Chapter 18 - Production Drafts
You've sold your script, and lo and behold, you're still the writer of
the next phase! Time for Production drafts and revisions (a.k.a. Production
Rewrite). All script formatting software available at The Writers Store are
terrific at generating locked scripts (meaning the pages are finalized), A
& B pages, numbered scenes and other specifics of the production draft.
One of the ways production drafts differ from spec scripts is NUMBERED
SCENES. Your script-formatting program can do this automatically. It numbers
the SCENE HEADINGS with numbers to the left and right of the scene heading. The
purpose of scene numbers is to aid the work of the Assistant Director and
Producer in their efforts of breaking down the scenes for scheduling, and
budgeting the script for production.
REVISED April 30, 2001
BLUE
1.
FADE IN:
1 EXT. KEY WEST MARINA - DAWN -
ESTABLISHING 1
Sailboats, yachts, and cabin cruisers all bob up and down in the warm
blue
water.
2 EXT. BEACH - DAY
2
as hundreds of young, perfect bodies of college age kids enjoy spring
break.
Top Continued and Bottom Continued
Software Tip:
Script formatting software can easily insert Top CONTINUED and Bottom
CONTINUED into your script, IF YOU WANT THAT DONE. It depends on who you are
submitting to and at what stage the project is in.
Writing Tip:
Top and Bottom CONTINUEDs were common practice in the past, a stodgy
convention indicating that a scene continued beyond the page the reader just
finished reading. Typically in spec scripts this is no longer done, and your
benefit of that change are the extra four lines of text you have just gained to
write a better script
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