Flying through the journey of cinematography, writing, and film production, Ipsum Flog in the Filmmaker's Blog. Written by filmmakers, for filmmakers. No one knows everything. We are here to share what we know, and to learn from our readers!
Friday, February 27, 2015
Monday, February 23, 2015
Write a Treatment
Having written a handful of stageplays, short screenplays, and two features in the works - organizing and planning is nothing new to my process. That said, I have ignorantly avoided writing "Treatments" for scripts.
Recently, I was encouraged to write a two page Treatment for a script that has been giving me a lot of trouble and have never felt my eyes more open about a script.
A Treatment, in my eyes, has always been an elusive creature ready to tear my fingers off. And while that is an unchanged opinion, I am excited to embrace the Treatment.
It is a document, whether one page or thirty, that tells your story from start to finish. Similar in style to a super short story, or novella, in that it's dramatic and feels like a very precise and detailed work of fiction. The reader should be able to see, smell, and feel, the world and characters involved with the story, and every word in the document is chosen with pitching the script in mind.
It is quite common, and often requested, that a Treatment accompany a script so it can be read before opening the script's coverpage. For that reason, the Treatment should be revered as the first impression readers will encounter and the way it is crafted will determine if your script will be read or thrown away.
From start to finish, Treatments provide an eye opening truth that tell you where you are at in the development of the story. Trying to organize characters, scenes, plots, refine dialogue, pacing, overall continuity, etc, can get overwhelming and your brains starts to fill in the blanks of where the bigger picture needs to get to. By doing that, it's easy to say, "I'll fix this later. I'll come back to this. I'll remember this hole and fill it in." And so on.
By writing a Treatment you can stay on top of where a script is at instead of assuming you've got everything in place. These periodic Treatments expose the height of stakes, relationships, and how entertaining the story actually is.
Long story short, a Treatment is a very detailed summary (not an outline) of your screenplay. An outline has bullet points and facts, a Treatment paints a well crafted picture of your script.
Treat yourself and the stories you want to tell; read some example treatments and make write one yourself.
Labels:
film,
filmmaking,
indie film,
Ipsum,
screenplay,
writing
Saturday, February 7, 2015
Project Management
Writing Part 2 will come soon enough.. ;)
For now, I need to share some thoughts on project management.
Project Management, literally referring to the management of projects, is something that gets me excited and feeling fulfilled - yet it comes with its challenges. Personally, my tendency is to pass a phase of searching for every new project, then they pile up on top of each other, leading to a hearty workload that a full time job simply doesn't allow.
In the last year, my project management skills have exponentially grown but I am far from perfect.
Everything aside, there are a few things that have been aiding in recent productivity:
1. Go to SLEEP before midnight every chance possible. Whenever that doesn't happen, productivity tends to lack the next day.
2. DON'T DWELL on a project. "Pet" projects aren't usually worth the countless hours, or years, of "what if." Just do them and move on, as much as possible. If they don't pour out of you, and they're a burden, they could easily feel that way to an audience.
3. COMMUNICATE. Some of us are notoriously awful at communicating, even though the world is at our fingertips. Never assume others are on the same page with the rat race taking place in your mind. Communication is the most basic step to accountability and reputation.
With everything going on: jobs, family, sanity, and personal projects - it is easy to get lost.
Keep a calendar. Talking is better than texting. Prioritize. Strive for fulfilling experiences and don't take yourself TOO seriously.
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