Chapter 16 - Titles or Opening Credits
In some scripts you read, you'll see this notation:
BEGIN TITLES or BEGIN OPENING TITLES followed by END TITLES or OVER
OPENING CREDITS followed by END OPENING CREDITS. An example:
FADE IN:
EXT. KEY WEST MARINA - DAWN - ESTABLISHING
Sailboats, yachts, and cabin cruisers all bob up and down in the warm
blue
water.
EXT. BEACH - DAY
BEGIN TITLES
as hundreds of young, perfect bodies of college age kids frolic during
spring
break.
Writing Tip:
Don't bother putting in Beginning and Ending titles. It is not usually
done in a spec script, and you can't predict where the producer and director
will want to insert the titles, the sequence of footage shot with the opening
credits rolling over it. Don't give yourself the extra work.
Superimpose or Title
When the notation SUPERIMPOSE or TITLE OVER is used, text or an image is
placed on top of the film footage. Most of the time, it contains information
the director thinks the audience needs to know... like the place or time of the
next scene.
EXT. BEACH - DAY
Hundreds of young, perfect bodies of college age kids frolic on the sand
and in
the warm water.
SUPERIMPOSE: Daytona Beach, Spring Break, 1966
Only the text, "Daytona Beach, Spring Break, 1966" would appear
toward the bottom of the screen.
Any text, like subtitles or translations of foreign signs, etc., fall
into this category.
Do not use SUPERIMPOSE: unless there is a definite need for it. It has
been so overused, it is some times spoofed, the way director Ron Howard did in
Splash.
No comments:
Post a Comment