Gameboy70
Member

Registered: Oct 1999
Location: Metro Station, Hollywood and Highland
Posts: 1018 |
I haven't used MovieMagic since it was called ScriptThing, and back then I never used any file format other than its native one. But if MM2K can import RTF docs, you should be able to pull it off.
When you save document edited in Final Draft as an RTF, then import that document into Word, you'll notice that when the cursor is positioned at the beginning of each new element -- regardless of where it's positioned -- registers as column 1 (a column being the horizontal coordinate on the page). So in Rich Text Format, a character name at the center of the page is regarded as the left-hand margin. Here's an example of what a page of script looks like on WordSmith:
quote:
INT. DARK OFFICE - NIGHT
The office is dark. Hunched over the desk, staring intensely at the computer, sit a WRITER.
WRITER
(excited)
I sured hope my bid for the old manuscript on eBay was accepted.
CUT TO:
EXT. STUDIO LOT - DAY
A STUDIO EXEC with a handheld computer surfs the web with his wireless connection.
EXEC
(to himself)
This looks like an interesting manuscript. I should take a chance on it. Beats having to read all those scripts in my office. The law of averages says it's probably not any worse than that crap.
He fiddles on the handheld some more.
EXEC (CONT'D)
Current bid's two bucks? What the hell, I'll bid three.
I doesn't look like much here or on WordSmith, but when you save this as an RTF, synch it to your desktop, and open it in FD as "Screenplay" (a dialog comes up with this option when you open it), it comes up perfectly formatted in screenplay format. I'd attach the file for a finished page here if vBulletin's attachment capability recognized FD, Doc, or RTF formats.
Everything in the above example that begins at the left margin that wasn't preceded by a carriage return will fall into the correct position: e.g., EXEC will by positioned in the center, "(to himself)" below it justified one tab to the left of EXEC, the dialogue ("This looks like an interesting manuscript") justified one tab position over to the left of the line direction, and the action ("He fiddles on the handheld some more") beginning at the left margin; transitions like CUT TO are automagically right-justified. Any line following a carriage return will automatically add one row space.
So the rules for creating a script document in WS are:
- Each new element (e.g. character names, line directions, dialogue, transitions and actions) begins at the left margin following a carriage return.
- Save in Rich Text Format.
- Synch it to desktop
- Open in screenwriting program, selecting "Screenplay" format if a dialogue prompt offers this option
- Save As screenwriting program's native format, if desired
Hope this helps.
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