You Said Stages Of Script Writing 1 Idea / Concept Development Start With A Simple Idea Or Theme (e

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You said: Stages of Script Writing 1. Idea / Concept Development Start with a simple idea or theme (e.g., “A son realizes his mother always sacrifices for him”). Identify the core message or emotion you want to convey. 2. Logline A one-sentence summary of the story. 👉 Example: “A distracted son realizes his mother’s quiet sacrifices when she gives up her meal for him.” 3. Synopsis / Story Outline A short paragraph summary of the story (start, middle, end). Highlights the conflict and resolution. 👉 Example: In one minute, the film shows how a mother gives her last bite of food to her son, and how the son realizes her love and shares it back. 4. Treatment (Expanded Outline) A prose version of the story, written like a short essay. Describes the scenes in order, without dialogues. 👉 Example: “In a modest kitchen, a mother places food on the table. She saves the last bite for her son, smiling despite her hunger. The son eats carelessly but later notices her empty plate. Guilt overcomes him, and he shares his food back with her. They share a smile of love and togetherness.” 5. Scene Breakdown Divide the story into scenes and shots (storyboard stage). Note the location, time, camera angle, and characters. 6. First Draft (Screenplay Form) Written in script format with: Scene headings (INT/EXT, LOCATION, TIME). Action lines (what happens on screen). Dialogue (what characters say). Parentheticals (how dialogue is delivered, if needed). 7. Revision & Polishing Refine dialogue to be natural. Cut unnecessary words. Ensure pacing matches screen time (1 page ≈ 1 minute of screen). 8. Final Draft / Shooting Script Technical version used for production. Includes: Scene numbers. Camera directions. Shot divisions (if director prefers). Ready for filming create board

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25.08.2025 07:13

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