Way more. Every time you see a cut in a movie, there's a frame of storyboard. Simple. Every single goddamn one. No, but you get every single shot. As in, every single time we put the camera somewhere else, every single time we roll and then cut. I don't think the White People Edition has it, but the Chinese and Japanese DVDs for Spirited Away include an alternate video track - the animatics of the film. That's the storyboards, timed out and presented as video. It was kinda trippy when I saw it, because my Chinese DVD defaulted to video track 2 for some reason. I thought it was a decidedly low-fi Miyazaki, but still pretty cool. I had to watch the first 20 minutes over again when I figured it out.So to continue my flawed analogy, a storyboard is going to have way more "pages" than a graphic novel of the same material would?
But, if you feel like answering another question, how do you decide which shot gets a storyboard frame?
Surely you can't account for every single different frame of a movie, too labor intensive.