I quite enjoy the "everything including the kitchen sink" nature of first drafts, because without the whole thing down on paper, you can't develop, pare and refine it.
Drafts are simply markers on the road towards perfection. A complete draft gives you the opportunity to see how all the elements in your script combine to make a whole. You can see what moves fast and slow; if the pace grinds to a halt when it should speed up; if characters talk their way through things you should be showing; if you hit the marks for whatever structure you're writing to; how much redundant material or character you have; how much light and shade you have; what's missing.
First, second, third, seventeenth; it makes no difference. Each one is an attempt to improve on the last.
And when, after all your drafts and passes and revisions, you have written perfection, you get to sell it and watch someone else turn it into something else completely!
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SF08: Gethsemane - Thriller
SF08: Shooting - Comedy - 105 pages - done
Good luck to you all.
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