Project Dashboard
UCA
Scene extraction, character and location detection, dialogue volume, and parser notes for the current screenplay upload.
Scenes
2
Characters
1
Locations
2
Dialogue blocks
7
Status
Scene 1
INT. CLASSROOM - DAY
This is an example of a film script
Scene 2
EXT. CAMPUS - NIGHT
Keep in mind that it doesn’t matter how the Inciting Incident is resolved; it can be happy, sad, or even weird
CAMPUS
Exterior
CLASSROOM
Interior
FILM SCRIPT Written by UCA Center for Writing & Communication Center for Writing & Communication 201 Donaghey Ave. Thompson Hall 109 Conway, AR 72035 cwc@uca.edu -- 1 of 3 -- FADE IN: INT. CLASSROOM - DAY This is an example of a film script. What you are reading now is known as "action description" which describes what is going on in the scene visually. This stretches across the width of the page, unlike dialogue. Action description should be broken into small bits, 3-5 lines in length. Keep things like "close-up" and "long shot" out of the script. The script is about the story and the story alone! The director and his crew will decide how the story will be told in the most visually effective manner. CHARACTER My name is Character, and I am speaking dialogue! NEW CHARACTER (angry) I’m speaking dialogue, too, and I’m angry! Directions like the one above should be kept to a minimum. These parentheticals can be used to signify emotion (angry), for clarification (to Jennifer), or to describe short actions that would not necessitate an entire action