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View Full Version : New Format? :-/


Ron Maiden
11-16-2010, 11:46 AM
Got a mail from MovieBytes and there's a bit from PAGE in it trying to pimp a book, telling me it's a godsend because there's a new format in Holywood etc etc :
"Did you know there's a brand new formatting style being used here in Hollywood? We're going to send you a sample of how it looks. Many professional screenwriters are now formatting their scripts this way. Agents encourage it and producers love it, and you're not going to read about it in any other screenwriting book - it's that new! But if you format your script the way the pros do, Hollywood execs will automatically assume you're "in the know." "

is there? or are they just blowing smoke to get some money?

Deepspirit
11-16-2010, 11:54 AM
I got this mail as well. I hope someone here can tell us what this new format is.

rainsmom
11-16-2010, 11:03 PM
That sounds like a HUGE scam to me. Hollywood moves at the speed of cold molasses. Screenplays from the 30s look pretty much just like the ones today. They have no REASON to change formats. Why change what isn't broken?

.

WriteKnight
11-17-2010, 12:09 AM
Nobody mentioned it at the Austin Film Festival last month. Plenty of screenwriters, producers, managers, agents and directors on hand in panel discussions and such. No one mentioned 'new format' - everyone talked about 'industry standard' formatting - and using the scriptwriting programs like Final Draft, Movie Magic and such.

Having said that, there are stylistic variations that come into vogue - like dropping 'cut to' or the use of other terms. But a whole new format? I doubt it.

nmstevens
11-17-2010, 03:55 AM
Got a mail from MovieBytes and there's a bit from PAGE in it trying to pimp a book, telling me it's a godsend because there's a new format in Holywood etc etc :
"Did you know there's a brand new formatting style being used here in Hollywood? We're going to send you a sample of how it looks. Many professional screenwriters are now formatting their scripts this way. Agents encourage it and producers love it, and you're not going to read about it in any other screenwriting book - it's that new! But if you format your script the way the pros do, Hollywood execs will automatically assume you're "in the know." "

is there? or are they just blowing smoke to get some money?

This sounds extraordinarily unlikely to me. The so-called "standard" format doesn't exist just for kicks. Its primary function is as a *production tool* -- so that when the time comes and they do a script breakdown into X number of pages and half pages and quarter pages and schedule "3 1/2" pages to be shot on the morning of X day -- that those 3 1/2 pages are really 3 1/2 pages and not 3 pages or 4 1/2 pages because somebody has screwed around with the font or the margins or something else.

Because when you move from pages to production, a page turns into rental hours, day out of days and dollars.

Now, when you get into complex action sequences, of course things are going to be different and that's why, when you have sequences like that, they don't literally go by the script -- those things are storyboarded, broken out into shots, etc. -- there's a whole intermediate process for action scenes and effects scenes.

But for regular sorts of sequences -- just people walking and talking and doing regular things in rooms and in streets, where things aren't blowing up and people aren't having squibs wired to them -- there's an expectation that a page is a page is a page.

And the last thing a production wants to have to deal with is to discover that they're running over-budget or behind schedule because some sort of weird-ass formatting has jammed more lines or words or action into a script per page than is usually found in standard format.

NMS

CaoPaux
11-17-2010, 05:18 AM
From what the folks over at Done Deal are saying, the "new format" is that it's now okay to bold/italicize sluglines. http://messageboard.donedealpro.com/boards/showthread.php?t=58346 Opinions vary as to the worth of the rest of the book. :cool:

mario_c
11-17-2010, 08:11 AM
If it smells like baloney, and slices thin like baloney, it's baloney. If someone is selling you, another unwashed slob with celtx and one script, an exclusive INSIDE TRACK to fame and groupies in Hollywood, for a few hours worth of your salary...come on. Use your judgement, you'll need it when you meet a real producer. Or if.

Ron Maiden
11-17-2010, 12:31 PM
i pretty much knew the answer ~ as soon as you get stuff like that which then goes on to say you need to buy something, you know what the score is. the thing that gave me doubt was that i thought PAGE were pretty legit and above this kinda behaviour.

cheers all.