Movie processing (or simply processing) is prose, usually between a scene card (index card) and a movie draft, television program, or radio script. It is usually longer and more detailed than the outline (or a single page summary) and may include details of the supervision style that the outline is omitted. Treatment reads like a short story but explains and explains what happened with the current tense. [1] may also be created in the process of adapting a novel, a work that can be played, or other existing work to the script.
The original draft process was created during the burn process and is usually very long and detailed. It is a combination of panoramic outlines. There are usually 30 to 80 standard letter sizes or A4 pages (Courier New 12 points), with an average of about 40 pages. For example, the terminator is 48 pages.
Presentation processing was created as a presentation material. Normally scene card descriptions are exported in order, including only basic and important story events that make up the scene. It is the simplest complete story from concept, theme, character, to detailed overview of about 4 to 8 pages of the main scene.
The presentation process is used to show how notes are integrated into scripts for viewing by the director or production director or as a presentation after promotion. [2]
If you need to send a script submission, the commit process will be handled appropriately. They are usually 3 to 30 pages in length, with an average of 7 to 12 pages.
In the film industry, processing is widely used as a sales document that outlines the story and role aspects of processed scriptwriting, but contours are often created as part of the development process. Script authors can use scripts to play scripts first, but you can also use a process to sell concepts that you are marketing without completing the script.
Some people in the industry simply do not know the difference between summary and movie processing and can use these terms in the same sense. If someone wants to see your "treatment", ask them how many pages they want. This will inform you at least, whether they really mean a plot of a story, not a treatment. They actually refer to the summary of the plot if they say they want to read two or three pages rather than they are talking about treatment. If they really want to get medical treatment, writing down one of them is a tough task for your time and energy. If your script has not yet signed the contract, you need to decide if it is worth the time. Your decision depends on whether this is an important producer or whether you think that there may be therapeutic use other than this producer's request.
Movie processing (or simply processing) is prose, usually between a scene card (index card) and a movie draft, television program, or radio script. It is usually longer and more detailed than the outline (or a single page summary) and may include details of the supervision style that the outline is omitted. Treatment reads like a short story, but it is said in the current tense, and it describes the event as it happens. It can also be created by adapting novels, works that can be played, and other existing works to the script.
In 2009, the story was adapted by John McCarty, directed by Colean Lovett 's short film (30 min) movie "Confession". (McCarti originally wrote about the story of the television collection in the late 1960s, the idea was put on hold but the treatment was modified to be finally restricted.) Episode of Twilight - "Things on the Wall "(1989 - a variant of Gilman's story, a woman listens to her face with a yellow wallpaper pattern in her bedroom and hears an ominous voice, the woman insists on putting herself in a mental hospital There is no pattern on the white wall of the hospital room.
Interrupted Girl is a movie about mental illness and its treatment that was created more than 10 years ago and was created in the late 1960s. These facts can be traced back to a certain extent - especially in the depicted treatment - movies are still relevant in exploring psychiatric disorders, mental health and psychiatry treatments. Is the "crazy" person really changed so much or is it different from other people Psychiatry is legal? Is treatment okay? The question is still relevant, the answer to the movies - those with mental illness are not much different from the others, the system can help but there is a fundamental problem - continue to resonate