- Platform: Windows NT / 98 / 2000 / Me / XP / 95, Mac OS X
- Media: CD-ROM
- Item Quantity: 1
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Movie Magic Screenwriter
What Does a Script Formatter Do?
Writing scripts for film, television, and theater has traditionally been a time-consuming task. There are many elements in a script that must be correctly placed in your script. Following these conventions is essential in making sure your script is receiving proper attention from agents, producers, and contests.
Screenwriter works by your side, automatically formatting action, character name, dialog, and other elements as you write your script. Even better, there are no function keys or special command keys to memorize--your fingers stay on the keyboard, always ready for creative thoughts to flow onto the page!
Free Technical Support!
Unlike Final Draft, technical support for Movie Magic Screenwriter is provided at no additional charge. Whether you call by phone, fax, or email your questions, or visit our first rate support Web site, you are not charged by the minute (or at all) for technical support.
Why Movie Magic Screenwriter?
All writing tools are not created equal. Naturally, Screenwriter uses a simple Tab-Enter system to quickly get your creative thoughts flowing into the computer. Screenwriter has index cards, script notes, simple entry of character names, spell-checking, and of course, smart margin changing. The comparison ends here.
Screenwriter alone has a full suite of Internet features, such as real-time Internet collaboration, online script registration, and export to Adobe Acrobat PDF format; superior production features, such as built-in script breakdown and detailed export to Movie Magic Scheduling; Script Analysis features; and the finest import and export facilities in the world of screenwriting.
The Screenwriter's Bible: A Complete Guide to Writing, Formatting, and Selling Your Script
How does a spec script differ from a shooting script? What kind of fasteners should one use to bind a script? How did the term MOS come to mean without sound? You'll find the answers to these pressing questions and much more in David Trottier's eminently usable The Screenwriter's Bible. The avuncular Trottier--a writer-producer, script consultant, and seminar leader--has written a friendly guide through the Hollywood morass. He touts it as six books in one: it's "a screenwriting primer, a screenwriting workbook, a formatting guide, a spec writing guide, a sales and marketing guide, [and] a resource guide."
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