Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Film Lab Society

40 members • Free

The Script Advantage Network

132 members • Free

One Grand Film Skool

1.3k members • Free

Independent Filmmakers United!

205 members • Free

Words To Film By™: FREE 🎬

192 members • Free

The Screenwriters Lounge

54 members • Free

StoryTellers Hub

213 members • Free

Write your script!

41 members • Free

2 contributions to Write your script!
💻⌨️ Scriptwriting apps and software ⌨️💻
Many of you have been asking about software/apps for scriptwriting. So, I thought I'd pop a quick little guide in here for you. Let me know if I've missed anything out! You can write a basic script using any word processor - Word, Google Docs, Pages etc. But if you want to get serious about scriptwriting, and if you want to share your work with actors at your local theatre, or agents, or film producers, at some point you’re going to want to use an app or software package to create scripts in industry-recognised formats. (and you’re also probably going to get a bit fed up of using the tab button/spending ages formatting each part of your document at some point). And yep, you did read that correctly - formats. Plural. Because each branch of the industry has its own specific format(s) - radio, TV, film, theatre - and there are even some regional variations. But, honestly, until you’re in production with something where there are very specific formatting needs, for now, you just need something to do the most common types - screen and stage. The word you’re going to see me use a lot here is ‘elements’. By this, I mean the different parts of a script. Not scenes or acts. I mean what each bit of a script within each scene tells us. These are basically the following: - Scene heading - in theatre, usually the scene number, sometimes a title for each scene.  - Character - the name of the character who is speaking, or performing some kind of action (‘MARK walks into a room’, for instance) - Dialogue - the words a character says, either out loud within the actual scene, off camera/offstage, or as a voiceover (like a narrator in a film) - Action - anything that can be seen or heard in a scene, other than the dialogue. - (Parentheticals) - usually within dialogue to explain how something is delivered - shouting, whispered, to another specific character -  or a pause.  - Transition - at the end of a scene, how it ends - e.g. blackout in theatre, fade or ‘cut to’ on screen 
💻⌨️ Scriptwriting apps and software ⌨️💻
3 likes • 2d
I am using Writers duet and I have been enjoying it! But I am not sure how many scripts I can make before I have to pay.
✍️✍️✍️ START HERE>>> Welcome! (And a question for you...)
Hey! I'm so pleased you're here. I'm on a mission to create a community of aspiring writers, writers for fun, and award-winners-to-be, where we can all share our ideas, work and inspiration, and I can share my knowledge and passion for creating worlds, people and work that moves people - to laughter, tears, action, and everything in between. If you haven't already, please take a moment to introduce yourself (using our 10 interview questions, if you like) in a new post (Community tab>>Write Something) And then, what better time to start writing than right now, with the free Scene One 7-day 'get writing' challenge. But first, a quick question What are you hoping to see and do and learn here? (There are no wrong answers to this!) Please do reach out and say hello. Happy Writing! Mark :-)
0 likes • 8d
Hi everyone! Thought I’d introduce myself properly. 1. What’s your name? Jade Edwards — Kenyan Australian, which surprises people when they first hear the name. 2. Where are you from? Melbourne, Australia. Known for the Australian Open, Formula 1, the MCG, AFL — and apparently for doubling as New York in films more often than people realise. 3. Why do you write? I’m on the younger side of the industry and currently studying screenwriting at university. Writing felt like the natural intersection between my love of film/TV and storytelling. I’m particularly drawn to morally complex characters and stories that explore power, inevitability, and consequence. 4. What’s your favourite story? The Day of the Jackal by Frederick Forsyth. I love the precision of it — the procedural detail and the relentless cat-and-mouse tension. I’ve also been enjoying the recent adaptation starring Eddie Redmayne. That slow-burn pursuit dynamic is something I’m trying to weave into my own current project. 5. Favourite writer? Quentin Tarantino. His command of dialogue and unapologetic style really stood out to me when I was first getting serious about screenwriting. Inglorious Basterds and Pulp Fiction were big influences in understanding voice on the page. 6. What would the story of your life be called? Out of place, on purpose. 7. Where do you hope to get to with your writing? Ultimately, I want a career in screenwriting. I know being based in Australia can make the industry feel a little further away from the UK/US hubs, but I’m focused on building strong work first and seeing where that takes me. Looking forward to learning from everyone here.
1-2 of 2
Jade Edwards
1
3points to level up
@jade-edwards-2122
Melbourne based beginner screenwriter

Active 3h ago
Joined Feb 23, 2026