Formatting (and examples) of one-page feature film treatment for MFA applications?

I'm applying for some MFA film programs and I'm currently working on my Feature Film Treatment for Columbia and NYU. I've got a longer treatment (nearly 20 pages) but I'm struggling with getting it into one page, double spaced, 12pt Courier font.

The Columbia prompt reads:
Feature film treatment: On one double-spaced page for a film you might wish to write, direct or produce based on your application concentration. The treatment must concisely relate a complete dramatic story sufficient to sustain a feature-length film, including major characters and plot developments and a clear statement of the resolution. The story cannot be the same as the one in your dramatic writing sample or your optional video submission. You must state the genre of your treatment and a log line. On a separate page, please state the genre, major characters and a log line for the film. A log line is one or two sentences that describe the protagonist(s) and the story of the film.

I'm finding the wording a little confusing, because while it seems clear a log-line, genre statement, and characters can go on a separate page, it seems to kind of say the same thing with the treatment. Additionally, I'm a little torn on how much they want us to get into the plot details, or if they just want us to cover the major developments? I don't want to repeat myself by re-stating my log line, the genre statement, and the characters in the body of the treatment itself, but I also don't want to only have that on a second page if that's not really what they're asking.

I was hoping someone may have a little more clarity on what exactly they're asking in terms of the formatting and type of content here, and was also hoping some people that've been accepted in prior years (or any current applicants) might be willing to share their submissions? Thanks in advance!
 
I'm applying for some MFA film programs and I'm currently working on my Feature Film Treatment for Columbia and NYU. I've got a longer treatment (nearly 20 pages) but I'm struggling with getting it into one page, double spaced, 12pt Courier font.

The Columbia prompt reads:
Feature film treatment: On one double-spaced page for a film you might wish to write, direct or produce based on your application concentration. The treatment must concisely relate a complete dramatic story sufficient to sustain a feature-length film, including major characters and plot developments and a clear statement of the resolution. The story cannot be the same as the one in your dramatic writing sample or your optional video submission. You must state the genre of your treatment and a log line. On a separate page, please state the genre, major characters and a log line for the film. A log line is one or two sentences that describe the protagonist(s) and the story of the film.

I'm finding the wording a little confusing, because while it seems clear a log-line, genre statement, and characters can go on a separate page, it seems to kind of say the same thing with the treatment. Additionally, I'm a little torn on how much they want us to get into the plot details, or if they just want us to cover the major developments? I don't want to repeat myself by re-stating my log line, the genre statement, and the characters in the body of the treatment itself, but I also don't want to only have that on a second page if that's not really what they're asking.

I was hoping someone may have a little more clarity on what exactly they're asking in terms of the formatting and type of content here, and was also hoping some people that've been accepted in prior years (or any current applicants) might be willing to share their submissions? Thanks in advance!
Just based on what you sent to me it sounds like on a separate page they want a character list, the stated genre (not a statement about the genre just listing what it is), and a log line. For the main page they want a 1 page treatment that lays out your story and proves it has feature legs.

I didn’t apply to Columbia so I can only help so much on this in terms of format, but what I do know is that as long as your one page treatment sells the story they aren’t going to get hung up on formatting.

I’m a currently AFI student and am happy to give feedback on your one-pager if you want to share via dm. If not no worries. Wish I could help more!
 
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