
June, 2003
By Gregg Goldstein |
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So you want to write a screenplay? Take a number. In a single year,
some 10,000 feature film scripts are registered with the Writers
Guild of America, West, a stunning figure when you consider that
fewer than 500 films make it to the bug screen in the same period.
While seminars, workshops, and Project Greenlight-style contests
have helped feed the screenwriting mania, a large part of the craze
can be directly attributed to screenplay formatting software. “We
sell the dream of being in the lottery,” says Frank Colin,
vice-president of product development for the leading program Final
Draft, which was launched in 1991. For $200 or so, total novices
can create a script that looks as professional as any Hollywood
hackwork, automatically fitting the industry’s strict template
designed to deliver one screen minute per page. Script guru Robert
McKee (who was paid odd tribute in Adaptation) advises all of his
students to use one. “If you hand in an ill-typed screenplay,”
he says, “we know you’re an amateur.”
Since the mid 90’s, Final Draft and Movie Magic Screenwriter
2000 have emerged as the Coke and Pepsi of the genre, garnering
a vast majority of formatting software sales. Both leapfrogged over
Scriptware, the program credited with pioneering the tab-enter typing
system that formatting software uses to jump smoothly between sections
of a script (from exposition to dialogue to action and so on). So
how’d they do it? Fierce marketing. In a town where image
is everything, they’ve gained notoriety through celebrity
testimonials (Tom Hanks for Final Draft, Francis Ford Coppola for
Movie Magic Screenwriter 2000), the favor occasionally rewarded
by product giveaways and quid pro quo cross-promotional deals, and
have recruited users by offering free software to film schools.
Today, there’s hardly a screenwriter out there who doesn’t
use one of the programs.
Still, Final Draft’s executive marketing has given it a substantial
edge over its closest competitor: Though no official figures are
available, it has the lion’s share of the formatting market.
And in this arena, market size matters. Because each program’s
format is unique, using agreed-upon software ensures both smooth
collaboration between screenwriting partners and painless onset
script revisions (though all program files can be swapped when saved
in rich text format). This herd mentality helps draw in new screenwriters,
and then the law of inertia kicks in: Once someone gets used to
a program, they’re much less inclined to bother learning a
new one. “ It’s like the tobacco companies,” says
one of the companies’ reps. “You’ve gotta hook
‘em while they’re young.”
So which program is best? Each one has loyalists who experience
love at first type, but the industry’s dirty little secret
is that they have virtually all of the same functions. “I
haven’t found any real discernable difference,” says
Richard Wesley, an NYU screenwriting professor. “Both are
very, very good.” The general consensus is that Final Draft
and Scriptware offer a slightly shorter learning curve, while MMS2000
has a detail-oriented edge for advanced functions and working with
scripts in production.
Everyone agrees that you can’t underestimate the importance
of these programs. “Bad formatting drives me crazy,”
says a studio script reader. “If I see that, it’s an
automatic pass.” But don’t overestimate their importance,
either: Final Draft et al won’t make you the next Charlie
Kaufman, or even the next Joe Eszterhas. “It has created the
illusion that anyone can write a screenplay,” McKee notes.
Even fellow scripts sage Syd Field, who’s getting paid for
his Ask the Expert feature in the latest version of Final Draft,
agrees. “What you throw down looks and talks and acts like
a screenplay, [so] you think it must be a screenplay,” Field
says. “And that’s not necessarily the case.” |