Production write-through contract

A production write-through contract is an arrangement, specific to the film industry, where a screenwriter enters into a commercial agreement with a studio that guarantees the screenwriter the right to complete the necessary rewrites of the screenplay. The screenwriter will be on the set throughout the production of the film, and will do the rewrites that a production rewriter would otherwise do.[1]

References and notes

  1. A book about entertainment law is required as a proper source for this term.


gollark: Lyricly is now permanently banned. How fun.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> Have you read Kevin Underhill's analysis of German beekeeping laws?
gollark: > Note: right now autofree is hidden behind the -autofree flag. It will be enabled by default in V 0.3. If autofree is not used, V programs will leak memory.
gollark: You can't use the accursed resultoptional hybrid they have in situations when you have a value which *can* actually be nonexistent for whatever reasons, and it's actually `Result<T, string>` constantly.
gollark: Because they aren't really doing "option" and "result" at that point as much as a bizarre special-cased thing which is basically just indirected exceptions.
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