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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Screenplay -1


What Exactly Is a Script?

A script is a document that outlines every aural, visual, behavioral, and lingual element required to tell a story. Why "outlines"? Because film is a highly collaborative medium and the director, cast, editor, and production crew will, based on your "outline", interpret your story their way when it is filmed. They may consult you, or they may not. Other writers may be brought in or you may be asked to re-write the entire thing. That's life, in the world of screenwriting. But because so many people are involved in the making of a film, a script must conform to standards that all involved parties understand and thus has a specific format or layout, margins, notation, and other conventions. This document is intended to overview the typical elements used screenplay writing.
It is crucial to remember that film is a VISUAL medium. You don't tell your audience your story, you SHOW them. You must learn to write a screenplay VISUALLY. Write what they will SEE and what they will HEAR. You might love your characters and know what they are thinking, but the discipline of screenplay writing is how to show it on a screen. When it happens, it may be just done with a look, often improvised on the movie set. So just write the pictures, sounds, and speeches, and leave the rest for the filmmakers.

What Makes Good Story?

Let's hazard a guess. The movies you loved most featured characters that swept you up, who captivated your emotions, got you involved. The audience viewing a movie not only wants to be interested in and care about the people they see on the screen, they want to be PASSIONATE about them, whether they like them or not. Great heroes and heroines inspire us; great villains make us want to jump into the screen!
There is always something at stake in a good movie. Not just something someone wants, something that must be acquired, no matter what the risk, as in Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark. Or something highly desired by as many main characters as possible, like the small black statue in The Maltese Falcon. Some times it can be an intangible thing, like the freedom of a people in Lawrence of Arabia or Gandhi. All these things drive the character's quest, even gives the hero superhuman strength. It can be something personal (romance) or for the good of all (saving the world from aliens) but it must be powerful and grow more desperate as the story unfolds.
There are always obstacles, which provide that catchword that actors love so much -- CONFLICT. This is the heart of drama. Someone wants something and people and things keep getting in the way of them achieving the goal. At times, the obstacles can be common to both the hero and villain, and the ultimate goal a laudable one for both parties, as in Jingle All The Way. In that film, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sinbad battle to achieve the same goal--the acquisition of the last popular action figure for sale that Christmas season. Both of them have promised their son, and they must not fail. Conflict and obstacles can be physical or emotional. But they have to be in your story or you don't really have a story. In most good stories, the protagonist will also have an inner obstacle, some mental or even spiritual problem, that will be resolved by the time s/he reaches the outward, physical goal of the story. Some people call this inner demon a "ghost," while others call in a "wound."
You need a hook. That's a songwriting term that describes that thing that catches the public's attention. A popular Hollywood term is a "high concept." A better idea might be a simple "What if?" In Galaxy Quest, for example, the concept is "What if the washed-up actors from the crew of a cancelled but still popular sci-fi TV show are pressed into a real war in space by aliens who think the TV show broadcasts they received were documentaries?" A good enough "what if?" will set your script apart from the pack. It is why people will leave the comfort of their homes and plunk down their hard-earned bucks at the local cineplex.
Hollywood buys genres. Agents, managers, and producers are drawn to and specialize in specific genres so approaching them with something they can recognize is a good idea. Successful stories have a fresh face but are identifiable. You know what makes your idea unique, but can you describe it quickly to others? Is it a fast-paced thriller, romantic comedy, action adventure?
Scripts have to look a certain way. I can't stress this point enough. You must present your work like an insider. The sheer volume of submissions makes it so that if ANYTHING about your script looks strange it's headed for the circular file. If you don't know the game they won't play. The scriptwriter has to adhere to conventions covering everything from how many pages to what font (Courier 12 pitch in the U.S.), and that's just the beginning. I recommend you follow those rules, unless you're independently wealthy and plan to finance, produce, and direct your movie. Even then, however, the people you'll need to work with will be accustomed to standard formats.


Screenplay - 22


Title Page of TV Movies

In the TV movie formats it is customary to place the title of the script, the show and its episode on the first page at the top.
Lettering can be either uppercase or mixed case.
Place the title(s) in quotation marks.
Center the text on the line.
Fade In: follows the act title.
The following is an example of a MOW title page:
                              "A Day In The Life"                                       
ACT ONE 
FADE IN:  INT. BABY NURSERY - MORNING 
 
Also, the end of each act is signaled with the FADE OUT: notation as well as the end of act notation.
FADE OUT. 
END OF ACT ONE  =======FORCED PAGE BREAK================== 
 
16                                      
ACT TWO  FADE IN: 
Software Tip:
When using script writing software you should always place a forced page break between acts. In other words, each act starts at the top of a new page.

Writing Tip:
Do not number the scenes. That's the job of the production office.

The Rules:
A MOW may also have a CAST LIST and on a separate page a SET LIST, much like in theatre scripts, but these forms change with the years. It's best to simply acquire a sample of a recently-aired MOW to learn the current convention.

The End

Well, that's as much as I've collected so far but I'll be adding more as I go. I hope this has been helpful and has assited you in finding the way to get to the next step in your screenwriting adventures.

Screenplay - 21


Other Script Formats

So far we've mostly discussed submission or spec screenplays. The same elements used in a screenplay are used in several other script formats. Only measurements and format vary here and there.
  • MOW - Movies of the Week
  • DTV - Direct TV Movie
  • Hour Episodic TV Show
These formats are almost identical as the format of the spec screenplay. However, these scripts are broken into ACTS that are delineated within the body of the script. An act covers that part of the story that takes place between the commercials. Hence, an ACT BREAK is a commercial break.
When a MOW Act begins, note it this way:
                                    ACT ONE 
When an Act ends, note it this way:
                                 END OF ACT ONE 
MOW or DTV scripts usually have 7 acts. When a MOW ends, note it this way:
                                    THE END 
A MOW will also have a (roughly) three- to eight-minute "teaser" that begins the story, noted this way:
                                     TEASER 
A Teaser is not usually noted with END OF TEASER. Rather, the scene simply ends and a new page begins where Act One starts. A one-hour episodic script will also have a Teaser, albeit a shorter one than a MOW.
A MOW will also have a similar (but shorter) "Tag" scene at the end that caps off the story and keeps your audience riveted by the television until after the next set of commercials. This is usually not delineated as such.
A one-hour episodic program usually has 4 acts.
Page numbering is continuous for both forms.

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Header

Another element of the production draft is the HEADER. A header occupies the same line as the page number, which is on the right and .5" from the top. Header information is printed on every script page. Information contained in the header includes the date of the revision and the color of the page. The header of the production draft of a script might look like this:
REVISED April 30, 2001 BLUE                                                   1. 
REVISED April 30, 2001 BLUE will print at the top of every single revised page, unless you tell your scriptwriting program to omit this information on the first page. On the first page of a production draft, however, you should include your header, if you have one. The page number will, of course, change.

Writing Tip:
Don't worry about what color of paper to use for subsequent changes to the same scene. If your still writing the revisions once the script is in production, they'll tell you what to use. This is determined by the production staff.

Do's and Don'ts

Do's

  • Do proofread your script. Spelling is very important. Don't trust your spell checking program, it may miss grammatical errors and won't have some terms in its built-in dictionary.
  • Do get someone else to proofread your script. A fresh pair of eyes will often catch something you continue to miss.
  • Do get the best photocopy you can. No one wants to read a dirty page.
  • Do use good quality brass brads to bind your script. Acco #5 brads are the best, because they are long enough to fit through the entire thickness of your script. Solid brass brads (as opposed to brass-plated brads) are preferable.
  • Do register your script with the Writers Guild of America but don't forget to copyright it as well. A WGA registration expires quickly, while a copyright is good for decades.
  • Do send a one-page (or less) cover letter with your script when you send it out. Make the letter short, concise and to the point. There are books and articles on the subject, but basically they simply want to know what the script is about and where to reach you.
  • Do follow the rules unless you KNOW a darn good reason not to.

Don'ts

  • Don't create a fancy Title page with giant fonts, colored letters, etc. A Title page has title and screenwriter's name(s) in the middle, and your contact information (address, phone number) at the lower right hand.
  • Don't put a quotation on the title page. Most likely, no one but you will care.
  • Don't put a date on your script, or the draft version.
  • Don't put blank pages in the script to set things apart.
  • Don't put a second page with the quotation that tells the theme of your screenplay.
  • Don't do a page of character descriptions and back story. That's a convention from the theater that is inapplicable in Hollywood. If your script doesn't tell that story, you're in trouble.
  • Don't include any illustrations, no matter how cute you think they are.
  • Don't put the script title on the first page of the script.
  • Don't use more than two brads, but use three-hole paper. Brads are used in top and bottom holes only.
  • Don't use colored paper or anything but 20 pound 3 hole punch paper.
  • Don't expect to have your script returned to you. Send it out, let it go. If a self-addressed, stamped envelope (SASE) is specified, include one. Then relax; a lot of people will have sent scripts to the same company.
  •  

Screenplay - 19


Locking Your Script Pages

Once the script is "published" and handed out to the department heads and talent in preparation for production, the pages must be LOCKED so that any changes made after this time are easily tracked.
If any changes are made to the script after circulation, only the REVISED PAGES will be printed and distributed. The REVISED PAGES must be easily incorporated into the script without displacing or rearranging the original pages.
All of our script writing software is designed to break revised pages according to the rules listed above, and they are capable of "locking the pages" before revisions are made. Once you lock a script, if you add more material to a page than will fit on that page, the program will generate what's called an "A" page and the subsequent writing will be a "B" page, i.e. Page 110A or Page 110B.

Locking Your Scenes

In a published script, scene numbers must also remain the same. In other words, if a scene in OMITTED, though the number is retired, it remains in the script with the word OMITTED next to it. Any new scene must have a letter next to the number to indicate that it was added after the original scenes were locked.
If you add a scene to the script, the program will automatically generate an "A" scene number. Revisions will be automatically generated by script formatting software programs and marked with an asterisk in the right margin.

  1     OMITTED 
1*    2     INT. MASTER SUITE - MORNING 
 
2  Expensive designer sheets and comforter covers the nude, shapely body of drop dead 
gorgeous JULIE COOPER, 25. Sunlight filters through portholes over the muscled, 
tan body of FRANKIE JONES, 38. He pulls the comforter down and begins kissing 
Julie's naked body. 
FRANKIE 
Hey, Baby, rise and shine. 
You've got to get up and outta 
here. 
 
JULIE 
(sleepily) 
What? What time is it? 
2A    INT. BATHROOM - DAY 
2A* 
 
The added INT. BATHROOM scene would show us what Julie is doing, while in the previously mentioned scene we only heard her O.S. as the camera remained on Frankie and the original room.

Screenplay - 18


Production Drafts

You've sold your script, and lo and behold, you're still the writer of the next phase! Time for Production drafts and revisions (a.k.a. Production Rewrite). All script formatting software available at The Writers Store are terrific at generating locked scripts (meaning the pages are finalized), A & B pages, numbered scenes and other specifics of the production draft.
One of the ways production drafts differ from spec scripts is NUMBERED SCENES. Your script-formatting program can do this automatically. It numbers the SCENE HEADINGS with numbers to the left and right of the scene heading. The purpose of scene numbers is to aid the work of the Assistant Director and Producer in their efforts of breaking down the scenes for scheduling, and budgeting the script for production.
 
REVISED April 30, 2001 BLUE 
1. 
FADE IN: 
1     EXT. KEY WEST MARINA - DAWN - ESTABLISHING 
   1  Sailboats, yachts, and cabin cruisers all bob up and down in the warm blue water. 
 
2     EXT. BEACH - DAY 
   2  as hundreds of young, perfect bodies of college age kids enjoy spring break. 

Top Continued and Bottom Continued

Software Tip:
Script formatting software can easily insert Top CONTINUED and Bottom CONTINUED into your script, IF YOU WANT THAT DONE. It depends on who you are submitting to and at what stage the project is in.

Writing Tip:
Top and Bottom CONTINUEDs were common practice in the past, a stodgy convention indicating that a scene continued beyond the page the reader just finished reading. Typically in spec scripts this is no longer done, and your benefit of that change are the extra four lines of text you have just gained to write a better script.

Screenplay - 17


Title Page

The TITLE PAGE has specific information on it. Type it in the same font as your script, Courier 12. It should not be on special paper, no graphics - it should just contain only the following information:
Centered on the page, vertically and horizontally - The title of your script in bold type if possible
Two lines below that, centered on the line - Written by
Two lines below that, centered on the line - Your Name (and co-writer, if any)
In the lower right hand corner your contact information (include agent or email address)
In the lower left-hand corner you can put Registered, WGA or a copyright notification.
The Good, The Bad, The Thin 
Written by 
Fatty Turner 
 
Copyright © 2001 by Fatty Turner 
Fatty Turner Registered, WGAw 
1234 Lake St. 
Anytown, CA 12345 
(310) 555-1212 
Writing Tip:
Authorities differ on whether or not you should note on your title page that you have registered your screenplay with the Writers Guild of America, west. Some people think it is the mark of an amateur, yet some producers insist upon it. Naturally, if you live east of the Mississippi River in the United States, you might have registered your script with the Writers Guild of America, east, and would thus note Registered, WGAe. One thing is certain, however. A U.S. copyright has much more legal standing that either registration. Note the copyright on the page. For more information about your legal protection in any creative work, see the U.S. Copyright Office Web page at http://www.copyright.gov/.

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Screenplay - 16


Titles or Opening Credits

In some scripts you read, you'll see this notation:
BEGIN TITLES or BEGIN OPENING TITLES followed by END TITLES or OVER OPENING CREDITS followed by END OPENING CREDITS. An example:
FADE IN: 
EXT. KEY WEST MARINA - DAWN - ESTABLISHING 
Sailboats, yachts, and cabin cruisers all bob up and down in the warm blue water. 
 
EXT. BEACH - DAY  BEGIN TITLES 
as hundreds of young, perfect bodies of college age kids frolic during spring break. 
 
Writing Tip:
Don't bother putting in Beginning and Ending titles. It is not usually done in a spec script, and you can't predict where the producer and director will want to insert the titles, the sequence of footage shot with the opening credits rolling over it. Don't give yourself the extra work.

Superimpose or Title

When the notation SUPERIMPOSE or TITLE OVER is used, text or an image is placed on top of the film footage. Most of the time, it contains information the director thinks the audience needs to know... like the place or time of the next scene.
EXT. BEACH - DAY 
Hundreds of young, perfect bodies of college age kids frolic on the sand and in the 
warm water. 
SUPERIMPOSE: Daytona Beach, Spring Break, 1966 
 
Only the text, "Daytona Beach, Spring Break, 1966" would appear toward the bottom of the screen.
Any text, like subtitles or translations of foreign signs, etc., fall into this category.
Do not use SUPERIMPOSE: unless there is a definite need for it. It has been so overused, it is some times spoofed, the way director Ron Howard did in Splash.

Screenplay - 15


Intercuts

Occasionally in a script, you might want to cut back and forth between two or more scenes. These scenes are occurring at the same time. Instead of repeating the Scene Heading for each scene over and over, an INTERCUT is used. This gives the reader the sense that the scene is moving rapidly back and forth between locations. There is a great sequence of intercuts in The Deer Hunter of shots of hunters out in the woods with a wedding going on simultaneously, at a different location. Here's another example:

INT. SHERRI'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 
Sherri starts disrobing in front of her open bedroom window. 
 
INT. LENNY'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 
Lenny gets up to cross to the fridge to get a beer. He looks out his window and catches a
 glimpse of Sherri across the courtyard. He freezes, watching her. 
 
INTERCUT BETWEEN LENNY AND SHERRI 
Sherri sits on the bed and unbuttons her double-breasted suit jacket.  Lenny moves
closer to the window for a better vantage point.  Sherri stands, hopping a few feet, 
trying to step out of her skirt.  Lenny, eyes glued to Sherri, moves to keep her in view. 
He slams his bare foot into a dumbbell on the floor. 
 
LENNY 
Ow! 
 
Sherri hears the yelp and looks in Lenny's direction.  Lenny sees Sherri and DROPS
from her view. 
 
Another type of INTERCUT is used when two characters are on the phone and you don't want one half of the conversation to be O.S. - you want to show them both.

INT. LIVING ROOM - NIGHT 
Sherri, comfy on the couch, is reading a book when the phone rings. She answers it.
 
SHERRI 
Hello? 
 
EXT. PHONE BOOTH - REST AREA 
Lenny sips a Coke as he talks. 
LENNY 
Hey Honey, I'm in Barstow.
 
INTERCUT BETWEEN LENNY and SHERRI 
 
SHERRI 
Oh, Honey, that's great... 
you'll be here by morning. 
 
LENNY 
Yep... I've got the pedal to the 
metal. 
 
In older films it was common to use a split-screen to show such a conversation. It's not common these days, and unless you have a very good reason for writing it in, it is best to INTERCUT.

Screenplay - 14


A Series of Shots

A SERIES OF SHOTS is similar to a Montage, but it usually takes place in one location and concerns the same action. Think of the movie Earthquake...
SERIES OF SHOTS 
A) Store windows start to rattle and shake. 
B) Hanging signs swing back and forth. 
C) Bricks and shards of glass begin to fall onto the sidewalks. 
D) People run for cover. 
 
A SERIES OF SHOTS is formatted as a SHOT. Just like a Montage, the shot series are action paragraphs and may also be numbered 1) 2) 3).
A MATTER OF STYLE
Some writers will incorporate a series of shots into a script without noting it as such. This generally contributes to a smoother flow of the action. The action lines might be short, descriptive sentences on separate lines.
The Piazza de Palma is packed with Saturday shoppers. 
A LOUD SHOT rings out.  Pigeons take flight, WINGS FLUTTERING EN MASSE. 
Heads turn in the direction of ANOTHER GUNSHOT. 
A frightened child drops his ice cream cone and CRIES.  A woman SCREAMS. 
Another style for writing the sequence above is:
THE PIAZZA DE PALMA  is teaming with Saturday shoppers. 
A LOUD SHOT  rings out. Pigeons take flight. 
Heads turn in the direction of ANOTHER GUNSHOT. 
A FRIGHTENED CHILD  drops his ice cream cone and CRIES. 
A SCREAM is heard. 
Writing Tip:
This particular style of writing takes more space on the page, but it also is a faster read. Why? Look at all the white space in the second example... the reader's eyes can read that passage very quickly.

Another style of writing has to do with EMPHASIS in the action element. Too often, readers will skim a script, particularly if the action paragraphs are overly long. Here's an option of how to get the necessary points across. Italics, bold or underlining are not used for emphasis.
Terry DROPS to the floor as a BEAM OF LIGHT sweeps across the room. He hears the FLOOR SQUEAK in the outer office. Terry HOLDS HIS BREATH as a big, bulky SECURITY GUARD enters. 

Short Lines/Poetry/Lyrics

Once in a while, it's necessary to write dialogue with a series of SHORT LINES. One example might be if your character is reciting poetry, or singing a song.
 JULIE 
Roses are red, 
Violets are blue, 
I'm writing a script, 
How 'bout you? 
 
Song lyrics are typically written in all caps.
 
 JULIE 
(singing) 
 ROW, ROW, ROW YOUR BOAT 
GENTLY DOWN THE STREAM 
MERRILY, MERRILY, MERRILY, MERRILY 
 LIFE IS BUT A DREAM.
 

Screenplay - 13


Abbreviations

The film industry uses several abbreviations as shortcuts in scripts. It's up to you whether you use these abbreviations or not. Some readers find them distracting, while others prefer the shorthand. We've already discussed several -- O.S., O.C., V.O. -- which are specific to scripts. Here are some others.
b.g. = background
b.g. is used in an action paragraph.
Frankie sits on the bed tying his shoes. In the b.g., Julie takes money out of his wallet. She also pockets his car keys. 
CGI = computer generated image
CGI denotes action that cannot be filmed normally and will require the use of computers to generate the full imagery, as used in films like The Matrix.
CGI: His mouth begins to melt, then disappears entirely. 
f.g. = foreground
f.g. is used in action the same as b.g., except the action takes place in the foreground.
SFX = sound effects
SFX tells the sound people an effect is needed.
SFX: The BLAST of a train whistle 
SPFX = special effects
SPFX announces that a special effect is necessary (one that might not require the use of CGI).
SPFX: A beam of light illuminates Frankie's face. His features slowly melt like a wax figure. 
M.O.S. = without sound
The story goes that a German-born director (perhaps Josef von Sternberg, who discovered Marlene Dietrich) wanted to shoot a scene without sound and told the crew to shoot "mit out sound," a phrase which the crew found humorous and thus proliferated it. It is most commonly used to show impending impact of some kind.
M.O.S. Horses stampeding down Main Street. 
POV = point of view
The camera 'sees' the action from a specific character's position
JULIE'S POV - Frankie sits on the bed tying his shoes. 

Montages

A MONTAGE is a cinematic device used to show a series of scenes, all related and building to some conclusion. Although a French word, it was created by Russian director Sergei Eisenstein as a "montage of attractions" to elicit emotions on several levels. Most often it is used as a passage of time device. Think of a baby being born, then rolling over, then taking its first steps, and finally running through the sprinklers. For example:
MONTAGE  1) Josh is born. The doctors clean him and hand him over to his smiling mother.  2) Josh rolls over in his playpen. His mother applauds.  3) Holding on to the coffee table, Josh takes his first steps. His mother joyously hugs him.  4) Clad in droopy diapers, Josh runs gleefully through the sprinklers. His mother sighs, and reaches for the diaper bag. 
You can also number the scenes A), B), C) if you prefer. Either numbering format is correct. (Note that the mother's emotions change through the montage from joy to weariness, once Josh is completely ambulant there should be some element of the story that a montage will illustrate.)
The MONTAGE is formatted as a single shot, with the subsequent scenes action elements of the complete sequence. It isn't necessary, but some writers write END OF MONTAGE when the montage is completed.

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Page Breaking

Software Tip:
If you still need convincing that script writing software is a useful tool for a screenwriter, page breaking will clinch it for you: If you've followed the program's simple directions while writing your script, then all of the following rules will automatically, dare we say magically?, self-execute right in front of your eyes, while you are writing. The software will
  • Never end a page with a Scene Heading. The ONLY time this is acceptable is if another Scene Heading or Shot follows. (An example would be an Establishing shot and then an interior scene heading.)
  • Never start a page with a Transition.
  • Automatically place Continued: notations when it breaks an Action paragraph or a Dialogue.
  • Never end a page with a Character Name line. At least two lines of Dialogue if there are that many (including a Parenthetical, if used) must follow.
  • Never end a page at a Parenthetical. Dialogue MUST follow.
  • If you have Dialogue, a Parenthetical and then Dialogue again, break the page BEFORE the Parenthetical.

Finer Points

Now you are familiar with the basic elements and directions for writing a spec script. With these elements, or simply using a script formatting software, you will write a standardly acceptable script. It will look professional, and the reader will not automatically assume you are an amateur storyteller because you don't know basic screenwriting rules. Now there are a few finer points we should discuss.

Dual Dialogue or Side-By-Side Dialogue

When two of your characters speak simultaneously, that's called dual dialogue or side by side dialogue. In the script we've been following, our characters might have this conversation:
Frankie and Julie are in a heated argument. 
 
FRANKIE 
Get out of my life! I can't
stand the sight of you any  
more!! 
  
JULIE 
Don't you yell at me! I'll leave 
when I'm when I'm good and 
ready! Tough!! 
 
Software Tip:
All of the script writing programs let you write this style of dialogue with ease, but you should probably avoid this device unless absolutely necessary.
Writing Tip:
Amateur screenwriters often do it in emulation of some old favorite scene, or to try to interject "conflict." However, you are more likely to distract the reader and disrupts the flow of the story. Don't give them a reason to put your script down by interjecting unclear scenes and dialogue.

Adlibs

Sometimes in a script it's acceptable or even necessary to have a crowd scene with ad lib dialogue. There are two basic ways of writing this.
The first way to do it is in an action line.
The CROWD in the bleachers taunts the pitcher: "You stink!" "Rubber arm!" "Ball!" 
"You throw like my sister!" 
The second choice is to do it is as a character and dialogue.
CROWD 
You stink! Rubber arm! Ball! You 
throw like my sister!!
 

Screenplay - 11


Shots

The Rules:
Shots are formatted like Scene Headings, flush left margin, all uppercase. Blank line before and after.
A SHOT tells the reader the focal point within a scene has changed. Here are some examples of shots:
  • ANGLE ON --
  • EXTREME CLOSE UP --
  • PAN TO --
  • FRANKIE'S POV --
  • REVERSE ANGLE --
Writing Tip:
As the writer, for reasons already mentioned you should be very judicious using a SHOT to redirect the reader's focus. Your "directing" runs the risk of interrupting the flow of your storytelling. If what you really want to do is direct films, do yourself a favor and DON'T do it in a script you're trying to sell... wait until it sells and try to negotiate a package deal with you on board as the director. This most often is a possibility after you've already had one of your screenplays filmed.
Once in a while, calling a shot is necessary. You want the reader to see something not obvious in the scene or you want to achieve a particular emotion or build to a climax. This device allows you to achieve this goal.
If you are describing a prison riot, with a prisoner holding a guard at knifepoint, and you want the audience to see a sharpshooter aiming at the prisoner, you might use a shot like this:
A PRISONER shoves a homemade shiv against the throat of a PRISON GUARD.                                          PRISONER                                 (trembling)                         I'll kill him! I mean it.                                          PRISON GUARD                         Take him out! Now! Do it!  ANGLE ON - A PRISON GUARD SHARP-SHOOTER  as he lines up the shot, finger poised on the trigger.                                          PRISONER                         I want to talk to the Warden. NOW! 
Another shot used from time to time is INSERT. INSERT is used solely as a direction - to focus on something integral to the scene, often something that the audience needs to read or what would otherwise be too small to be clearly seen in a full, wide scene.
INSERT - RANSOM NOTE 
Writing Tip:
A well-constructed action paragraph or a single line might achieve the same goal without distracting the reader. Be vigilant of the flow of the story, and try not to interrupt it.

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Transition

We must begin with this remark: Nowadays, in Spec Scripts, transitions are frowned upon, a waste of a couple of lines you could better use for brilliant dialogue, and are only used when absolutely necessary.
The Rules:
When you DO use a Transition, the left margin is at 6.5" and a right margin of 1.0". Transitions are formatted in all caps and almost always follow an Action and precede Scene Headings.
Transitions you may be familiar with are:
  • CUT TO:
  • DISSOLVE TO:
  • SMASH CUT:
  • QUICK CUT:
  • FADE TO:
  • FADE OUT (never at the end of the script)
Writing Tip:
The only time to use a Transition in a spec script is if it's integral to telling the story. For instance, you might use a TIME CUT: to indicate passage of time. More commonly, a DISSOLVE TO: indicates that time has passed. Or, you might need to use MATCH CUT: if you want to illustrate that there is some correlation between something we just saw and something in the new scene. The point is, unless you become quite skilled in screenwriting don't use these things unless absolutely necessary, because the director of the film will probably think of something different.
Software Tip:
Most Transitions are already programmed into script writing programs, capitalized and lined up for those rare occasions when you can't resist to use one.
Frankie pulls on a pair of shorts, slips into some running shoes and exits.                                                                  CUT TO: 
(Remember, the Cut To: will probably be left out in most spec scripts these days. What it indicates is a complete change of location.)

Screenplay - 9


Extension

  • O.S. - Off-Screen
  • V.O. - Voice Over
An Extension is a technical note placed directly to the right of the Character name that denotes HOW the character's voice will be heard by the audience. An Off-Screen voice can be heard from a character out of the camera range, or from another room altogether.
Frankie pulls all the covers off of Julie. She sits up in bed, pulls on a long T-shirt, then swings her legs onto the floor and shuffles off to the bathroom.  
FRANKIE                                 

(continuing)                         

You're welcome.                                
(beat)                         
Hey, how long you gonna be? I've                        
got a meeting and I need to                         
shower.                                          
JULIE (O.S.)                         

Twenty minutes.
Some writers use O.C. (off camera) in place of O.S. The "beat" used above simply denotes that Frankie pauses (perhaps formulating his next thought) before uttering his next bit of dialogue.
Another common extension is V.O. That stands for Voice Over. Think of a V.O. as a narration, or a character speaking while s/he isn't in the scene. Or s/he can be in the scene, but also acting as narrator, reflecting on and describing some time gone by. This dialogue is recorded and then laid in over the scene in editing.
FRANKIE (V.O.)

I knew I wasn't gonna get in                         

that shower for at least 45                         
minutes, so I went for a run.
Our character Frankie is reminiscing about the morning on the boat in a Voice Over.


Screenplay - 8


Parenthetical

Parentheticals are left indented at 3.0" and the right margin is 3.5" although that is a bit flexible. As seen in our examples, a Parenthetical remark is NOT centered under the character name.
A Parenthetical remark can be an attitude, verbal direction or action direction for the actor who is speaking the part. Parentheticals should be short, to the point, descriptive, and only used when absolutely necessary.
These days, Parentheticals are generally disfavored, because they give direction to an actor that may not be appropriate once on the set. The slang term for them is "wrylies" as in:
FRANKIE
(wryly) 
Good mornin', Bluebird. 

JULIE                         
(sleepily)  
What? What time is it?
                                        
FRANKIE                                 
(getting out of bed)                         
After six. You're gonna be late                         
again and I don't want to hear
it.
Parentheticals are also used in some scripts as the (continuing) notation. If a character is speaking followed by an action line and then the same character continues speaking, this notation can be used, but the New Spec Script frowns on all such superfluously inserted notations.
FRANKIE

                (getting out of bed)                         

                After six. You're gonna be late                         
               again and I don't want to hear                         
it.  
Frankie pulls all the covers off of Julie. She sits up in bed, pulls on a long T-shirt, and shufles to the bathroom.  
                FRANKIE                                 
       (continuing)                         
                                    You're welcome.
Software Tip:
Script writing programs may give you the option of placing the (continuing) as a parenthetical remark or on the same line as the Character name, looking much like an Extension.
FRANKIE

(getting out of bed)                         

After six. You're gonna be late                         
again and I don't want to hear                         
it.  
Frankie pulls all the covers off of Julie. She sits up in bed, pulls on a long T-shirt, then swings her legs onto the floor and shuffles off to the bathroom.  
FRANKIE (CONT'D)                         

You're welcome.
Software Tip:

The (CONT'D) is entered automatically by the script writing software if that option is chosen.

It indicates that the character continues speaking throughout the action.

Screenplay - 7


Dialogue

The Rules:
DIALOGUE margin is indented 2.5" from the left margin. A line of dialogue can be from 30 spaces to 35 spaces long, so the right margin is a bit more flexible, usually 2.0" to 2.5".
DIALOGUE rules apply when anyone on screen speaks. During a conversation between characters. When a character talks out loud to himself... even be when a character is off-screen and only a voice is heard.


Writing Tip:
Great dialogue is a window into the soul of your character. It sounds real... It's conversational. The audience feels like a fly on the wall, hearing natural interplay between characters. Great dialogue may use common language but express great passion, and even become a catch phrase in popular culture, as the line from Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry Callahan "Go ahead. Make my day."

It's not a bad idea to read your dialogue aloud to see how it really sounds. If you have a difficult time reading a line, it may not be good dialogue. You'll definitely be able to tell if you organize a reading of your script and hear it that way (best with professional actors, like they do in Hollywood and on Broadway).

Software Tip:
Script writing software now has the capacity to read your dialogue back to you via your computer's sound system. You assign a gender to your character name, even different inflections, and you can have a staged reading of your script right there in your living room.
FADE IN: EXT. KEY WEST MARINA - DAWN - ESTABLISHING Sailboats, yachts, and cabin cruisers all bob up and down in the warm blue water.  
INT. MASTER SUITE - MORNINGExpensive designer sheets and comforter covers the nude, shapely body of drop dead gorgeous JULIE COOPER, 25. Sunlight filters through portholes over the muscled, tan body of FRANKIE CAMPISI, 38. He pulls the comforter down and begins kissing Julie's naked body. 
FRANKIE
Rise and shine, Bluebird. Time
to spread your wings and fly.

Screenplay - 6


Character Name

The Rules:
The CHARACTER NAME is formatted in uppercase letters and indented 3.5" from the left margin.
Before a character can speak, the writer inserts a CHARACTER NAME to let the reader know this character's dialogue follows.
A character name can be an actual name (JOHN) or description (FAT MAN) or an occupation (DOCTOR). Sometimes, you might have COP #1 and then COP #2 speaking. It is okay to identify the speaking parts like this, but actors will like you more if you personalize their part with a name. Try to be consistent.


Software Tip:
When you use script writing software the use of long, difficult to type character names is a breeze. The programs automatically learn and keep track of the CHARACTER NAMES you use, allowing for consistency and ease. No need fear those JACQUELINEs and DR. FRANKENSTEINs; two quick keystrokes are all you will need to make them appear on the screen.

Script writing software will also insert the correct spacing from the previous paragraph style, saving you thousands of keystrokes during the writing process.

FADE IN: EXT. KEY WEST MARINA - DAWN - ESTABLISHING Sailboats, yachts, and cabin cruisers all bob up and down in the warm blue water.  
INT. MASTER SUITE - MORNING  Expensive designer sheets and comforter covers the nude, shapely body of drop dead gorgeous JULIE COOPER, 25. Sunlight filters through portholes over the muscled, tan body of FRANKIE CAMPISI, 38. He pulls the comforter down and begins kissing Julie's naked body.                                             FRANKIE

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