A shooting script is the version of a screenplay used during the production of a motion picture. Shooting scripts are distinct from spec scripts in that they make use of scene numbers (along with certain other formatting conventions described below), and they follow a well defined set of procedures specifying how script revisions should be implemented and circulated.
Read more about Shooting Script: Overview, Preserving Scene and Page Numbers, The Revision Slug, Revision Marks, Software, See Also
Famous quotes containing the words shooting and/or script:
“... though it is by no means requisite that the American women should emulate the men in the pursuit of the whale, the felling of the forest, or the shooting of wild turkeys, they might, with advantage, be taught in early youth to excel in the race, to hit a mark, to swim, and in short to use every exercise which could impart vigor to their frames and independence to their minds.”
—Frances Wright (17951852)
“If its a good script Ill do it. And if its a bad script, and they pay me enough, Ill do it.”
—George Burns (b. 1896)