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Austin Film Festival Script Competition

Austin Fest Film

Contact

1801 Salina St.
Austin, TX 78702
512-478-4795 (voice)
512-478-6205 (fax)

Web:
http://www.austinfilmfestival.com
Email:
screenplay@austinfilmfestival.com

Contact: Steven DeBose, Director of Script Competitions

Report Card

Overall: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Professionalism: 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars (4.0/5.0)
Feedback: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Report Cards: 98    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

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Objective

The Ultimate Runway
For thirty years, Austin Film Festival has been catapulting writers into life-changing careers. With one of the most noteworthy competitions among Hollywood tastemakers, AFF consistently yanks newcomers from the isolation of their desks and ushers them into the bustling world of film and television. Whether your dream is to sign a contract, land an agent, learn from an industry icon, or take home the coveted Bronze Typewriter Award, it’s simple: you can’t win if you don’t enter.

Josephson Entertainment Screenwriting Fellowship
This opportunity will provide a one-on-one mentorship in Los Angeles for two fellows – one writer or writing team with a feature script and one writer or writing team with a teleplay pilot – selected from the Final Round of this year’s competition. Show More

Deadline/Entry Fees

Deadline Date
Days till:
Entry Fee
Earlybird March 25, 2025
107
Feature Screenplay: $60 // Teleplay & Shorts: $50
Regular April 22, 2025
135
Feature Screenplay: $70 // Teleplay & Shorts: $60
Late May 27, 2025
170
Feature Screenplay: $90 // Teleplay & Shorts: $75

Notification: Notifications for all entrants will be sent by mid-September

Awards

Awards range from $1000-$5000 per winner. Winners also receive reimbursement of roundtrip airfare (up to $500, excluding frequent flyer miles); hotel reimbursement at the Film Festival (up to $500); and the AFF Bronze Typewriter Award.

***All entrants will receive complimentary Reader Comments, a brief overall summary of the readers' notes.***

Austin Fest Film

Contact

1801 Salina St.
Austin, TX 78702
512-478-4795 (voice)
512-478-6205 (fax)

Web:
http://www.austinfilmfestival.com
Email:
screenplay@austinfilmfestival.com

Contact: Steven DeBose, Director of Script Competitions

Report Card

Overall: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Professionalism: 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars (4.0/5.0)
Feedback: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Report Cards: 98    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

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Contest Comments

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Austin Film Festival Script Competition

Contact

1801 Salina St.
Austin, TX 78702
512-478-4795 (voice)
512-478-6205 (fax)

Web:
http://www.austinfilmfestival.com
Email:
screenplay@austinfilmfestival.com

Contact: Steven DeBose, Director of Script Competitions

Report Card

Overall: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Professionalism: 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars (4.0/5.0)
Feedback: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Report Cards: 98    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

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Contest News

MovieBytes Interview:
Screenwriter Brian McDonald

An interview with screenwriter Brian McDonald regarding the Austin/Film Writing Competition.

Q: What's the title of the script you entered in this contest, and what's it about?

A: It’s called ‘Graverobbers’ and it’s about a man who remembers a tragedy in a past life and becomes so obsessed with it that he ignores his current life and nearly destroys it.

It’s about learning how to live in the here-and-now.

It won in sci-fi but it’s really a supernatural drama.

Q: What made you enter this particular contest? Have you entered any other contests with this script? If so, how did you do?

A: Six years ago I had a script semi-final at Austin. When I saw the beautiful trophy they give to the winners I said that I was going to come back and get that trophy.

I have entered it in other contests and it hasn’t done as well. It got a ‘consider’ in one competition, but that’s it.

I wish that contests would post their objective standards on the web, so you could see how they define quality. It’s strange to win one competition and not even to make the first round of another.

I mean sometimes you will get a little note saying that your dialogue is not good or something like that. That’s fine, but define ‘good’ dialogue. Is it dialogue without subtext? Or is it not snappy enough for this particular reader? Does it not get exposition across skillfully? Do all the characters sound the same?

They should have to tell you what it means when they say ‘bad dialogue’. Because the dialogue for Goodfellas is one thing, but the dialogue in Pleasantville is another. You can’t use a broad brush to define something like dialogue by saying, “This dialogue is bad”. If you do that the writer doesn’t know what to work on. It leaves him/her in the dark.

Q: Were you satisfied with the adminstration of the contest? Did they meet their deadlines? Did you receive all the awards that were promised?

A: THEY ARE GREAT AT AUSTIN. All HAIL AUSTIN.

Q: Were you given any feedback on your script? If so, did you find the feedback helpful?

A: No, no feedback. Except after I won a few of the judges told me what they liked about the script. They really dug it.

Q: Has your success in this contest helped you market your script? Were you contacted by any agents, managers or producers?

A: Time will tell. A few people have contacted me, but it's nothing I can talk about yet.

Q: What's your background? Have you written any other screenplays or television scripts?

A: I have written a lot of stuff. A few TV specs. In fact one spec almost got me on staff at a sitcom, but that didn’t work out. I came close to selling a feature once, but that didn’t happen. That’s show biz.

I used to write comic books. I did the first Hellboy spin-off comic. It’s called Abe Sapien: Drums of the Dead. I did Predator. I did Lost in Space. I did Tarzan. A few things.

I made a short film called White Face that won Slamdance and ran on HBO for a while. That was cool.

I’m sort of known as a story-guy and I teach it a few places. Right now I’m teaching a story structure class at Pixar.

Q: Do you live in Los Angeles? If not, do you have any plans to move there?

A: Not now. I used to. I may move back, but I know working screenwriters who don't live there. I think it's better not to live there. I think it warps your perspective of the world. There are better places to live -- a war zone for instance.

Q: What's next? Are you working on a new script?

A: I'm always working on something. But I want to direct, it's the only reason I ever started writing as a kid. You can't direct nothing so I wrote scripts. To me it's all storytelling. Writing and directing are just different aspects of the same job for me.

I have a few ideas, I just need to pick one and go. I'm sure I'll be back at the keyboard soon.

Posted Thursday, October 26, 2006

Austin Film Festival Script Competition

Contact

1801 Salina St.
Austin, TX 78702
512-478-4795 (voice)
512-478-6205 (fax)

Web:
http://www.austinfilmfestival.com
Email:
screenplay@austinfilmfestival.com

Contact: Steven DeBose, Director of Script Competitions

Report Card

Overall: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Professionalism: 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars (4.0/5.0)
Feedback: 3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars3.5 stars (3.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Report Cards: 98    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

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Submit Report Card

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