TWO
BRADS OR THREE?
or:
Adventures in Judging
Screenplay Entries in a Film Festival
21 Ways to Better Your Chances of Winning,
When Entering Screenplay Competitions
by:
ELIZABETH ENGLISH
Founder & Executive Director
Moondance International Film Festival
Suggestion
#1:
Please send your submissions in early! Don't wait until the final
deadline date! Your submission can be buried under a pile of
hundreds or thousands at the bigger festivals and
competitions. The readings could be hurried. Maybe the
reader saw one sent in earlier and has decided that's his
or her favorite.
Suggestion #2:
Two words: Two brads. Brass brads, SOLID brass brads #6,
not those short, wimpy brass-plate brads that let the script
fall apart by page 60. Acco has them at Office Max & Office
Depot by special order. Try to find or special-order those
little brass washers (to fit the #6 brads), too. They seriously
hold the script together, even to the last page. Readers curl
the script pages behind what they've read; they leave them
overnight, half-read, to read next day. Your script is roughly
handled, by three or four people. Make sure it stays together
through all of that!
Suggestion #3:
Covers: please use plain cover-stock or card-stock. Print only
the script title & author name on the front. Any color is OK,
but white, grey or tan are preferred & more professional-
looking. Do not bind your script in a highschool plastic binder
or one with metal bars inside. Nothing else is acceptable but
front and back card-stock covers.
Suggestion #4:
Title Page: Please have the first page of your submission be
the title page. Print the title, author's name, info on copyright
or WGA-registration, and the author's contact info: mailing
address, phone number & e-mail address.
If you change your address, phone number or e-mail address,
please let the festival know this right away, so they can
contact you if you win! Send e-mail addresses for co-authors
to be notified of script’s status in contest.
Suggestion #5:
Do not write the title or your name on the binding side of the
script. That makes the script look old & shopped-around. The
festival readers or registration people will do that when they
receive the entry.
Suggestion #6:
A printed-out copy of the script from your computer looks a
lot better than a copy-shop's or a Xeroxed, faded copy. Make
sure it's nice and clear and clean, with black ink. It's actually
cheaper to print out a computer copy than it is to take it
somewhere to be printed, in most cases.
Suggestion #7:
Use COURIER 12 point font. Nothing else will do.
Suggestion #8:
Do not try to cheat by doing a "loose" script to make your
script look like 120 pages. Do not do a "tight" script, to try
to make a too-long script look like 120 pages. If you have a
90-page script, that's fine. If you have a 150-page script,
you need to do some editing.Check every page of your
submission, to make sure it's printed clearly and that the
pages are in order and none are missing.
Suggestion #9:
Have someone who is an English-major read your script for
typos, incorrect grammar (except in the dialog, if that's what
you intend anyway), punctuation, spelling, syntax & other
errors. You could offer to pay him or her a dollar for each
error found (with which you agree). This will make you really
edit in advance, like crazy, to save yourself the expense!
Don't ever rely only on your spell-check program. Print out
the script and read it in hard-copy, and edit as you read. Use
a red pen, so you can easily find the edits when you do the
re-write. Spend the time to correct the errors. Nothing makes
an author look more lazy and unprofessional as lots of
un-edited errors in your submission.
Suggestion #10:
Format: use the standard script format found in books on the
subject and in computer screenwriting programs. Don't
customize it. Use correct, standard spacing between
elements and in all four of the margins.
Suggestion #11:
I would love to see the second page of your submission be
the logline and mini-synopsis! Film festivals and prodco readers
don't usually ask for this, or require it, but it would make
reading the screenplay a lot easier and more enjoyable. Plus,
if your logline is great, it induces the reader to put your
screenplay submission at the TOP of his or her pile of must-
read-now.
Suggestion # 12:
Give your submission a GREAT title! I got a script submission
last year, entitled "THE TENT". I didn't want to read it. I didn't
want to go to my entry-form files & read her logline and
synopsis, based on that title. It went to the bottom of the pile
to be read when I absolutely HAD to. Well, guess what? When
I finally read the script, it was very good, and made the
Moondance 2001 semi-finalist list! I asked the author if she’d
consider changing the title. She couldn’t think of one, until I
reminded her that she had the title within the screenplay
dialog: DANCE WITH ME, ALASKA. Even her agent loved the
new title!
Suggestion #13:
Don't send in long resumés and lists of credits or info about
your other festival wins with your entry forms and submission.
It won't help you win. It won't (or shouldn't) influence the
readers and judges, because each festival has a different
criteria. (Film entrants should feel free, however, to do this)
Suggestion #14:
Entry fees: Attach the check or money-order with a paper-clip
(don't staple it in) to the front of the entry form. If it's a US
festival or competition, make sure the funds are in US dollars.
Don't just toss the entry fee into the bottom of the envelope.
When sending a money-order, write your name on it, so we
know who it's from. When sending a check from someone else,
write your name on it, for the same reason.
Suggestion #15:
Mailing: use the simplest packaging form possible, one that's
easy and quick to open. Don't tape it together as if the
contents were made of gold. Avoid the use of those
envelopes that are full of grey fluffy stuff that gets all over
desks and clothes and the floor when the reader has finally
managed to slice it open. That grey stuff damages videos,
too. A script generally does not need padded envelopes.
Suggestion #16:
Postage: use enough postage to cover the cost of mailing.
Most festivals and competitions will not pay the postage due,
and your entry will probably be returned to you, un-opened.
Suggestion #17:
Entry forms and release forms: Please fill them out CLEARLY in
black ink. Sign them. Print them, rather than using fancy
cursive writing in purple or pink ink. Make sure your e-mail
address is clear. If you have a mix of zeros (0) and the letter
O, make sure they can be read for what they are. Same with
the letter I & 1, or L & lower-case l. They all look the same
sometimes, so be clear, if you ever want to hear from the
festival again. MAGOO0011Ill@aol.com is hard to figure out.
Suggestion #18:
Remember to enclose the entry form, release form and entry
fee with your script in the same envelope.
Suggestion #19:
If you want a confirmation that your submission was received,
please send (with your submission package) an attached post
card with US postage (if entering a US competition). Write on
the postcard: your name and address in the mail-to area, and
on the back or in the message area, write: (name of festival)
has received the screenplay (title of your entry) on this
date_________.
Suggestion #20:
Do not send an SASE (self-addressed, stamped envelope)
with your submission if the festival or competition announces
that they will not return any entries or submissions. You'll be
wasting the postage.
Suggestion #21:
Make sure your entire submission package is reader-friendly!
Every one of the above 21 suggestions are based on
personal experience of mistakes former entrants made when
submitting materials to Moondance or to other festivals and
competitions.
As for the content of your screenplay; structure counts,
usually. Have a clear Act I, II, and III. Try to hook the reader
on the first page! Make the first five (or ten pages at most)
be Act I, wherein you introduce all the main characters and
show the reader the who, what, where, when and why of your
story. Notice that I said SHOW. Telling is not so good. Film is a
visual medium and you should actually be writing a FILM, not a
script.
Act II is the rest of the story, where you build on what you
started, and it climaxes at the clear end of Act II. Act III
should be five or ten (max) pages, where all loose ends are
tied up and all conflicts are resolved.
Make sure you've defined your characters and have given
them unique qualitites special to them, so they are
recognizable as individual people and have depth. Same with
the dialog. Don't have every character speak the same. Or as
you speak. Let the environment and ambience of the settings
be shown. Mention weather and seasons and time of day or
night. Make sure your characters visibly REACT to each other,
and to dialog spoken to them.
Have conflict, whether personal, local, national, or world-side...
or even universal. Then resolve that conflict at the end.
Avoid too many clichés in characterizations, dialog, actions
and reactions. Do something new and interesting. Avoid like
the plague having your actors speak long lines of exposition!
Actors and directors and the audience hate to hear a
character verbally explaining what he or she is thinking,
planning, worrying about, or is going to do, or did in the past.
Action! Show it, don't tell it!
Every word of dialog and every word of action and exposition
in your screenplay must move the story forward toward its
conclusion. Every scene must move the story forward. The
screenplay should read like a good novel, and the reader
should not want to put it down until the end.
Remember transitions. Each scene should flow into the next,
logically, or be hinted at in a previous scene. Don't make the
reader wonder where we are in this scene. Lead them into it.
If your two characters will be going out for pizza in the next
scene, or are going to rob a bank, hint at that in the previous
scene(s). Set it up for the pay-off. You can have many set-
ups and pay-offs, all moving the story forward and building
toward the ending pay-off, which resolves the conflict.
Write your dialog and scenes for specific actors you may have
in mind, and imagine them reading your script to see if they'd
like to play the parts. Give the stars and lead characters the
best lines and the best action. Try to write memorable dialog& /or memorable action. The actors and the directors love it
and this stuff sticks in the audiences' minds. Remember,
somebody has to spend millions of dollars on your idea, if they
like it. It has to make them a profit. Most studios and
production companies are not only in the business of making
movies; they're also in the business of making MONEY.
Don't write a director's script. Don't have scene numbers on
the sluglines. Don't use cut-to or dissolve-to any more than
you absolutely have to. No camera angles, unless it's vital. Try
to keep the number of sluglines to 85-100 max. Each scene
change costs production money.
And finally: The more professional and reader-friendly your
entire submission package is, the better your chances are of
winning a competition and of selling that screenplay.
Remember, when entering a competition, if your script wins
or is a finalist, or even a semi-finalist, producers and agents
will ask you for it, and the festival will want to be proud to
have selected your screenplay!