Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What does the script look like?

What does the script look like?

Script is the basis of a play, that is, the written expression of a TV play or movie. I admire the writer for being a good script myself.

The script is mainly composed of lines and stage descriptions, which is the text basis of dramatic art creation and the basis of the performance of directors and actors. Words similar to scripts also include scripts, scripts and so on. It is a literary style with the first-person narrator's style as the main way to express stories.

Scripts are mainly divided into literary scripts and photographic scripts. Literary scripts are scripts that highlight literariness and have a low sense of photography, including drama scripts (or drama scripts), novel scripts (or drama novels), sketch scripts, cross talk scripts and so on.

Photography script is a script that highlights the sense of shooting, and its literary artistry can be high or low (depending on the comprehensive situation of film theme, market and investment). ), including split-mirror scripts, split-mirror scripts (split-mirror scripts or movie scripts), Taiwan Province scripts, etc.

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The script is mainly composed of lines and stage descriptions. The first-person narrator is used in dialogues, monologues and narrators, and lyrics are often used in operas and operas. The stage description in the script is a narrative word written in the playwright's tone.

Including the description of the time and place of the plot, the description of the characters' image characteristics, body movements and inner activities, the description of the scene and atmosphere, and the requirements for scenery, lighting and sound effects.

In the history of drama development, the emergence of scripts is roughly when drama is formally formed and mature. The ancient Greek tragedy developed from the original Dionysian ceremony to a complete performing art, which fundamentally marked the emergence of a large number of tragic scripts; China's drama scripts of Song and Yuan Dynasties are the most obvious evidence that China's dramas are maturing.

The maturity of Indian and Japanese classical dramas is also marked by a number of scripts handed down from generation to generation. However, there are some mature drama forms without scripts, such as some burlesque in ancient Greece and Rome, early Italian impromptu comedies, some oral plays of Japanese kabuki, song and dance sketches and funny sketches in China in the Tang Dynasty, and modern pantomime.