Does anyone have any knowledge or experience with the Beverly Hills Film Festival or the Scramento Film Festival?
Screenplay Contests
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Re: Screenplay Contests
Are these the ones you're referring to?
https://www.moviebytes.com/ContestDe...estNumber=2405
https://www.moviebytes.com/ContestDe...estNumber=3122
They have ratings and comments left on Moviebytes, though take those with a grain of salt. I have no personal experience with either so I'll let the ratings speak for themselves.
Originally posted by Guinness View PostDoes anyone have any knowledge or experience with the Beverly Hills Film Festival or the Scramento Film Festival?
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Re: Screenplay Contests
I would save my money.
There are just a handful of contests that MAY help you get traction if you win or place in the finals: Nicholl, Austin, Page, Final Draft Big Break. Others may make the case for Tracking B and Launch Pad.
Run with the big dogs.
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Re: Screenplay Contests
Originally posted by ClintW3 View PostI would save my money.
There are just a handful of contests that MAY help you get traction if you win or place in the finals: Nicholl, Austin, Page, Final Draft Big Break. Others may make the case for Tracking B and Launch Pad.
Run with the big dogs.
1) No deadline; apply anytime
2) Relatively quick response (avg. less than 3 weeks instead of months)
3) No quota of high scores among submissions whereas most comps have a cap on 1-5 winners.
4) Industry access if you place high enough. The free hosting and ratings can create a snowball effect
5) You can submit as often as you can afford and as many revisions
6) They also often have a Lab program you can apply for (there's a 2018 Annual Feature lab going on at the moment)
The downside is that if you don't score high enough, you're dollar-wise out for more than the average cost of submission to other contests ($100 [1 mo. hosting + 1 eval] vs. $50-60). That and, I guess, the fact that you're competing against the entire pool of writers, working pros included, so the competition is higher. But that's the way it should be anyways.
The cost for the Black List is relatively cheap considering what you're getting, in my opinion.Last edited by nguyensquared; 02-25-2018, 07:33 AM.
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Re: Screenplay Contests
Originally posted by nguyensquared View PostAre these the ones you're referring to?
https://www.moviebytes.com/ContestDe...estNumber=2405
https://www.moviebytes.com/ContestDe...estNumber=3122
They have ratings and comments left on Moviebytes, though take those with a grain of salt. I have no personal experience with either so I'll let the ratings speak for themselves.
Comment
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Re: Screenplay Contests
Originally posted by nguyensquared View PostYou can even try the Black List, which I think provides some advantages over comps (I am not affiliated with the Black List in any way, just my opinion):
1) No deadline; apply anytime
2) Relatively quick response (avg. less than 3 weeks instead of months)
3) No quota of high scores among submissions whereas most comps have a cap on 1-5 winners.
4) Industry access if you place high enough. It can create a snowball effect
5) You can submit as often as you can afford
6) They also often have a Lab program you can apply for
The downside is that if you don't score high enough, you're dollar-wise out for more than the average cost submission cost ($100 [1 mo. hosting + 1 eval] vs $50-60). The cost is relatively cheap considering what you're getting, in my opinion.
That and, I guess, the fact that you're competing against the entire pool of writers, pros included, so the competition is higher. But that's the way it should be anyways.
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Re: Screenplay Contests
Originally posted by ClintW3 View PostI would save my money.
There are just a handful of contests that MAY help you get traction if you win or place in the finals: Nicholl, Austin, Page, Final Draft Big Break. Others may make the case for Tracking B and Launch Pad.
Run with the big dogs.
Comment
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