physical driving sensation must be visible from outside the vehicle (actors being jostled during a chase) while keeping camera access, lighting control, and actor safety optimal. The SFX department designs, operates, and maintains the gimbal during filming.

greenscreen tow

A greenscreen tow is a controlled studio or stage technique where a picture car is mounted on a low trailer or towed platform in front of a green screen or LED volume.

The vehicle rocks and pitches naturally as the platform is driven slowly on stage, while driving plates or VFX-generated backgrounds are composited in post-production to simulate real-world motion. Greenscreen tows give directors maximum control over actor performance, lighting, camera access, and safety making them a staple of modern action filmmaking.

grip rig on a picture car

A grip rig on a picture car is the combination of grip equipment hostess trays, speed rail, suction-cup camera mounts, seat mounts, and custom brackets used to attach camera systems to the exterior or interior of a vehicle.

The key grip and rigging grip design the rig based on the director of photography's shot requirements, and the picture car coordinator ensures the vehicle's body structure can support the weight and stress of the intended rig. All grip rigs on vehicles must be approved by the safety department before driving.

H

hauler in film production

A hauler is the transportation provider responsible for physically moving picture cars between storage facilities, prep shops, and filming locations.

Haulers use enclosed or flatbed trailers sized to the vehicles in question and coordinate with the picture car coordinator and transportation captain to ensure vehicles arrive in correct condition and on schedule. On union productions, hauling falls under Teamsters jurisdiction and must be performed by qualified drivers with the appropriate commercial license and endorsements.

hero car

A hero car is the primary on-camera picture vehicle kept in immaculate, camera-perfect condition for close-ups, featured scenes, and any shot where the vehicle must look its absolute best.

Because hero cars face the risk of damage during filming, productions typically source multiple identical vehicles one or more dedicated hero units and one or more stunt or multiples. The hero car receives the most intensive prep, detailing, and continuity documentation of any vehicle in the picture car fleet.

high-speed camera pass on a picture car

A high-speed camera pass on a picture car is a driving sequence in which the vehicle travels at elevated speed past a stationary or tracking camera position to capture dramatic slow-motion footage when the film is played back at standard frame rate.

High-speed passes are captured using high-frame-rate cameras (typically 120–1000 fps) and require the stunt coordinator to approve vehicle speed, road conditions, safety buffer zones, and camera-to-vehicle proximity before each pass. The combination of real speed and slow-motion playback creates some of the most viscerally exciting picture car footage in cinema.

hold day for a picture car

A hold day is a production day for which a picture car is reserved and paid for but does not appear on camera typically due to weather delays, schedule changes, or stand-by requirements.

Hold days are usually billed at the full daily rate or a negotiated hold rate. Productions must specify hold day policies in rental agreements to prevent disputes when the shooting schedule shifts, as car owners depend on this income to offset lost commercial opportunities during the hold period.

hostess tray vehicle mount

A hostess tray vehicle mount is a flat, sled-style camera mounting platform designed to attach directly to a vehicle's hood, trunk, or roof using suction cups or clamped rigging points.

The hostess tray provides a stable, low-profile base for a camera and head, enabling point-of-view hood shots, reverse windshield angles, and roof-level overheads. Hostess trays are typically a standard part of any grip truck on a production involving picture cars and are among the most frequently used vehicle rigging tools in the industry.

I

in-and-around driver

An in-and-around driver is a Teamster-classified driver who operates vehicles within a production's base camp and on-set staging areas moving cars, equipment trucks, and personal vehicles around the immediate production zone rather than on public roads over long distances.

In-and-around drivers handle the short-range repositioning of picture cars from the staging lot to set, between shooting positions, and back to the lot at the end of the day. Their work is covered under the same union agreements as road drivers but limited to a defined radius around the base camp.

insert car

An insert car is a specialized low-profile vehicle or rolling camera platform used to capture detail shots of a picture car in motion such as wheel spins, exhaust shots, underbody details, or close-up instrumentation shots that a standard camera car cannot easily achieve.

Insert cars are typically low to the ground, highly maneuverable, and configured for specific lens and stabilization systems. They allow the camera department to film the moving picture car from angles that a larger camera vehicle cannot safely or practically access.

interior rigging for picture cars

Interior rigging for picture cars is the installation of camera mounts, lighting fixtures, and related equipment inside the vehicle's cabin to capture in-car performances and driving scenes.

Interior rigs are typically seat-mounted, dash-mounted, or affixed to the A-pillars and headliner using custom brackets. They must be installed without permanently modifying the vehicle's interior, and must not obstruct the driver's ability to operate the car safely. All interior rigs require sign-off from the safety department before the vehicle is driven with crew inside.

J

J-bar or jib car

A J-bar or jib car is a camera vehicle fitted with a fixed or articulating jib (crane arm) that allows the camera to be elevated above, beside, or angled down at a moving picture car during filming.

Unlike a full U-Crane, a J-bar system is smaller, lighter, and faster to configure, making it useful for productions that need elevated angles on a budget or in tight location environments where a larger arm car cannot maneuver effectively.

J-turn or bootlegger reverse in stunt driving

A J-turn or bootlegger reverse is a stunt driving maneuver in which a vehicle traveling in reverse is swung 180 degrees to face forward without stopping or a forward-moving vehicle is thrown into reverse and whipped around.

The J-turn is a classic chase and evasion sequence staple and requires a skilled stunt driver, an open surface, a vehicle with sufficient power and the correct differential, and a choreographed camera and safety plan. Executing a J-turn in a hero car without adequate preparation or a qualified stunt driver carries significant risk to the vehicle and crew.

K

key scenic or key car

A key scenic or key car is the most important picture vehicle in a specific scene the one around which all other vehicles, camera positions, and performer blocking are organized.

While the hero car is the key scenic for most of a production, individual scenes may designate other vehicles as the key scenic depending on the story's focus in that moment. The picture car coordinator and AD communicate clearly about which vehicle is key scenic to prioritize prep, staging, and camera readiness accordingly.

kill switch in a stunt vehicle

A kill switch in a stunt vehicle is a safety mechanism often a remote-triggered electrical cutoff or a manual emergency stop that allows a safety supervisor or remote operator to instantly disable the engine or fuel supply of a picture car during a stunt.

Kill switches are required on many high-risk stunt vehicles and are part of the overall safety engineering package designed and signed off by the stunt coordinator before the gag is performed. Their exact location and operation must be known to all crew in the stunt zone.

L

loanout vehicle or manufacturer-provided car

A loanout vehicle or manufacturer-provided car is a picture car furnished directly by an automaker to a production often at no charge or reduced rate in exchange for the brand exposure that comes with on-screen use.

Manufacturer loanouts are typically negotiated by the production's product placement coordinator and come with specific usage restrictions: the car must be shown favorably, must not be used in stunts without written approval, must remain in branded condition, and must be returned in its original state. Some manufacturers provide technical representatives to accompany their vehicles on set.

lock-up car

A lock-up car is a parked background vehicle placed and secured in a specific position on set typically with wheel chocks, locked steering, or a prop chain to ensure it remains exactly in place for continuity across multiple shooting days.

Lock-up cars are particularly important in street scenes where background vehicles must not be moved by passersby, city vehicles, or overnight disturbances between production days. Wranglers verify lock-up car positions each morning against continuity photos before the first shot of the day.

low loader

A low loader is a flat, low-height tow trailer used to carry a picture car at road speed during location driving scenes, most commonly found in UK and European productions.

The picture car is secured to the trailer's deck while actors perform inside or on the vehicle, and camera crews ride on or around the low loader to capture footage. The low loading platform height allows cameras to be positioned at or just below the level of the vehicle's door sills, creating compelling, immersive driving angles.

M

mileage log for picture cars

A mileage log for picture cars is the daily record kept by wranglers or coordinators documenting the exact odometer reading of each picture vehicle at the start and end of every production day.

Mileage logs protect car owners by providing verifiable evidence of how far the vehicle traveled during filming, which is important for calculating wear and tear, maintaining warranty compliance on newer vehicles, and supporting insurance claims that involve odometer-based valuations. Owners should establish agreed mileage caps or per-mile fees in their rental agreement before filming begins.

mock-up or mockup vehicle

A mock-up or mockup vehicle is a non-functional or partially functional picture car replica built to represent a specific vehicle type, era, or fictional design without requiring the actual vehicle to be present or operable.

Mock-ups are used for wide-angle establishing shots, static display scenes, or sequences where a real vehicle would be too rare, too expensive, or too impractical to risk. They are built by the art department or fabrication shop and may range from a simple cosmetic shell over an unrelated chassis to a highly detailed show-quality reproduction.

monthly rate for picture car rental

A monthly rate is a discounted rental price offered for reserving a picture car for a continuous period of approximately four weeks or a full calendar month.

Monthly rates are typically 15–30% lower than the equivalent number of daily rates and are commonly used on long-form television series, feature films with extended production schedules, or productions that require a vehicle to remain on-site for continuity reasons throughout a long shoot block.

motion control rig for picture cars

A motion control rig for picture cars is a programmable, robotically actuated camera system that can repeat an identical camera move in terms of path, speed, and timing with absolute precision across multiple takes.

For picture car work, motion control is used when a specific vehicle movement and camera move must be perfectly synchronized, or when a VFX shot requires multiple passes (one with the hero car, one clean, one with lighting variations) that must be perfectly registered in post. Motion control rigs add significant setup time and cost but enable shots impossible to achieve any other way.

multiples package

A multiples package is a set of two or more identical or near-identical picture cars sourced for the same production.

Productions use multiples to protect the hero vehicle from damage during stunts, to allow simultaneous filming across multiple units, or to have damage cars and a pristine hero available in parallel. Multiples packages are negotiated as a discounted group rate and are essential for action-heavy productions where a single vehicle cannot realistically survive every stunt sequence.

N

ND car (non-descript vehicle)

An ND car, or non-descript vehicle, is a background or supporting picture car deliberately selected and dressed to be visually neutral lacking distinguishing features, strong styling, bold colors, or any branding that might attract the viewer's eye or create continuity problems.

ND cars are used to fill scenes with period-appropriate traffic or environment without competing visually with hero or featured vehicles. Coordinators typically seek out common makes and models in muted, era-appropriate colors when building an ND car roster.

New Mexico Movie Teamsters

New Mexico movie Teamsters represent the drivers, transportation coordinators, and picture car crew on film and television productions across New Mexico, one of the fastest-growing US production hubs.

Motion-picture jurisdiction in the state transferred from Albuquerque's Teamsters Local 492 to Hollywood's Teamsters Local 399 in 2022, so productions shooting in New Mexico now work under Local 399 for covered transportation and picture-car services.

New Orleans Teamsters Local 270

New Orleans Teamsters Local 270 is the International Brotherhood of Teamsters local representing drivers, transportation coordinators, and picture car crew on film and television productions throughout Louisiana, one of the country's most active tax-incentive production hubs.

Productions shooting in New Orleans and across the state under signatory agreements use Local 270 members for covered transportation and picture-car services.

non-union work in picture car production

Non-union work in picture car production refers to transportation, wrangling, driving, and coordination services performed outside of the jurisdiction of labor unions like the Teamsters.

Non-union productions, including many independent films, student films, and low-budget commercials, operate under individually negotiated contracts and may have different pay scales, working conditions, and safety requirements than union projects. Car owners and wranglers should verify the production's status and contract terms before committing to non-union engagements.

North Carolina Teamsters Local 391

North Carolina Teamsters Local 391 is the International Brotherhood of Teamsters local representing transportation drivers and picture car crew on film and television productions in North Carolina, including the long-established studio hub in Wilmington.

Productions shooting in the state under signatory agreements use Local 391 members for covered transportation and picture-car work.

NYC Teamsters Local 817

NYC Teamsters Local 817 is the International Brotherhood of Teamsters local representing drivers, transportation coordinators, and picture car crew working on film and television productions in New York City and the surrounding metropolitan area.

Productions shooting in New York on signatory agreements must use Local 817 members for all covered transportation and picture car work, and vehicle owners hired by productions under Local 817 jurisdiction should understand the union's rules around vehicle use, hours, and compensation.

O

off-production vehicle return

An off-production vehicle return is the process of returning a picture car to its owner when the production has finished using it whether at the end of the day, at the end of a block of scenes, or at full wrap.

An off-production return should always involve a documented condition check comparing the vehicle's state to the pre-pickup inspection photos, signature of the receiving party, and return of all keys, accessories, and personal items. Damage discovered at return triggers the insurance claim process under the rental agreement's terms.

on-set mechanic for picture cars

An on-set mechanic for picture cars is a licensed automotive technician assigned to the production to diagnose and resolve mechanical issues with picture vehicles while on location.

The on-set mechanic handles fast fixes between takes addressing starting issues, brake concerns, fluid leaks, lighting malfunctions, or anything that could delay the shooting schedule. On productions with a large vehicle fleet or specialty vehicles with complex mechanical builds, a dedicated on-set mechanic is a critical investment that prevents costly delays.

overlay vehicle

An overlay vehicle is a picture car filmed separately and composited into a scene in post-production, rather than being physically present in the same location as the rest of the action.

Overlay vehicles are used when a specific vehicle is unavailable at the main shooting location, when safety or practical constraints prevent it from being on set, or when the VFX supervisor determines it is more efficient to add the vehicle digitally. The overlay vehicle is photographed with matching lighting, lenses, and movement so its post-production integration is seamless.

owner hold or holder fee

An owner hold or holder fee is a payment made by a production to a private vehicle owner to reserve the car for specific dates, preventing the owner from making the vehicle available to other parties during that period.

The holder fee compensates the owner for lost income and availability while the production finalizes its schedule or secures budget. Hold terms, cancellation policies, and conversion-to-shooting rates should all be clearly defined in a written vehicle rental agreement before any hold is placed.

P

picture car breakdown sheet

A picture car breakdown sheet is a production document, typically prepared by the picture car coordinator during pre-production, that identifies every vehicle needed for each scene in the script.

It lists scene numbers, vehicle descriptions, on-camera usage type (hero, background, stunt, etc.), required dressing, dates needed, and any special notes. The breakdown sheet is the primary planning tool used by the coordinator to source vehicles, budget the department, and build the vehicle shooting schedule in alignment with the overall production schedule.

Picture Car Broker

A Picture Car Broker is a specialist, company, or platform that connects film productions with vehicle owners and manages the logistics of the rental relationship.

Brokers like Revolution.film maintain databases of available vehicles, verify owner documentation, facilitate insurance arrangements, match production requirements to inventory, and handle contract and payment administration. Using a broker reduces the sourcing burden on coordinators and provides car owners with access to a steady pipeline of production opportunities without having to manage outreach independently.

Picture Car Coordinator

A Picture Car Coordinator is the department head responsible for sourcing, evaluating, contracting, prepping, transporting, and managing all picture vehicles for a production from pre-production through wrap.

The coordinator reads scripts to identify all vehicle requirements, works with the production designer to define looks, negotiates with car owners, arranges insurance, coordinates wranglers and haulers, and maintains the on-set vehicle schedule. On large productions the coordinator may manage a team including a fleet manager, assistant coordinator, and multiple wranglers.

picture car dispatcher

A picture car dispatcher is the logistics coordinator who creates and manages the daily vehicle movement schedule on a production assigning wranglers, dispatching haulers, timing pickups and deliveries, and communicating vehicle arrival and departure times to the assistant director and transportation captain.

On productions with many vehicles across multiple locations, an experienced dispatcher is essential to prevent delays caused by missing or late vehicles, which can be extremely costly to a shooting schedule.

picture car fleet inventory

The picture car fleet inventory is the master list of every vehicle committed or under consideration for a production, typically maintained by the picture car coordinator.

It includes each vehicle's description, owner contact information, daily/weekly rate, confirmed dates, prep status, current location, insurance status, and any outstanding action items. A well-maintained fleet inventory prevents double-bookings, missed prep deadlines, and insurance gaps, and serves as the single source of truth for the entire picture car department during a production.

picture car lighting package

A picture car lighting package refers to practical or additional lighting elements rigged on or around a picture car to supplement or replace the vehicle's factory lights for on-camera use.

This may include battery-powered LED practicals in headlights and tail lights for consistency, underbody LED lighting for night scenes, interior ambient lighting for in-car dialogue, or remote-controlled theatrical lighting rigged to the exterior. The gaffer and rigging department coordinate the package with the picture car coordinator to ensure power sources, mount points, and heat dissipation are all safely managed.

picture car mechanic

A picture car mechanic is a certified automotive technician hired by the production to maintain and repair picture vehicles throughout filming.

Beyond standard maintenance tasks, a picture car mechanic must be adept at working quickly and cleanly in set environments, understanding the aesthetic requirements of camera-facing parts, and diagnosing mechanical issues on diverse vehicle types including vintage, classic, and heavily modified stunt cars that fall outside standard diagnostic tooling.

picture car or picture vehicle

A picture car or picture vehicle is any motor vehicle automobile, motorcycle, truck, bus, or specialty vehicle that appears on camera in a film, television program, commercial, music video, or other visual production.

The term encompasses everything from a single background car glimpsed in a crowd scene to a hero vehicle that is central to the entire narrative. Managing picture cars is a specialized discipline within film transportation and production design, requiring coordination across multiple departments.

picture car parking or staging layout

Picture car parking or staging layout is the organized plan for positioning all vehicles in the picture car lot at the beginning of each shooting day.

The layout is designed by the fleet manager or picture car coordinator to prioritize access placing vehicles needed earliest in the most accessible spots, grouping vehicles by scene or unit, and leaving clear aisles for haulers to maneuver. A thoughtful staging layout prevents vehicles from blocking each other and significantly reduces wrangler stress and potential delays when the AD calls for a vehicle.

picture car prep day

A picture car prep day is a scheduled, paid production day dedicated to inspecting, detailing, dressing, rigging, and camera-testing picture vehicles before principal photography begins.

Prep days allow coordinators to address mechanical issues, confirm that set dressing matches the art director's specifications, photograph continuity, and verify that all vehicles are ready before they are ever needed on set. Prep days are negotiated as part of the vehicle rental agreement and are typically billed at the full daily rate.

picture car tech scout

A picture car tech scout is a pre-production location visit attended by the picture car coordinator, transportation captain, stunt coordinator (if applicable), and the director of photography to assess a filming location specifically for vehicle logistics.

The tech scout evaluates vehicle access routes, staging areas, road surface conditions for action sequences, sight lines for camera positions, proximity of traffic for safety planning, and any local permit requirements that could affect how and where picture cars are used on location.

police or law enforcement vehicle package

A police or law enforcement vehicle package is a fully dressed picture car representing a specific police department, era, and jurisdiction complete with correct livery, light bar, push bumper, antenna configuration, and appropriate interior equipment.

These packages are built to match real-world reference and must accurately represent the jurisdiction depicted in the script. Legal restrictions on the use of real law enforcement insignia vary by state, so production clearance is essential before any police vehicle package goes to camera.

pre-pickup inspection at Revolution

A pre-pickup inspection at Revolution is the documentation process that every car owner should complete before a wrangler or hauler takes possession of their vehicle.

The owner captures timestamped, comprehensive photographs and video of the vehicle's full exterior, interior, undercarriage, and any existing damage or wear from every angle. These images form the baseline condition record that protects the owner in the event of any damage claim, insurance dispute, or disagreement about the vehicle's state when it was returned after filming.

process trailer

A process trailer is a low, flat tow platform designed to safely carry a picture car with actors inside performing while the entire rig is towed through a location or in front of a greenscreen on stage.

The process trailer eliminates the safety risks of having actors perform in a real moving vehicle at speed, while cameras mounted on or around the trailer capture the scene. Platform height and camera access points are engineered for each production's specific requirements.

production design vehicle reference

A production design vehicle reference is the visual bible prepared by the production designer and art director that defines the exact look, color, condition, and dressing of each picture car needed for the film.

It typically includes reference photographs of real vehicles, hand-drawn renderings, VFX concept art, and specific notes on modifications, livery, and period details. The picture car coordinator uses this reference as the primary guide when sourcing, evaluating, and approving vehicles before presenting them to the director and production designer for final sign-off.

Q

qualified driver on a film set

A qualified driver on a film set is a licensed, vetted professional who has been cleared to operate picture vehicles on or in transit to the production location.

Qualification requirements vary by jurisdiction, vehicle type, and union contract. Under most Teamsters agreements, qualified drivers hold a commercial driver's license (CDL) with appropriate endorsements. Stunt drivers require additional certification and coordination with the stunt department and safety supervisor. Only qualified drivers may move picture cars into, through, or between set positions.

R

ramp vehicle

A ramp vehicle is a purpose-built or specially modified picture car used as a launching platform for another vehicle during a jump, launch, or airborne stunt.

Ramp vehicles are typically low-profile, with a ramped front end or modular ramp apparatus attached to their body. The geometry and angle of the ramp directly determines the height and distance of the launched vehicle, so precise engineering calculations and pre-shoot testing are essential. Both the ramp vehicle and the launching vehicle require safety modifications and qualified stunt drivers at the controls.

remote-controlled (RC) picture car

A remote-controlled (RC) picture car is a full-size or scale vehicle modified with a radio-controlled drive-by-wire system that allows it to be operated from a safe distance without a driver inside.

RC cars are used for high-risk stunt gags, crash sequences, fire scenes, or other scenarios where having a driver would be unsafe or impossible. The RC system is engineered and operated by the stunt coordinator or a specialist technician, and the vehicle must be tested extensively before performing the gag on camera.

Revolution.film picture car listing

A Revolution.film picture car listing is a vehicle profile created by a car owner on the Revolution.film platform that makes their vehicle discoverable and bookable by film, television, and commercial productions.

A complete listing includes high-quality photographs from all angles, vehicle specifications (year, make, model, modifications, condition), available dates, daily and weekly rates, geographic location, and any usage restrictions the owner requires. Strong listings with detailed photos and clear rates attract more production inquiries and faster booking decisions.

road lockoff or ITC (Intermittent Traffic Control)

A road lockoff or ITC (Intermittent Traffic Control) is a permitted, coordinated road closure or traffic management plan that allows picture car sequences to be filmed safely on public streets.

A lockoff requires coordination with local law enforcement and traffic authorities, production-employed traffic control personnel, approved traffic management plans, and often community notification. ITC is used when a full closure is not practical holding civilian traffic at intervals to allow picture cars through during takes before reopening the road between shots.

rollover vehicle

A rollover vehicle is a specially prepared picture car engineered to safely execute a controlled rollover stunt on camera.

Rollover vehicles are stripped of all glass, fitted with an internal roll cage, fire suppression, and breakaway body panels, and are typically launched by a pipe ramp or cannon mechanism rather than a natural road event. The stunt coordinator, SFX team, and fabrication shop jointly engineer the rollover system, and the sequence is executed only after multiple dry runs and sign-offs from all department heads and the production's safety officer.

run-of-show rental

A run-of-show rental is an agreement where a picture car is booked and paid for across the full duration of a production from the first prep day through the final wrap day regardless of how many individual shooting days it is on camera.

Run-of-show rentals give productions guaranteed access and continuity, and typically come with a reduced per-day rate compared to individual day rentals. They are common for hero vehicles and key featured cars that must remain available and consistently dressed throughout a long production schedule.

S

safety bulletin compliance for picture cars

Safety bulletin compliance for picture cars means adhering to the recognized safety guidelines published by bodies such as the CSATF (Contract Services Administration Trust Fund) that govern the use of camera cars, process trailers, camera rigging, chase sequences, and picture car stunts on professional productions.

These bulletins define minimum crew qualifications, equipment standards, communication protocols, and risk management procedures. Non-compliance can result in production shutdowns, insurance voidance, or significant legal liability in the event of an incident.

set dressing for vehicles

Set dressing for vehicles is the process of applying temporary interior and exterior modifications to a picture car to align it with the production's story, period, branding, or visual world.

This includes custom license plates, signage, period-accurate decals, dash and interior prop items, seat covers, luggage, or commercial vehicle livery. All set dressing is designed to be fully reversible at wrap to restore the vehicle to its original condition, and changes are documented with continuity photos to ensure consistency across shooting days.

side mount camera rig on a picture car

A side mount camera rig on a picture car is a camera attachment system that positions the camera on the exterior side of the vehicle typically at door or wheel-well height to capture low-angle tracking shots running parallel to the vehicle's direction of travel.

Side mounts are commonly used to film wheel and tire contact shots, low door-level angles during chases, and road-surface perspective shots. They require secure attachment points on the vehicle body, appropriate cable management to prevent road contact, and safety review before driving speeds are approved.

special effects (SFX) technician in picture car work

A special effects (SFX) technician working in picture car sequences is the crew member responsible for integrating practical on-set effects into vehicle scenes including bullet hits, fire and smoke systems, rain bars, hydraulic tilts, controlled breakaway glass, and practical explosions.

SFX technicians rig these systems to the picture car or to the set surrounding it, and coordinate closely with the stunt coordinator, director of photography, and safety department to execute each effect safely on camera.

speed bump or road surface inspection for picture cars

A speed bump or road surface inspection for picture cars is the pre-shoot evaluation of driving routes and surfaces performed by the stunt coordinator, transportation captain, and location department before any vehicle sequences are filmed.

The inspection identifies hazards including potholes, manhole covers, excessive camber, oil patches, gravel, and low clearance obstacles that could damage picture cars, destabilize camera rigs, or create unsafe driving conditions. Issues found during the inspection are either remediated before filming or communicated to the stunt coordinator for route adjustments.

storyboard for picture car sequences

A storyboard for picture car sequences is a visual pre-production document that illustrates every planned shot in a vehicle sequence showing camera positions, vehicle movements, angles, and transitions frame by frame.

Storyboards for picture car work are created by the director, DP, and stunt coordinator collaboratively and serve as the primary communication tool between all departments involved in filming the sequence. They allow the picture car coordinator to understand exactly which shots require which vehicles in what condition, enabling precise prep and scheduling.

stunt car

A stunt car is a picture vehicle often a duplicate of the hero car that has been specifically modified, reinforced, or prepared to safely perform physical stunts without risking damage to the hero vehicle or injury to crew.

Modifications typically include roll cages, fire suppression, remote kill switches, reinforced suspension, stripped interiors for crash safety, and specialized rigging for camera or tow attachment. Stunt cars may look identical to the hero car on camera while being fundamentally different vehicles mechanically.

stunt coordinator

A stunt coordinator is the department head responsible for designing, planning, and supervising all stunt work on a production including all vehicle-based action sequences.

For picture car work, the stunt coordinator specifies which vehicles need structural modifications, defines driving routes and speeds, approves all rigging, assigns stunt drivers, manages safety rehearsals, and serves as the primary communication bridge between the director's creative vision and what can be safely executed on camera. All vehicle stunt work is conducted under their authority.

stunt driver

A stunt driver is a highly trained, specially insured driving professional who performs precision, high-speed, or otherwise dangerous vehicle maneuvers for film and television productions.

Stunt drivers hold specialist skills including controlled skids, J-turns, bootlegger reverses, precision parallel parking at speed, near-miss choreography, and high-impact crash sequences. They work exclusively under the supervision of the stunt coordinator and must remain in constant communication with the AD, camera department, and safety team during every driving gag.

surveillance vehicle in film production

A surveillance vehicle in film production is a picture car dressed to represent a covert law enforcement or intelligence agency observation vehicle typically a nondescript van, SUV, or sedan with tinted windows, minimal exterior markings, and optionally a dressed interior with monitoring equipment.

Surveillance vehicles appear frequently in crime dramas, thrillers, and action productions. They require the same clearance process as any law enforcement vehicle regarding agency insignia and must be clearly identified on set as film vehicles to avoid confusion with actual surveillance units.

T

tail-slash or precision immobilization technique (PIT) in stunt driving

A tail-slash or Precision Immobilization Technique (PIT) in stunt driving is a controlled maneuver in which one vehicle makes contact with the rear quarter panel of another to cause a yaw rotation, spinning it out of its direction of travel.

PITs are a staple of chase sequence choreography and must be performed by qualified stunt drivers in vehicles specifically prepped for impact with reinforced contact points, working safety equipment, and a clear, prepared surface. The technique requires precise speed matching and approach angle and is rehearsed multiple times before any camera rolls.

Teamsters Local 399 Transport

Teamsters Local 399 Transport is the Los Angeles-based local of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters that represents drivers, transportation coordinators, fleet managers, picture car coordinators, and wranglers working on film, television, and streaming productions in the greater Los Angeles area.

Local 399 is one of the most prominent and influential entertainment industry transportation unions in the country, setting standards for wages, working conditions, and jurisdictional coverage for picture car professionals across the industry.

tilt-and-flip vehicle (T-bone rig)

A tilt-and-flip vehicle, also called a T-bone rig or cannon car, is a stunt vehicle fitted with a hidden pneumatic or explosive pipe cannon that fires downward on one side, forcing the vehicle to flip sideways on cue.

Unlike naturally occurring crash rollovers, cannon car flips can be triggered at a precise moment, speed, and location for maximum camera coverage and repeatability. The cannon charge is sized by the SFX team to achieve the desired flip height and rotation. Cannon cars require extensive structural reinforcement, fire suppression, and a fully locked-off safety zone before each use.

tow rig in film production

A tow rig in film production is the truck and trailer combination used to transport picture cars between prep facilities, storage lots, and filming locations.

Tow rigs are sized and specified based on the vehicles they carry a single classic car may require an enclosed single-car trailer, while a production with multiple vehicles may need flatbeds or multi-car transporters. The tow rig driver is responsible for safe loading, securing, and delivery of every vehicle, and must document the condition of each vehicle at both pickup and delivery.

tracking shot vehicle sequence

A tracking shot vehicle sequence is any filmed sequence in which the camera moves continuously alongside, behind, or ahead of a picture car while both the camera platform and the vehicle are in motion.

Tracking shots require precise choreography between the camera car driver and the picture car driver to maintain consistent framing a vehicle drifting even two feet from its mark can take it out of frame entirely. Radio communication between all moving units is standard practice during tracking shot sequences.

transportation captain

A transportation captain is the crew leader responsible for overseeing all drivers, transportation logistics, and vehicle movements for a production including picture car staging, cast vehicle scheduling, and equipment hauling.

The transportation captain reports to the unit production manager (UPM) and works in close coordination with the picture car coordinator to ensure all vehicles are staged correctly, arrive on time, and depart safely. On large productions, the captain manages a transportation co-captain and multiple drivers across several units.

U

U-Crane

A U-Crane is a hydraulically stabilized camera crane system mounted to a vehicle, most commonly a large SUV or purpose-built platform vehicle.

The crane arm extends out from the vehicle's side and can be raised, lowered, and articulated to place a gyro-stabilized camera head at virtually any position relative to a moving picture car swooping low to the ground, rising high above the vehicle roof, or reaching across to capture the subject from a parallel car's interior. The U-Crane is the workhorse tool of high-end automotive cinematography.

union work in picture car production

Union work in picture car production refers to all transportation, wrangling, coordination, and driving services performed under a collective bargaining agreement most commonly the Teamsters.

Union contracts establish minimum wage rates, maximum daily hours, overtime and meal penalty provisions, equipment requirements, and safe working conditions for all covered crew. Productions signing with the major studios or networks are generally required to use union crews for all picture car transportation and on-set vehicle work.

Unit Production Manager (UPM)

A Unit Production Manager (UPM) is the production executive responsible for overseeing budgets, scheduling, logistics, and crew contracts on a film or television production.

The UPM coordinates directly with the picture car coordinator to approve vehicle budgets, authorize special fabrication or sourcing requests, negotiate rental rates, and ensure insurance compliance across the vehicle fleet. Any significant expenditure in the picture car department typically requires UPM approval, making the UPM a key stakeholder for the picture car team throughout production.

V

vehicle detailer

A vehicle detailer in film production is the crew member responsible for ensuring that picture cars are in pristine, camera-ready condition before each shooting day.

This involves deep cleaning and polishing of exteriors to eliminate fingerprints and water spots visible in 4K, cleaning all glass to remove reflections and smears, treating rubber and plastic surfaces, vacuuming and detailing interiors to the level required for close-up shooting, and maintaining the hero car's appearance throughout the shooting day between takes.

vehicle log or vehicle movement sheet

A vehicle log or vehicle movement sheet is the daily paper or digital record maintained by the picture car department documenting every vehicle's pickup location, departure time, arrival time at set, on-camera usage, condition notes, and return details for each day of production.

Vehicle logs provide an audit trail for insurance purposes, resolve disputes about vehicle damage timing, and help the coordinator and fleet manager identify scheduling inefficiencies over the course of a long production. Many productions now use digital tools and shared spreadsheets to maintain vehicle logs accessible to all department heads in real time.

vehicle rental agreement for film

A vehicle rental agreement for film is the legally binding contract between a car owner and a production company that defines the terms of renting a picture vehicle.

Key elements include the rental rate, usage dates, permitted and prohibited uses, modification allowances, insurance requirements, damage and liability provisions, return condition standards, and cancellation and hold fee policies. Both parties should review and understand all terms before signing. Revolution.film provides standard template agreements and guidance for first-time car owners entering the production space.

vehicle wrangler or handler

A vehicle wrangler or handler is the on-set crew member assigned to deliver, drive, position, fuel, stage, and maintain picture cars throughout a filming day.

Wranglers work directly with the picture car coordinator, AD, and transportation captain to move vehicles in and out of shots quickly, keep them fueled and operational, ensure continuity between takes, and protect them from damage while on set. A dedicated wrangler may be assigned to individual hero vehicles on productions where that car's condition is critical.

VFX vehicle or digital car

A VFX vehicle or digital car is a computer-generated picture vehicle created by the visual effects department rather than using a real physical car.

Digital cars are used when a required vehicle does not exist, when stunts are too dangerous to perform physically, when a scene requires vehicle counts or destruction impossible to achieve practically, or when the production needs a futuristic or fictional vehicle design. Even when digital cars are used, a real hero car is often photographed for reference and to match lighting, surfacing, and dimensional accuracy in the CGI model.

vintage or classic car for film production

A vintage or classic car in film production is a period-appropriate vehicle, typically more than 25–30 years old, rented for its authentic historical appearance.

Vintage and classic cars require special handling considerations including the use of experienced wranglers familiar with older vehicle systems, additional mechanical inspection before filming, and heightened insurance coverage given their often-irreplaceable nature. Owners of vintage vehicles working with productions should ensure the rental agreement clearly addresses valuation, agreed deductibles, and how restoration costs for any damage are calculated.

W

weekly rate for picture car rental

A weekly rate is the price to rent a picture car for a continuous period of five to seven working days, typically at a cost equivalent to four or four-and-a-half daily rates rather than seven providing a meaningful discount over booking individual days.

Weekly rates are the most common rental structure for mid-length production engagements and help both the owner and the production plan around predictable weekly billing cycles. Most weekly rates include standard prep and shooting use, with any additional mileage or special use billed separately.

wetdown

A wetdown is a practical technique used on exterior night shoots in which roads, sidewalks, and surrounding surfaces are deliberately saturated with water before filming to create reflective, glistening surfaces that catch and multiply light sources.

For picture car scenes, wetdowns dramatically enhance the visual quality of night driving shots by adding depth, dimension, and cinematic richness that a dry surface cannot provide. A dedicated water truck or fire hose team keeps the surface wet between takes throughout the night shoot.

window mount camera rig

A window mount camera rig is a bracket system that clamps to a vehicle's door frame or window channel to secure a camera at door height pointing inward for close-up actor performances, outward for passing scenery, or rearward for following-vehicle shots.

Window mounts allow camera operators to position cameras in locations inside or on the edge of the vehicle without modifying the door structure. They are one of the most frequently used rigging configurations in picture car work for dialogue and reaction shot coverage.

wrap day for picture cars

A wrap day for picture cars is the designated final day of a production when all vehicles are de-rigged, un-dressed, cleaned, documented, and returned to their respective owners or storage facilities.

Wrap day for the picture car department involves removing all set dressing and modifications, performing wrap inspections with documentation, arranging haulers for each vehicle, settling any outstanding damage or cleaning charges, and closing all rental agreements. Efficient wrap day execution requires advance planning ideally with a vehicle return schedule issued to all owners in the final week of production.

wrap inspection for picture cars

A wrap inspection is the formal condition assessment performed on a picture car when it is returned to its owner at the conclusion of a production.

During the wrap inspection, the owner or their representative compares the vehicle's current condition against the pre-pickup documentation, identifying any new damage, missing parts, unreturned set dressing, or cleanliness issues. Any discrepancies discovered during the wrap inspection form the basis for damage claims against the production's insurance. Revolution.film recommends that all car owners perform and photograph the wrap inspection in the presence of the wrangler or hauler making the return.

X

X-Games or extreme stunt vehicle

An extreme stunt vehicle sometimes referenced in the industry as an X-Games style vehicle is a picture car built or modified for high-impact, visually spectacular stunts that push beyond standard chase or action sequences.

These vehicles may be designed for jumps spanning multiple lanes, barrel rolls, high-speed precision impact sequences, or underwater and fire sequences. Extreme stunt vehicles require the most intensive fabrication, the most experienced stunt and safety teams, and the most comprehensive pre-production testing of any picture car category.

Y

yellow line hold

A yellow line hold is the designated staging zone typically marked with painted lines or cones at a specific distance from the set perimeter where picture cars wait until the AD calls them onto set.

Picture cars in yellow line hold are prepped, dressed, fueled, and attended by wranglers so they can move immediately on cue. The yellow line system keeps vehicles organized in sequence, prevents traffic on set, and ensures safety by keeping non-essential vehicles away from active filming areas.

Z

zero hero

A zero hero is a pristine, fully camera-ready duplicate of the hero car reserved exclusively for close-up and detail shots where the vehicle must look absolutely perfect no rigging marks, rig holes, dust, or wear from active use.

While the primary hero car may be rigged for camera mounts, used in driving sequences, or exposed to environmental conditions, the zero hero is kept in a controlled, protected environment and only brought onto set for specific shots requiring showroom-quality appearance. Zero hero vehicles are most common in automotive commercials and high-budget productions.

zero-mileage or delivery-condition picture car

A zero-mileage or delivery-condition picture car is a vehicle sourced directly from a dealership, manufacturer, or private owner in as-new, undriven condition for use in automotive advertising or a scene requiring a brand-new vehicle.

These cars typically have under 50 miles, no wear to the interior, showroom-fresh tires, and factory-original detailing. They require extreme care during transport and on set, dedicated wrangling attention, and special insurance provisions reflecting their replacement value at new-car cost.