Submissions Policy

The film industry traditionally operates under a strict policy of not accepting unsolicited material. We take a different view.

We believe great work can come from anywhere—and that writers deserve to be heard, respected, and protected.

For that reason, we do accept unsolicited screenplay and script submissions, provided your work has been registered prior to submission with the Writers Guild of America (WGA) Registry.

Registering your screenplay establishes a dated record of authorship, documenting when your work was completed and helping protect your material in a clear, non-adversarial way. This allows us to review submissions responsibly while respecting your creative ownership.

Once submitted, selected projects may be considered for development and packaging, including preparation for presentation to artists, studios, producers, and production companies.

Required Before Submission

Please register your work with the WGA Registry before submitting it to us:
👉 https://www.wgawregistry.org/register.aspx

You may also choose to register your work with the Library of Congress, U.S. Copyright Office.
While WGA registration documents authorship, it does not replace copyright registration, which primarily documents ownership and rights. Both forms of registration can serve as legal evidence if required. For specific copyright questions, we recommend contacting the Library of Congress directly.

Why Registration Matters

When you register your script before submitting it to contests, agents, managers, producers—or to us—you create a dated, verifiable record of authorship. In the event of unauthorized use, the WGA Registry can produce this material as evidence should legal action ever be initiated.

In short:
You stay protected. We stay ethical. Great work gets a chance to move forward.

Submissions – Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. While much of the film industry maintains a policy of not accepting unsolicited material, we do accept submissions—with one important requirement.

All scripts and screenplays must be registered prior to submission.

Registration creates a dated record of authorship, showing when your work was completed and establishing your claim to the material.

This protects you as the writer and allows us to review submissions responsibly, without legal ambiguity or risk to either party.

We require registration with the Writers Guild of America (WGA) Registry before submitting to us.

Register here:
👉 https://www.wgawregistry.org/register.aspx

No. WGA registration documents authorship, not ownership.

You may also register your work with the Library of Congress, U.S. Copyright Office, which primarily documents copyright ownership and rights. Both registrations create legal evidence that may be used in court, but they serve different purposes.

For specific copyright questions, we recommend contacting the Library of Congress directly.

Registering your script provides a verifiable, time-stamped record of your authorship.

If unauthorized use were ever alleged, the WGA Registry may produce the registered material as evidence in support of your claim.

All submissions are reviewed internally.

Selected projects may be considered for development and packaging, which can include preparing the material for presentation to:

  • Artists
  • Studios
  • Producers
  • Production companies

Submission does not guarantee selection, representation, or production.

No. We do not review or accept unregistered material under any circumstances.

We believe strong ideas deserve a fair opportunity—and that writers should feel respected, protected, and understood.

Requiring registration allows us to accept submissions ethically while safeguarding both creators and collaborators.

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