Real Gone: Seth Worley’s Latest Film Written With Slugline
Writer-director Seth Worley visualizes his film's structure as a clock face.

Writer-director Seth Worley visualizes his film's structure as a clock face.

Seth Worley’s latest film, Real Gone, is the latest in Film Riot’s Epic Summer series of shorts. It’s hilarious, dark, and made with Seth’s usual clever DIY attitude.

Seth wrote Real Gone in Slugline, and detailed some of his writing process in this behind-the-scenes video. Story structure nerds may particularly love his “clock” method of outlining. Check it out:

Character CONT’Ds in Slugline

John August recently wrote about the use of (CONT'D) after a Character element, when that character speaks successively within a scene.

In some cases, you’ll absolutely want to use (cont’d) to indicate a character is still speaking. It’s a signal to the reader (and the actor) that the character is continuing the same thought, regardless of the intervening action.

In other cases, it’s much less clear whether dialogue continuity makes sense. If a bunch of action has occurred between the last time the character spoke, is it really correct or helpful to have that (cont’d)?

John prefers adding the (CONT'D) manually, and only for those occasions where a character is continuing a thought. Slugline supports this style with ease — if turn off Character CONT'Ds in the Document Settings menu, you can then add them manually as needed.

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But some writers think of Character CONT'Ds as a purely automatic function (probably in no small part due to the default settings of some popular screenwriting apps), and Slugline supports that as well. If you leave Character CONT'Ds on, Slugline will automatically add (CONT'D) after successive dialogue by the same character within a scene.

The (CONT'D) appears in light gray to let you know it’s there, but not editable. It is not baked into the text of the file. This is a document setting, so you choose to have Character CONT’Ds on or off on a per-screenplay basis.

Note that this setting does not affect the industry-standard (MORE) and (CONT'D) that Slugline always adds when pagination causes Dialogue to split across a page break.

So it's your choice — let Character CONT'Ds be automated, or a manual, more intentional part of your writing. Slugline will always strive to make your writing process easier, whichever you choose.

Stu MaschwitzHow to
Back to School Sale! Slugline is 40% Off For Two Days

Last year, we received a nice email from a film student at NYU asking about an educational discount. Unfortunately, there's no mechanism for this in the App Store (except the volume educational pricing, which we do participate in), so we hatched a plan to do a back to school sale that anyone could take advantage of.

Does the timing actually make any sense? Are you even a student? Who cares? Slugline is on sale for 40% off through Thursday. That's $23.99 instead of the usual $39.99.

When you are learning screenwriting, you don't need expensive software. You just need to write. Slugline is a great choice for students, and we hope this sale makes it easier to get going.

Stu Maschwitz