Cheap Write Brothers Movie Magic Screenwriter (PC & Mac) (Software) (Windows 2000, Mac OS X, Windows, Windows XP, Macintosh, Windows NT) Price
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$159.99
Here at Cheap-price.net we have Write Brothers Movie Magic Screenwriter (PC & Mac) at a terrific price. The real-time price may actually be cheaper — click “Buy Now” above to check the live price at Amazon.com.
| PLATFORM: | Windows 2000, Mac OS X, Windows, Windows XP, Macintosh, Windows NT |
| CATEGORY: | Software |
| MANUFACTURER: | Write Brothers |
| FEATURES: | CD-ROM, PC: 486DX minimum (Pentium 1 or higher recommended), Windows 95/98/Me/2000 or NT, 16 MB RAM (32 MB recommended), 25 MB free hard drive space, CD-ROM drive, iPartner requires Internet Connection, FirstUse registration feature requires Internet connection. MAC PPC or better, OS 8.5 or later, OSX compatible in Classic mode, 16 MB RAM (32 MB recommended), 15 MB free hard drive space, CD-ROM drive, iPartner requires Internet connection, Speak script function requires Macinto, Write Brothers, Inc, MAC, PC |
| MEDIA: | CD-ROM |
| MPN: | 907045 |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| ACCESSORIES: | |
| UPC: | 705868070478 |
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Customer Reviews of Write Brothers Movie Magic Screenwriter (PC & Mac)
Pretty Good for what I Need This all started when I began writing a screenplay on spec. I setup my Word program with as much of the Hollywood standard format as I could, but I started having problems with certain elements (e.g., parentheticals within dialog, CONT'd's at the end of pages). So I picked MMS because it seemed to be the most powerful at the lowest cost. I also liked that it had play and novel formats. It did a decent and fairly painless job of importing my screenplay from Word. Unfortunately, it turned many of my shot headings into character elements for dialog. I had to manually fix all these, but MMS made changing the type of element fairly easy. <
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>So far, my only real negative is with scene headings. Hitting enter after a scene heading, a list of possible time references comes up (day, night, continuous, etc.). I often like to use SAME TIME as a time reference, but I haven't found any way to add or change the list. <
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>Otherwise, I'm very satisfied with the program so far, and it does so much a regular word processor won't do for you.
best of its kind, not as popular as it deserves to be.
I'll keep this short because I'm supposed to be writing! I used to use Final Draft for all my TV work (Wire In The Blood, Hornblower). I even recommended it to the BBC when they still used Word for screenplays. Then a friend and producer showed me Screenwriter and I have never looked back. It's far more intuitive than FD in so many ways, it makes it easier to just concentrate on the text. And technically Screenwriter is far more solid - I have never used a version of Final Draft that didn't have numerous really irritating bugs, which tech support could never seem to resolve despite endless patches. I haven't patched Screenwriter for years quite simply because I don't need to - it just works. I'm sorry I ever backed FD now, but it's almost the standard program in the UK. I often write my stuff in Screenwriter and import it into FD for submission.
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>Note that FD tech support costs money whereas Screenwriter's doesn't. How can the smaller company afford to provide free tech support? I suspect the answer is simple: that hardly anyone ever needs it. And to the reviewer who complained about the CUT TO's clogging up his script: you can switch all that stuff off you know!
The best out there....
Of all the screenwriting / scriptwriting software out there today, this is by far the best one. Everything you need to get started is there and it's very user friendly. I had never used it before but was able to start writing within minutes of opening the box. I also recommend david Trottier's book The Screenwriter's Bible, as a companion for the software. I have found both to be invaluable.