Project-based screenwriting training

Screenwriting Courses for Focused Writers

Learn structure, character, and dialogue by building scenes that work. Practical lessons. Real feedback. A clean, distraction-free environment.

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No fluff. No images. Just the craft—fully optimized for clarity and SEO.
What you’ll practice
Scene-first approach
Loglines Beat sheets Scene objectives Subtext Reversals Polish passes
Loglines Beat sheets Scene objectives Subtext Reversals Polish passes

Outlines That Convert

Turn ideas into solid outlines using scene goals, stakes, and reversals.

Tools: premise triangle, sequence map, beat tension check.

Dialogue With Purpose

Write subtext-driven dialogue that reveals character and advances the plot.

Tools: tactics, status shifts, compression, distinct voices.

Pitch-Ready Drafts

Polish scripts with actionable notes and prepare loglines and treatments.

Deliverables: logline, synopsis, treatment, query-ready summary.

Minimal Interface

A focused writing space with high contrast and zero distractions.

High-clarity layout
Readable typography and consistent spacing for long sessions.
Milestone checklists
Break drafting into small, trackable writing tasks.
Templates included
Beat sheets, scene cards, rewrite diagnostics.
Dark/light mode
Comfortable contrast for day and night writing.

Mentor Feedback

Optional notes from industry mentors on key milestones.

Feedback Slots Today
Limited to keep notes actionable.
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2) Biggest blocker
3) Weekly time
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We’ll recommend the best starting point based on your stage, blocker, and weekly time.

Focus for week 1
  • Define protagonist goal and external obstacle.
  • Draft 2 scenes with clear intention and reversal.
  • Rewrite for subtext, not exposition.
Recommendation is guidance only—always refine based on your genre and goals.

Sample Syllabus

A compact view of the core curriculum.

  1. Premise and Logline: aligning theme with conflict
  2. Structure: acts, sequences, and beats
  3. Character: want vs. need, contradictions
  4. Dialogue: subtext and tactics
  5. Rewriting: diagnostics and polish

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Example Feedback Notes

What “actionable” looks like: specific, testable, scene-level.

Scene Goal Clarity

Your protagonist enters with a vague intention. Give them a measurable objective (“get the signature”) and a ticking cost if they fail (“the meeting ends in 3 minutes”).

Conflict Escalation

The antagonist blocks once and then yields. Add a second tactic that changes the power dynamic (e.g., bring in a third party, reveal leverage, force a public choice).

Dialogue Subtext

Two lines state the theme directly. Replace with a concrete argument about something trivial that mirrors the real issue. Keep theme implied by behavior.

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