itstartedwithawindmill at 2009-11-28 16:38:08:
Not a fan of bold. Maybe for the single most important word in the entire script. I had an aspiring screenwriter argue that typewriters were capable of producing bold text. So why not? But his script really sucked badly.
januaryfire at 2009-11-28 16:38:44:
Hate them. Hate bold, hate underlined. I read a script recently that bolded and the bolding didn't appear different enough from the regular font, just slightly different. But enough to be annoying and make me wonder about it and take me out of the story. If the writing is clear, concise, specific enough, then the writer doesn't need to rely on cheap printed visual cues to let the reader know what's happening and where. Just my opinion.
The Bitter Script Reader at 2009-11-28 16:54:55:
Gotta agree with the others. Not so much a fan - for the reasons januaryfire cites. In fact, I even wrote a whole post on it a while back.
E.C. Henry at 2009-11-28 17:12:37:
Scott,

Quick question based off the script passage you included from Alan Ball:

EXT. JIMS' HOUSE - CONTINUOUS

I use the phrase "CONTINUOUS ACTION" occasionally in the time of day field to clarify for the reader that no time has passed between scenes or shots. I picked this up from Chistopher Riley's "The Hollywood Standard: The Complete & Authoritative Guide to Script Format and Style." Final Draft 8 ONLY has "CONTINUOUS" in "smart type/times."

EXT. JIM'S HOUSE - CONTINUOUS ACTION

Is there any difference between "CONTINUOUS" and "CONTINOUS ACTION"?

Thanks,

E.C. Henry
JamesHutchinson at 2009-11-28 17:30:29:
"The Muppet Man" by Christopher Weekes uses bolded sluglines and I really liked how it looked. You know exactly where you are.

I don't do it myself, though.
Laura Reyna at 2009-11-28 17:47:45:
I like to keep this stuff--desolve, cut to, CU, etc-- to a minimum to help the read. Unless I need them to create a specific affect, I leave them out.

I don't use MORE or CON'T either.

I've never understood some writer's fascination with CUT TO:... Unless there's a harsh transition you reeeally want to emphasize, leave them out. The reader can see by the heading it's a new scene, & the director and editor know when to cut.

I looked at the script for the recent KING KONG and couldn't believe how many words were capped unnecessarily. Very distracting. Not a good sytistic choice.

I do like the bold slugs tho. I think they do make a script easier to read. It might get a bit much if you bold secondary slugs & have a bunch of them.
kgmadman at 2009-11-28 18:07:59:
I use bold not just for slugs but any major action that I would use ALL CAPS for. For skimming mostly, it highlights any of the major actions. M. Knight Shyamalan did this in the "Signs" script and I effin' loved it. It's all for function anyways so who cares.
Jeff at 2009-11-28 19:02:49:
Having read and digested the Preston Sturges library, I found he underscored and bolded his sluglines in such works as "The Lady Eve," "Christmas in July," and "Sullivan's Travels."

Because I shamelessly ape my heroes, I started doing it. It did sort of give my scripts an extra readability, I thought, and seemed the simplify the work as a whole.

However, I ultimately stopped, mostly out of fear, figuring the gatekeepers have enough reasons to slap a big red "NYET!" on my scripts, why give them extra ammo, y'know?

Sturges also wrote in a strange sort of "Sequence" style, thematically breaking his scripts up into "sequence A," "sequnce B," etc. Since he directed his own material, I suppose he could do whatever he wanted though.
Joshua James at 2009-11-28 19:10:53:
Bold my slugs, got turned onto it by another scribe a couple years ago and I love it, I do ... it looks and reads so much better ...

I don't use it for secondary slugs, just regular slugs ... which means that if you use it a lot, you have to really think, is this a secondary, or primary ...

I don't use transitions like CUT TO, any of that, either ... I use secondary headings when necessary.

But I really like bolded slugs, makes it read much better (of those pro scripts I've read who also do it).

I'm hoping it becomes a real trend ... if I remember correctly, people were also resistant to secondary headings for awhile, were they not (felt it was directing the shot)?

But me likey, very much.
Kristy @ MSP at 2009-11-28 21:13:24:
Sorry huge typo above...

I bold sluglines because I like reading bold sluglines. Sometimes when I get in the zone I forget to see the slugline and the bold makes me check up for a second before moving on. I'll even go as far to say I like reading bold and underlined sluglines lol I'm sure I'll be one of the few though
The Douche Guide at 2009-11-29 05:10:23:
thanks for your response, scott.

i only asked because i noticed a lot of the 2008 Black List scripts using the style... and i liked it.

@januaryfire: yeah, maybe it's a cheap visual cue. but isn't capitalizing IMPORTANT EVENTS the same thing? i think overuse of that is more cloying than bolded slugs could ever be.

sometimes, i'm a pretty lazy reader and i find the bolded slugs help me focus. i honestly think it reads better. and if scripts are partially based on readability, i'm thinking why the hell not?

but if the bitter script reader thinks it doesn't fly than maybe not. but you gotta admit: it seems to be trending. i'm seeing more and more of it recently.

screw it. i'm using them. i like them too much. thanks for the thoughts, guys.
januaryfire at 2009-11-29 10:15:52:
I understand the trend. Just the scripts I've seen with bolded slug lines, the bold isn't that much bolder and looks like some quirk or mistake when I read on my computer screen...maybe they come out different printed, but I haven't wanted to use so mch paper and printer toner. If the bold version of the font were thicker, maybe it would look better to me. I am coming at the whole bold issue from 15 years as a graphic designer.

Bold slugs won't stop me from reading, but they already annoy me when I start so the writing better be good to keep me interested.
itstartedwithawindmill at 2009-11-29 15:53:26:
Why add something to a script that the reader might hate? If there is an instructional reason for the boldiness or anything else, then that's another reason to dislike the script cuz it comes with instructions.

The old rule about being typed on one of those stone age typewriters still holds true for me. If you remember using typewriters, typing bold words was a bit of a pain in the butt.
DS at 2009-11-30 01:42:30:
I love CUT TOs. I love

WHITE SPACE

on a page. I use them sparingly, and it's usually for a harsh effect, but I may try BOLD to replicate the effect of CUT TOs.
itstartedwithawindmill at 2009-12-02 00:23:09:
I figured out one reason not to use bold while reading a script today. Your bold text isn't going to be so clear after a script gets copied a couple times. I'm sure you've all read scripts that have been copied multiple times. The letters start to blur and the bold text blurs most. Big bold blurry words, no thanks.
Bang2write at 2013-06-14 03:23:34:
Speaking as a script reader, I really hate bold. It makes my eyes go funny, because 9/10 the writer doesn't just leave it at the slugline, but starts putting it everywhere. That said, IF the writer does leave the bold only on the slugline and uses plenty of white space, then why not. I'm not going to throw a script out because of it (I don't throw scripts out for anything, TBH - other than font ... ie. if writers don't use Courier).