: Re: What are the differences between a script and a screenplay? There is usually a lot of confusion when it comes to these two terms. Some sources say that there is no (practical) difference between
A screenplay is a preproduction tool, whereas a script is a production/post production tool.
From the filmmaking side, being on set, we refer to the printed copy as a script. The script is a tool that the actor and rest of the crew use while on set at a particular location, and is often only a portion of the entire screenplay.
Directors, actors, continuity directors, script supervisors, and film loaders (clapper/slate operators) often make notations on their own copy of the script.
The screenplay would be the entire thing, in its original form. You might submit a screenplay, but you wouldn't submit a script.
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