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Final Draft Big Break Screenwriting Contest

Final Draft/Big Break

Contact

2300 W. Empire Avenue
5th floor
Burbank, CA 91504
818-995-8995 (voice)

Web:
Click here
Email:
bigbreak@finaldraft.com

Contact: Kala Guess, Contest Director

Report Card

Overall: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Professionalism: 3 stars3 stars3 stars (3.0/5.0)
Feedback: 2.5 stars2.5 stars2.5 stars (2.6/5.0)
Signficance: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Report Cards: 47    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

Objective

Big Break is an annual, international feature and television screenwriting contest designed to launch the careers of aspiring writers. Big Break rewards screenwriters with over $100,000 in cash and prizes, including a trip to Los Angeles for a series of A-list executive meetings. Winners and finalists alike have had their screenplays optioned and produced and have secured high-profile representation as well as lucrative writing deals.

Deadline/Entry Fees

Deadline Date
Days till:
Entry Fee
Early Bird April 15, 2024 $35
Regular May 20, 2024
25
$65
Final June 10, 2024
46
$75
Extended June 28, 2024
64
$85

See website for feedback fees, and other options.

Dates reflect deadlines for electronic submission of scripts. All entries must be electronically submitted by their respective deadlines at midnight Pacific Time.

Rules

Visit website for contest rules and conditions: https://www.finaldraft.com/big-break-screenwriting-contest/rules/

Awards

2 Grand Prize Award Winners
  • One Feature Grand Prize and one TV Grand Prize winner will be chosen from the 11 Feature Genre and TV Format award winners
  • These two Grand Prize Award Winners are flown to Hollywood for meetings and networking with executives, producers, agents, and managers. See the full prize package here: https://www.finaldraft.com/big-break-screenwriting-contest/prizes

Final Draft/Big Break

Contact

2300 W. Empire Avenue
5th floor
Burbank, CA 91504
818-995-8995 (voice)

Web:
Click here
Email:
bigbreak@finaldraft.com

Contact: Kala Guess, Contest Director

Report Card

Overall: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Professionalism: 3 stars3 stars3 stars (3.0/5.0)
Feedback: 2.5 stars2.5 stars2.5 stars (2.6/5.0)
Signficance: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Report Cards: 47    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

Contest Comments

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Final Draft Big Break Screenwriting Contest

Contact

2300 W. Empire Avenue
5th floor
Burbank, CA 91504
818-995-8995 (voice)

Web:
Click here
Email:
bigbreak@finaldraft.com

Contact: Kala Guess, Contest Director

Report Card

Overall: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Professionalism: 3 stars3 stars3 stars (3.0/5.0)
Feedback: 2.5 stars2.5 stars2.5 stars (2.6/5.0)
Signficance: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Report Cards: 47    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

Contest News

Tips on Contest Entry: Big Break TV Winner Eric Buchman Shares Lessons from the World of Script Coordinators



Meet Eric Buchman. By day, he's the script coordinator for the hit NBC show Blindspot, starring Jaimie Alexander and Sullivan Stapleton. By night however, Buckman is the writer of his own show called 45 Wall and dreams of one day hiring his own script coordinator so he may get to shooting all the episodes he has outlined in his head. Now that Buchman is the TV Grand Prize Winner of the Final Draft Big Break Screenplay Contest, that day has just gotten closer.



We sat down with Buchman to find out how his role as script coordinator prepared him to write the award-winning pilot that he describes as "Silicon Valley meets the world of finance."



But, first, we thought we should clarify what exactly he does as a script coordinator, since the job can vary from show to show. Buchman describes himself as, "The liaison between the writers' office and the production department. All scripts go through me. There's a clerical aspect, making sure that scenes track, characters track, that everything makes sense. There's also the research aspect where I help the writers research ideas for future stories and figure out how to make some of the fantastical elements feel more real."



Because Buchman is a writer, he's also able to contribute in a more creative way than most script coordinators. "It's the best job to have if your title is not 'writer,'" Buchman said.



In addition to being a script coordinator, Buchman also credits his experience as a television writer, a writer's assistant and a digital writer (writing webisodes, etc.), for honing his instincts. "I hoped that when people read 45 Wall, it already feels like a script that has come out of a writers' room - in my case, a one-person writers' room - but that it has a structure and is more developed than a script you might typically see from a writer who did not have my experience."



The other way that working in television has helped Buchman is being able to keep his finger on the pulse of what is current and topical in the Hollywood marketplace. Though he wrote 45 Wall long before The Big Short was released, he's not surprised that a comedic film about the financial industry won the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay. "My experience has helped not only to learn how to write something, but how to choose the right subject matter to begin with." An excellent skill to have as a writer.



His advice for writers who want to write for the marketplace is to read as many scripts as possible. "Even if you don't live in Los Angeles, there are lots of websites that keep tabs on what is circulating in Hollywood." He says it's important not only to read what's getting made, but also what isn't.



"I've read every draft of every script of every show I've worked on. I know what's changed and why. I think that perspective can only help any writer."


"That's what's helped me at my job. I've read every draft of every script of every show I've worked on. I know what's changed and why. I think that perspective can only help any writer," said Buchman.



Buchman has three pieces of advice for anyone thinking of submitting their script to a competition. One, make sure lots of other eyes have seen your draft. "You only have one shot and my impression is that you never know what the readers might bump on. If there's a typo on the first page, that might keep them from reading beyond that."



Secondly, he also recommends that you give yourself plenty of time to submit your draft. "It's better to enter later with a better script than rush to get a script in that might not be ready just to save a few bucks."



Lastly, he says it's crucial to be honest with yourself, "No first draft is ever going to be perfect. That's why the software is called Final Draft, and that's what's good about their Big Break contest, it reinforces the idea that writing is rewriting."



Buchman is thrilled with the results he's seen from winning the Big Break competition so far and said, "It's because of this contest specifically that I've gotten a level of attention I've never gotten before. I'm seeing the fruits of that starting to bear. That's why if you live in Iowa or if you've been in Hollywood for years, you can enter a contest like Big Break and you never know what's going to happen."



Updated: 03/01/2016

Final Draft Big Break Screenwriting Contest

Contact

2300 W. Empire Avenue
5th floor
Burbank, CA 91504
818-995-8995 (voice)

Web:
Click here
Email:
bigbreak@finaldraft.com

Contact: Kala Guess, Contest Director

Report Card

Overall: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Professionalism: 3 stars3 stars3 stars (3.0/5.0)
Feedback: 2.5 stars2.5 stars2.5 stars (2.6/5.0)
Signficance: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.7/5.0)
Report Cards: 47    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

Submit Report Card

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