
Not All Heroes Are Good. Not All Villains Are Evil. Understanding Protagonist and Antagonist
A writer's guide to the two forces that drive every story — and why most people misunderstand both.
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A writer's guide to the two forces that drive every story — and why most people misunderstand both.

You've written a script. Maybe two. You've spent months on it; rewriting scenes, adjusting dialogue, getting feedback from friends. And then you send it out, and nothing happens. No response, no meeting, no conversation. Just silence.

One sentence stands between your screenplay and the desk it lands on. Here's how to make it count.

You have a script. You have a director. You might even have funding. And somewhere in the back of your mind, you are already thinking about the shoot. But before a single camera is set up, before a single actor is called, before anyone books a hotel room or rents a van, someone needs to sit down with that script and take it apart. Scene by scene, line by line. This is the script breakdown.
A complete reference for the vocabulary of the craft from the first slug line to the final fade out.

Every week, a busy production company can receive up to twenty scripts. Some arrive through agents, some through open submissions, some through personal connections. They all come with the same implicit request: read me, consider me, say yes.

A screenplay is not a short text. It is a 100 to 150 page document, often written over weeks, months, sometimes years. It carries characters, locations, time jumps, dialogue systems, and narrative continuity across dozens, sometimes hundreds of scenes.

Every writer knows the feeling. The draft is done. The scenes are there. Something still isn't working and you can't see what it is because you're too close to it. That's not a talent problem. That's a distance problem.

Most screenwriters spend months, sometimes years, writing a screenplay. Then, somewhere between a festival deadline, a funding application and a producer submission, they remember they also need a synopsis. The synopsis is usually written in a hurry. It becomes a practical necessity rather than a creative task — a document to complete, not a document to craft. Yet this overlooked text may determine the fate of a screenplay more often than the screenplay itself.
Explore a complete sample analysis and understand the feedback format.