: Re: Need clarification on use of M-dash and ellipsis in screenplay, I've seen numerous conflicting sources on this I will try to explain the general idea I've gotten from the most trusted source
John August talks about em-dashes and ellipses in Scriptnotes Ep.51 where basically he calls them interchangeable and go with the style you like. However as scripts are written in mono-spaced fonts the convention is to use a double dash for an em-dash.
SF.'s answer is grammatically right on the money, in that an ellipse is a trail-off but an em-dash is a hard break. But such a hard distinction is too pedantic for show business.
However I would caution you to
Never use ellipses
This assumes you want to sell your screenplay instead of make it yourself. If you're writing for your own production, have at it. It's your baby. In all other cases I think it's lazy or bad writing.
In Screenwriting Mistake #2 : Ellipses Phil Dyer points out that ellipses are ubiquitous. Read enough un-produced screenplays and you'll cry at the environmental destruction they've wrought just in page count and toner/ink wastage.
You would not use a parenthetical before every line of dialogue to instruct the actor how to deliver the line. Therefore isn't 99% of ellipsis use a direct note to the actor on how the line is delivered?
Even Shakespeare does not tell actors how to perform or deliver their lines.
More posts by @Merenda569
: I think the ability to relay emotional weight is proportional to your ability to make your reader forget themselves. I played Dawn of War (a Warhammer game) and had a blast but I never shed
: How feasible is it to write a story without any worldbuilding? Is it possible to make a story (with a plot and characters) that has no worldbuilding or explanations for events? Like whenever
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © selfpublishingguru.com2024 All Rights reserved.