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Director's treatments


Yash Lucid

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Is there any source to find famous director's treatments for TV Commercials and Music Videos?

 

I would love to get an insight to some people's brains and their inner workings.

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As a cinematographer, the treatments I get when working on commercials are highly detailed.

 

They are usually broken down in different categories, such as:

 

- Storyline

- Tone of the piece

- Actors

- Cinematography

- Production Design

- Costumes

- Sound (which includes sound effects and the tone of the voice over if there is any)

- Make up

 

Sometimes they come with some sort of storyboards but most of the times they don't and the director and myself talk about what we would like to achieve.

 

There are loads of images and videos on the treatments as references so a normal treatment could have around 40 pages.

 

When I receive the treatment I start creating a cinematography booklet with the vision I have for the piece and then I send it to the director and we make changes if needed.

 

When the director and myself are happy with the booklet, I send it over to the crew and HOD's so everybody has more info and they have a clearer vision of the project.

 

Have a lovely day!

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There are loads of images and videos on the treatments as references so a normal treatment could have around 40 pages.

 

 

It always depresses me that I have to squeeze that many pages out of a 15 second spot. The whole game sucks. I need to find a new line of work. I wish I could just make movies like Brett Ratner is allowed to. :)

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It always depresses me that I have to squeeze that many pages out of a 15 second spot. The whole game sucks. I need to find a new line of work. I wish I could just make movies like Brett Ratner is allowed to. :)

In fairness, the commercials I shoot are always 30" or 45" so 1 page / second which is not that bad, right? :P (joke! Just in case haha)

 

As a director, don't you like creating treatments? I think that if I were a director I would love to create them because it is the first step to imagine how it will be.

 

Maybe it is because I work better visually than with words that I like seeing treatments with images and videos rather than 2 pages of writing.

 

When I make the booklets for directors I really enjoy that part too, I love researching for images that I think might fit the piece and putting them together on a keynote.

 

Have a lovely day!

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As a director, don't you like creating treatments?

No I don't, and this is why; I'm a naturally enthusiastic person. I get very excited when I see something I like. I think endorphins are released when I see a really great composition, for example. I'm doing a music video right now that I'm really excited about because I think it could be really beautiful. On the flip side of that coin, I have a very hard time pretending to like something I don't care about. And if I'm upset, everyone in the room knows it. It's a flaw of mine. So, when I have to write a treatment, I have to pretend to really care about Flintstone vitamins. I have to learn about them. Then I have to act like I really care about their effect in the world. It's just not an easy thing for me to do. But that's the job and I can't afford to give it up. But I admit that I sometimes wish I did what my brother did and drove a UPS truck. He makes good money and has good benefits and plays 36 holes on the weekends. Only instead of playing golf on the weekends, I would probably make short films. Something I get really excited about.

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I am going to start a business for directors.. It is called: "I will make your treatment"

 

My agent sent me a treatment not long ago and it was the worst treatment ever, 3 pages with text, 2 images and really badly done.. when I saw that I said: How the hell did this guy got the commercial with a treatment like this one!! :O

 

I didn't get to shoot it but I am looking forward to seeing the piece as I want to see how that treatment got translated into images! Knowing the cinematographer who shot it.. probably on anamorphic with the Kowas

 

Justin, you are already a driver!, the mind behind a lot of people who believe in your vision, respect your craft and want to make the most beautiful images ever! And they need to be driven by you!

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I will admit I'm not playing ball with the big boys. If I were getting jobs like this...

 

Lincoln commercial

 

Then I would be happy to write a 40 page treatment. Side note, there are guys that have turned "fake excitement" into an art form. Try listening to Joseph Kahn talk about one of his commercials sometime. He'll talk about Fruit of the Loom with the enthusiasm of a guy willing to blow all his money on a Power Rangers fan film (which he did).

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Justin, you are already a driver!, the mind behind a lot of people who believe in your vision, respect your craft and want to make the most beautiful images ever! And they need to be driven by you!

Okay fine, but I've read director's treatments about tennis shoes written with more passion than Francis Ford Coppola talking about "Apocalypse Now." At a certain point it's just BS.

 

Not too long ago a friend of mine did a 48 page treatment for a 15 second Eggo commercial. 27 pages less than the script for "Dunkirk" for a couple shots of a waffle. And keep in mind, that's off the clock. We're paid for shoot days not treatments.

 

End rant.

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Many, many commercial directors have "treatment writers". In fact, I know three people who do that job full time, more or less. That doesn't mean they do all the work and the director just comes in gets the big bucks, it's a collaboration. They email and talk on the phone about the tone, the ideas and what needs to be achieved. Many directors are simply too busy to spend a few days on a treatment when they're shooting. Agencies often want it presented within a short period, and that's where these writers come in and can work in the background. Also, many bigger production companies have researchers that can dig up reference images and mood boards to include in treatment. Not all directors work with treatment writers - some want to be the full author of their work - but quite a few do.

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Good point. If I were directing jobs as big as the ones on your website, I would hire treatment writers for sure. But unfortunatly like I said earlier... Flintstone vitamins... so I still write my own treatments :) Maybe one day...

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Okay fine, but I've read director's treatments about tennis shoes written with more passion than Francis Ford Coppola talking about "Apocalypse Now." At a certain point it's just BS.

 

Not too long ago a friend of mine did a 48 page treatment for a 15 second Eggo commercial. 27 pages less than the script for "Dunkirk" for a couple shots of a waffle. And keep in mind, that's off the clock. We're paid for shoot days not treatments.

 

End rant.

 

 

I see your point but I don't agree with it! :D Probably because I'm too passionate about everything.. I could be American! haha.

 

Regarding getting paid for shoot days not treatments, I suppose that if you want to pitch for something you have to do some previous work and that is well considered in your fee for the shooting days?

 

That's the way directors work in Spain! their salary takes into consideration the time and effort they have spent creating the project out of nothing, as opposed as crew, who are paid recce days and shooting days no matter the time you have spent during prep.

 

As per treatment writers, the guys behind Twin have an amazing podcast on The Wandering DP website where they talk about that and they say that the reason behind that is that, as Adam says, they are too busy shooting to create treatments within the hours that agencies want them that they started working with treatment writers and they like it.

 

http://wanderingdp.com/podcast/wandering-dp-podcast-episode-59-twin/

 

Have a lovely day!

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