My Secret Formula for Breaking-In as a Screenwriter

CJ Walley
11 min readOct 9, 2019
Photo by Felix Mittermeier on Unsplash

You see it every day on the forums, how do I break in? What’s the Goldilocks porridge of scripts that will guarantee success? What do I need to create that magic bullet? Who do I need to talk to to make it all happen? What is Hollywood looking for? DEAR GOD, PLEASE TELL ME WHAT THIS CRAZY TOWN IS LOOKING FOR!?!? I empathise with this dilemma and, in this article, I’m going to outline what I feel is a genuine strategy toward getting your foot in the door as a working screenwriter.

I’ve always professed that I don’t believe there’s a magic formula to breaking into screenwriting. There’s just never been enough data for me to see any pattern that suggests one route over another and I’ve done a ton of reading and research on the subject. Serendipity plays a huge part since the main factors that cause industry members and writers connect are either subjective (they like your voice) or logistical (they find you convenient). In the more recent years, I’ve suggested staying unwaveringly close to our true artistic voice and writing shoestring budget single location specs in the hope of aligning with an industry member with similar taste. After all, this was how I got my own first feature script option.

This was until I myself got swept up unexpectedly into the film world and whisked over to Los Angeles to see inside the sausage machine. As…

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CJ Walley
CJ Walley

Written by CJ Walley

Screenwriter | Film Producer | Founder of Script Revolution & Rebelle Rouser | Author of Turn & Burn

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