| Script Frenzy 2010 |
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| Written by D. Eric Franks | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tuesday, 16 March 2010 12:40 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
If, like OUR HERO, you have a movie in your head and you need to get it out, there’s no time like April 2010. April has 30 days, a screenplay might have 100 pages and Script Frenzy has the motivational tools, virtual workshops, events and community to help you knock out three or four pages a day until it is done. Script Frenzy in April is the bastard child of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) in November and is an extremely fun “contest” and challenge to write a movie in a month. What can you win? Well, you’ll get a warm fuzzy feeling, a sense of accomplishment, you'll be able to authentically introduce yourself to hotties at you local indie coffeehouse with the words “I’m a screenwriter” and, of course, you’ll have a 100-page draft of your movie. That’s a pretty extraordinary prize, in my opinion.
Script writing involves a lot of formal formatting and technical mumbo jumbo a real scriptwriter needs to know to really finish a script, but there are some great, free tools you can use to help you out. I use Celtx – poorly – but it helps my motivation to use a real screenplay tool. For the Script Frenzy contest, however, I'd just forget about all that and write your story and get into a daily writing discipline. So go sign up, friend the soon-to-be-famous future screenwriter “def” (that’d be me) and we’ll see what we can come up with, starting at 12:01 on April Fool’s Day. I’m thinking of writing a rom-com set in a submarine in a near-future post-apocalyptic American lake… References:
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