Screenplay Format  

Posted by jeffige

If you really want to start up the screenplay mountain, you have to learn correct screenplay format. Or do you?

Before I started to write my first screenplay, I had to spend hours upon hours learning the correct way to format a script. I wrote my first screenplay on an old typewriter. Hearing the keys click – clack as the words spilled out onto the page before my eyes was inspiring. It was a task lugging the old ball and chain down to the local coffee shop. -- The typewriter, not my wife. I wasn’t married at that time. But, it was worth it. To sit outside having a cup of joe while life continued around me... awesome. The only problem was it took what seemed like forever to write just a few pages. My thoughts would float back to the formatting aspect, instead of staying with the story aspect.

Today, folks can keep their minds on the story, instead of being worried about margins, line spacing and exactly how much space goes before the first line and the last on the page. Unless, you still write with a typewriter. And if you do, God Bless you. I won’t dwell on screenplay format for one very good reason. There is an abundance of software that will put your mind at ease when it comes to the formatting. From Screenwriter 6 --which I use -- and Final Draft 8, to online programs like Scripped Writer or Five Sprockets. You can shell out hundreds of dollars, or not shell out a dime. These programs do just about the same thing: keep your mind on your story.

Writing a fundamentally good screenplay is a daunting task. Not only do you have to worry about the story you want to tell, you have to think about things like plot, your protagonist, antagonist, the hook, the ending, turning points, structure, and that’s just to name a few. Do you actually need something else to worry about? Didn’t think so.

Below are links to some screenwriting programs that will help keep your supply of aspirin where it should be. In the bottle.


Boxed Software
SCREENWRITER 6
FINAL DRAFT
MOVIE OUTLINE
MONTAGE For MAC only

Free Download Software
SCREENFORGE
SOPHOCLES
CELTIX

Free Online Software
SCRIPPED WRITER
FIVE SPROCKETS
PLOTBOT
ZHURA


A final note on formatting. You would be wise to invest in a little book that a lot of screenwriters swear by, including this one. The Screenwriter’s Bible by Dave Trottier. Within the pages you will find all aspects of screenplay format, and a lot more. It is worth its weight in gold for aspiring scribes.

Also, read a helluva lot of screenplays. Read the titles that scored big at the box office, and the ones that didn’t. Read scripts from the movies that you’ve seen. Watch a movie while you read the script. What ever you do – guess what? That’s right – READ SCRIPTS.

Below are links to a few places that you can download free movie scripts. Just be warned: Some of the screenplays are SHOOTING SCRIPTS. They are written with camera directions. DO NOT! write camera directions into your screenplay.

THE DAILY SCRIPT
SIMPLY SCRIPTS
INTERNET MOVIE SCRIPT DATABASE(IMsDB)

One final order: WRITE. WRITE. WRITE.

This entry was posted on Wednesday, September 30, 2009 at Wednesday, September 30, 2009 . You can follow any responses to this entry through the comments feed .

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