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Answering basic questions about screenwriting.

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How many pages should each act of a screenplay be?

Tagged: film, formatting, guru, length, presentation, screenplay, screenwriting, script, scriptwriting, structure, terms

Unlike plays and television scripts, which explicitly indicate their act breaks, most feature screenplays don’t print act breaks anywhere in the script. But in everyday discussion, screenwriters generally talk about movies having three acts. SCREENWRITER Crap. I’m at page 38 but I’m nowhere near the end of the first act. or SCREENWRITER Boom! Page 90, […]

What does an outline look like?

Tagged: film, formatting, length, outlines, presentation, screenplay, screenwriting, script, scriptwriting, structure, terms

Unlike screenplay formatting, there is no official standard. Generally, an outline provides a breakdown of how a story will play out. Outlines can take different forms based on many different factors including purpose, level of detail, method of creation, and writer preference. Some are incredibly detailed, listing every beat. Others give only very broad strokes. […]

What is scale?

Tagged: arbitration, business, credits, film, guild, screenplay, screenwriting, script, scriptwriting, terms, union, WGA

“Scale” is the minimum a WGA signatory can pay a screenwriter — whether it’s purchasing a spec script or hiring a writer to work on a script. Each type of job (e.g original screenplay, outline, rewrite) has a set price. These rates are the subject of WGA negotiations, and change every year. In features, rates […]

How much does a screenwriter make?

Tagged: arbitration, business, credits, film, guild, managers, screenplay, screenwriting, script, scriptwriting, terms, union, WGA

Screenwriters’ incomes can vary wildly. Every year, the WGA sets a minimum their signatories can pay a screenwriter for a project. This is known as “scale.” The current schedule of minimums can be found at the WGA’s site. A screenwriter working for a WGA signatory can be paid anywhere between scale and — well — […]

What is Save the Cat?

Tagged: film, formatting, guru, screenplay, screenwriting, script, scriptwriting, structure, terms

Save the Cat! is a popular screenwriting book (and book series) by Blake Snyder, which breaks down screenplays into 15 beats (and further into 40) that all screenplays should contain. The title comes from the idea that a film’s hero should do something nice the first time we meet him — ie save a cat […]

What is the difference between .fdx and .fdr?

Tagged: FDR, FDX, film, Final Draft, formatting, iPad, iPhone, screenplay, screenwriting, script, scriptwriting, software, terms

Both .fdr and .fdx files are types of Final Draft documents. Files with the .fdx extension come from Final Draft 8, while .fdr documents are from earlier versions of Final Draft. Final Draft 8 can open and save .fdr files, but older versions of Final Draft cannot open .fdx files. The .fdx format is based […]

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