Finding Your Voice
Now that you’ve written your script and broken it out, you might find it helpful to record a temp track, like I do. This is a track of moderately talented amateur actors and team members—such as you—reading the lines for the purposes of determining audio file size and length. All you need to record a temp track is your script, a willing actor, a decent microphone, computer software that can record audio, and a quiet place that doesn’t echo to record. Try to do your best to read each line the way you will eventually want it performed by a professional voice actor. However, it’s a bad idea to animate a character’s lip sync to a temp track: the actor’s performance will end up very different than that of the temp actor. You should use temp track audio only for timing and blocking purposes.
Speaking of voice actors, while you could play the part of Jake Steele, international terrorist hunter, you really should hire a professional...