Screenwriting : Thoughts on Festivals and Contests? by Jenna Hogan

Jenna Hogan

Thoughts on Festivals and Contests?

After a long....long journey my TV pilot is complete. While I imagine my actively employed writer friend leaving it on his coffee table where his television writer, producer, creator bud can stumble across it, fall in love, and give me a call I am ready to submit to contests, festivals, etc.......I am in no position to toss $ around....and definitely in no spot to throw my heart and soul into a scam....SO. Which contests/festivals are legit? Which are best? Which to avoid?

Glenn Spillman

You can actually start out by submitting it to free festivals. I have done that with a couple of my films, and actually have gotten noticed through those venues. I have also got funding for other projects.

Dan Guardino

What free festivals are you talking about? I wrote two screenplays with Judy Norton that she will star in and we are looking for funding.

Dan MaxXx

Black List website is doing a tv lab, partnered with Eva Longoria and Lena Waithe. $30,000 to shoot winning pilots.

Sundance hosts a tv workshop. WarnerBros has a 1-year tv fellowship.

Vic Burns

Snake oil -- every reason why you shouldn't waste your time and money on contests can be found in this free Scriptnotes podcast episode: https://johnaugust.com/2018/not-worth-winninghttps://johnaugust.com/2018...

Michael Connor

Trackingb and tracking-board will get you read by legit managers if you're a finalist.

The fellowships (NBC WOTV, Disney, et al) won't do you any good if you're submitting a pilot. You need a spec episode first, then you give them a pilot if you advance.

Only other one for pilots may be Austin. I was a finalist with a spec episode, but that didn't help any. Nobody reads those any more.

Deadlines for all of these are past. You'll have to wait until 2019. But imo, they're worth the wait.

Ones to avoid? Everything else.

Chad Stroman

We need a way to "pin" a favorite thread to our profiles for later retrieval. Marking it with a heart is good and all but I'd like to be able to "pin" to my profile a building list of bookmarks or pins that I can retrieve quickly and link to (like this one and others with valuable info) when these questions come up every so often.

Jenna Hogan

I agree Chad Stroman .

Jenna Hogan

And okay! I guess I will go with the hope that my friend leaves it on his coffee table for his creator friend to pick up and fall in love with! [ anxiously awaits a call....]

Jenna Hogan

I do hope so....

Jenna Hogan

Submitting to this!

https://screencraft.org/pilot/https://screencraft.org/pilot/

Anyone else? Or...any thoughts on this contest?

Gustavo Freitas

Screencraft is a good one. Very well known.

Jenna Hogan

Gustavo Freitas thank you!

Phillip E. Hardy, Prolifique

Dear Jenna:

Conventional Wisdom says enter the top 20 contests and film festivals. Here are a list of some of those:

American Zoetrope Screenplay Contest

This contest has been around for a long time, offers a $5,000 first prize, and is judged by somebody named Francis Ford Coppola, of whom you may have heard. If you write prose, Zoetrope also offers a short story contest you may want to consider.

Austin Film Festival Script Competition

The Austin Fest Screenplay Competition is a huge contest that's been around forever, and while it's not quite as prestigious as the Nicholl Fellowships, it's darn close. Past winners who have sold their scripts include Ron Peer (Goodbye Lover), Max Adams (Excess Baggage) and lots of others. This contest also attracts 6,000 - 7,000 submissions per year, but even those who don't win can benefit through discounts to the Austin Film Festival Screenwriting Conference, one of the biggest and best parties of the year for screenwriters.

2018 BlueCat Screenplay Competition

BlueCat has more of an indie-vibe than some of the other big contests, but they've had their share of success stories, too, including Ana Lily Amirpour, who won the BlueCat Grand Prize in 2007 and went on to write and direct the Sundance hit A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night. BlueCat founder Gordie Hoffman is a writer/director himself, and won the prestigious Sundance Film Festival Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award for his terrific indie film, Love Liza.

Cinequest Screenwriting Competition

Cinequest is one of the cooler Film Festivals in the country, and their Screenplay Contest Finalists are presented alongside high profile Maverick Spirit awardees like J.J. Abrams, Lawrence Kasdan, Chuck Palahniuk, Neil Gaiman, Philip Kaufman, Michael Arndt, Diablo Cody, Dennis Lehane, Jason Reitman and others at their highly anticipated Writers Celebration. Not bad company, and they also award a substantial $5,000 First Prize.

CineStory Foundation Feature Retreat and Fellowship

A trailblazer among those contests offering mentorship as part of their prize package, CineStory may be the best contest you've never heard of. Each fall the contest's semifinalists are invited to attend an intensive, 4-day retreat in the mountains of Idylwild, CA, where they spend their days and evenings interacting with industry mentors such as Mark Fergus & Hawk Ostby (Iron Men, Children of Men) and Meg LaFeuve (Inside Out, The Good Dinosaur.) The best part? This is one of the smaller competitions on this list, so if your script is ready your odds of success are pretty darn good.

Creative World Awards

The Creative World Awards (CWA) is a well run, highly regarded contest with a $3,000 Grand Prize as well as several genre and short screenplay awards. The Richmond International Film Festival Screenplay Contest - run by the same folks - is similiarly well regarded.

Cynosure Screenwriting Awards

Cynosure has been around since 1999 - ancient history! - and since its very earliest days has specifically recognized screenplays in two categories: those with compelling female protagonists, and those that showcase diversity. If your script falls into either one of those categories, you may want to take a shot at the contest's substantial $5,000 first prize.

Film Independent Screenwriting Lab

Next to the Sundance Labs (below), Film Independent's Screenwriting Lab may be the best opportunity available for indie screenwriters to hone their craft. The lab is an intensive five-week program running two evenings a week in Los Angeles in July and August. The Lab is designed to help screenwriters improve their craft and advance their careers.

Final Draft Big Break Screenwriting Contest

Sponsored by the folks who publish the industry-leading Final Draft Screenwriting Software, The Final Draft Big Break Contest offers a trip to L.A., substantial prize money, and a high-profile awards ceremony.

Fresh Voices Screenplay Competition

The Fresh Voices Original Screenplay Competition flies under the radar a little bit, but they offer substantial prizes and like PAGE, they offer awards in several different genres, as well as multiple TV categories. They also distribute several "Spotlight Awards" to recognize scripts in various categories such as "Best Role Written for a Female Lead", "Diversity and Inclusion," "Courage and Fortitude," etc.

International Screenwriters Association

ISA Fast Track Fellowship

The International Screenwriters Association (ISA) is a popular online organization for screenwriters, and sponsors a family of contests including the ISA Fast Track Fellowship, which flies two winners out to L.A. for a series of meetings with industry executives, and Table Read My Screenplay, which features screenplay readings in high-profile destinations like Sundance and London.

Kairos Prize for Spiritually Uplifting Screenplays

If you've written a "spiritually uplifting" screenplay, a submission to the Kairos competition is a no-brainer. They offer $50,000 in prizes, including $25,000 to their Grand Prize Winner, plus recognition at the Annual MOVIEGUIDEĀ® Awards Gala and Report to the Entertainment Industry.

Launch Pad Screenwriting Competition

Sponsored by the tracking-board.com website, the Launch Pad Feature and Launch Pad Pilot competitions have an excellent track record of winning agency and management representation for winning writers.

Nashville Film Festival Screenwriting Competition

Nashville, like Austin, is a well-established film festival as well as an increasingly high profile screenwriting competition with various genre awards for both features and TV.

2018 PAGE International Screenwriting Awards

The PAGE International Screenwriting Awards is a huge competition with a gigantic $25,000 Grand Prize and a huge number of success stories. Your odds of winning the Grand Prize may not be great, but unlike the Nicholl Fellowships and some of the other contests on this list, PAGE offers prizes in 10 different genres, which means your sci-fi epic won't have to compete with another writer's indie romance, and vice-versa. PAGE is also an uncommonly well-run competition that meets their deadlines and responds promptly to email inquiries.

ScreenCraft Screenwriting Fellowship

In contrast to contests like PAGE and Nashville that offer multiple genre awards within the same competition, ScreenCraft sponsors several different contests, each devoted to a specific genre or format, plus the ScreenCraft Fellowship for scripts from any genre.

Screenplay Festival

Screenplay Festival is another contest that flies a bit under the radar, but it's worth considering for the recognition they give genre scripts. And if you want to improve your odds, consider Screenplay Festival's 100 Screenplays Contest, which limits entries to the first one hundred screenplays entered.

Script Pipeline Screenwriting Competition

Script Pipeline has actually been around for about 15 years and has steadily grown into a family of well regarded screenwriting contests with a number of notable alumni, including Evan Daugherty, a former contest winner who went on to sell the $3 million spec Snow White & the Huntsman. Script Pipeline now offers a number of different competitions for both screenplays and TV, including a couple of contests for story ideas in case you haven't yet gotten around to actually writing your blockbuster.

Scriptapalooza Features & Shorts

Scriptapalooza, founded in 1998, offers separate contests for Film and TV, as well as a Screenwriting Fellowship. They take pride in promoting their winners agressively, and have had several films produced from their contest winners.

Shore Scripts Feature Screenplay Contest

Shore Scripts offers both a screenwriting contest and Short Film Fund that provides financing for a short script of 3 to 13 pages. The screenwriting contest has some impressive judges on both sides of the Atlantic, so this may be a good contest for British writers or those with international ambitions.

Slamdance Screenplay Competition

Slamdance is no Sundance, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. They've been around forever, and sponsor a well-respected screenplay competition that may be a little less snobby than their Park City neighbors. Competition is substantial, though, as they attract about 2,500 submissions every year.

StoryPros Awards Contest

StoryPros sponsors two contests, one with separate genre categories, the Story Pros Awards, and one for scripts regardless of genre, the Story Pros International. Both contests are well-run, and have a good reputation for the quality of their feedback (which costs extra).

Sundance Feature Film Program

For those on the outside looking in, Sundance can feel like a cliquish secret society that doesn't necessarily welcome newcomers. If you fit their profile, though, there's literally no better place to have your screenplay nurtured.

trackingb.com Original TV Pilot Contest

the trackingb (read: tracking board) TV and Screenplay contests have a somewhat lower profile than some of the other contests listed here, and they offer virtually no cash prizes. That said, the insider access they promote seems to be legit, and past Finalist Mickey Fisher had a CBS TV series deal for his sci-fi spec Extant within eight months of winning this contest.

The WeScreenplay Feature Competition

WeScreenplay offers a family of well-run competitions including a feature contest offering cash awards and mentorship, a TV Contest, and a contest specifically devoted to promoting Diverse Voices.

The Writers Lab

Talk about pedigree! The Writers Lab is funded by Meryl Streep, and is designed to provide opportunities for female writers over 40 years old. The Lab brings 12 selecte

You may also want to consider some writing fellowships. Many of these are free.

CBS Diversity Institute

The focus of this eight month program is opening doors to the Industry, and of the 97 emerging, diverse writers have graduated from the program over the course of 13 years, 53 careers have been launched. That's a good track record! Applicants are expected to submit a half-hour or one-hour episodic spec as well as a piece of original material such as an original pilot, a stage play, or short fiction story.

Disney | ABC Writing Program

Disney/ABC Writing Fellowship

A submission to the Disney/ABC Writing Program isn't a contest submission so much as a job application. Winners are paid a weekly salary for a one-year gig that provides access to executives, producers and literary representatives leading ultimately to a potential staff position on a Disney or ABC television program. The best part? It's free to submit.

Fox Writers Lab

The Fox Writers Lab is a highly selective opportunity for experienced writers with diverse voices, backgrounds, and life experiences. Eight writers will be selected to receive priority meetings on Fox TV shows, and from among those eight, one writer will be selected to receive a blind script deal with the Fox Broadcasting Company. Not bad!

HBO Access Writing Fellowship

The HBO Access Writing Fellowship provides participants with eight months of mentoring by HBO Creative Executives, as each writer develops a script suitable for HBO or Cinemax. Applications are accepted in the Spring, so keep your eyes open.

Nicholl Fellowships

Academy Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting

Sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, The Nicholl Fellowships remain the 800-pound gorilla of the screenwriting contest world, a competition so prestigious that its winners are almost guaranteed representation and a toe-hold in the industry. Need more convincing? Consider some previous winners: Erhen Kruger (Arlington Road), Michael A. Rich (Finding Forrester), Bragi Schut Jr. (Season of the Witch), Doug Atchison, (Akeelah and the Bee), and lots more. This contest routinely attracts more than 7,000 submissions every year, but even its finalists and semifinalists have been known to garner significant attention for their success.

NBC Writers on the Verge

Writers on the Verge is a 12-week program designed to help writers who are "almost there" but need a final bit of preparation with their writing and presentation skills. Like a lot of the Industry programs listed here, they're especially interested in attracting writers of diverse backgrounds, but all writers are welcome to submit. For Asian and Hispanic writers, NBC also co-sponsors the CAPE New Writers Awards, and the NHMC Television Writers Program.

Nickelodeon Writing Program

Like Disney, Nickelodeon is offering a one-year, salaried position interacting with executives, writing spec scripts and pitching story ideas. They're particularly looking for writers with diverse backgrounds and experiences, so if that sounds like you, there's no better opportunity anywhere. And like Disney, this one's totally free.

Universal Writers Program

Unlike most of Hollywood Fellowships listed here, the Universal Writers Program focuses primiarly on feature film development. Program participants write feature-length scripts, and participate in a curriculum designed to strengthen their creative approach, personal presentation skills and overall knowledge of the Studio production process. As with Disney's program, this is a year-long paid gig.

Warner Bros. Writers Workshop

The Warner Bros. Workshop has been around for more than 30 years, and its list of past participants includes a fair number of industry heavyweights like Terence Winter (Boardwalk Empire), Marc Cherry (Desperate Housewives), Greg Garcia (My Name Is Earl) and Felicia Henderson (Soul Food). The submission process is competitive, so be sure to check their website regularly for deadlines and requirements.

Also checkout the Film Freeway platform:

Here is a link for that one:

https://filmfreeway.com/festivals?utf8=%E2%9C%93&has_query=&q=Television...

Just do your research and don't always go with conventional wisdom. I'd try some top rated indie festivals to get your feet wet. Top contests like Page, Nicholl and Austin Film Festival get thousands of entries and odds are longer on placing or winning. Best of luck.

Here's a link to Movie Maker's list of best film festivals to enter.

https://www.moviemaker.com/archives/best_of/50-film-festivals-worth-the-...

Jenna Hogan

THANKS! Quite the list!

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