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Final Draft International Version 7.0 | 
| From: Final Draft Category: Software
List Price: £187.99 Buy New: £141.90 You Save: £46.09 (25%)
New (4) from £129.99
Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 179
Platforms: Windows Nt 4, Windows Xp, Windows 2000, Macintosh, Mac Os X, Windows Me Media: CD-ROM Operating System: Macintosh Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 1.3
MPN: fd7 UPC: 603121840014 EAN: 0603121840007 ASIN: B0001XNGZ2
Release Date: April 30, 2004 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Final Straw September 10, 2008 Sarcosuchus 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Hey kids! Are you writing a script? Maybe it's a drama. Maybe it's a comedy. Maybe it's a corporate training video. Well don't worry - whatever it is, Final Draft will be able to screw it up for you. That's right - Final Draft!!! Not only is it fiddly to use, annoyingly un-intuitive and has some obstinate ideas about formatting, it's also prone to crashing or simply not saving your work every so often! And that's not all! Final Draft is also prohibitively expensive! Words cannot describe the disappointment when you first register it, only to discover it's not as good as Word!!! To use FD is to take a trip down memory lane, to a simpler, more bug-ridden time when computers were the poor cousin of electric typewriters, a novelty item that was OK to use if you wanted to play Jet Set Willy or fail to catch the Yorkshire Ripper, but not really a serious proposition if you wanted to write a screenplay. And of course, because of pressure from various "writers", who think that software equals creativity, and can't be bothered typing out a character's name more than twice, FD is now the industry standard, menaing that reviews are superfluous and you have to buy it. Have fun!!!!!
Great software, shame about the activation December 3, 2007 Mark Grant (London, UK) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I have to say I disagree with many of the other reviews here; I've written several scripts using Final Draft 7 and, on the whole, I love it. The first release was buggy, but those bugs are long gone. But... I only love it when it works. Final Draft 6 used the CD as a 'key', and required it to be in the CD drive to run. That was a bit annoying, but I just left it in the CD drive all the time and forgot about it. Final Draft 7, on the other hand, forces 'activation' on you. You can 'activate' it on two PCs, and then it runs. It won't run on any PC which isn't 'activated'. Which, in theory, is better. Unfortunately in practice it's awful. I installed it on my laptop a few months ago and a few weeks later it told me it wasn't activated. I reactivated it, and then a few weeks later I wanted to activate it on my desktop system (from which I'd previously deactivated it while the PC was being shipped across the Atlantic). It told me I'd used up my activations. I then had to spend fifteen minutes on the phone to California to get them to allow me to use the software I'd paid for on my desktop system. Which was annoying, but it was OK for a while since I then had it running on both systems with no problems. Until a few days ago when I tried to run it on my laptop and... guess what... it's not activated again. Now, I have no desire to do the phone hold runaround to California again to get the software I've paid for running on my PC because it randomly decides that it's not the same laptop that it was previously activated on. Fortunately I've been able to go back to Final Draft 6, but I will be very wary of buying any future versions of the software, and I really can't recommend it to anyone while it forces compulsory activation _WHICH DOESN'T WORK_.
More of the same September 13, 2007 Lenny (London) 14 out of 15 found this review helpful
I have been using Final Draft since version 4 and was one of the writers who nagged the BBC into approving it as a submission format, after becoming frustrated with their insistence on MS Word. FD is still better than Word for screenplays - what isn't? - but IMHO it is not the best screenwriting program. I have upgraded FD twice since then to v5 and v6 and have recently been trying a demo of 7. I have to say I have found nothing new, useful, or greatly improved in version 7. A lot of the revisions added useless gimmicks like having the computer read your script back to you (as if a synthetic voice could ever make any script sound remotely interesting) as well as a handful of frustrating bugs. Back in v4, when FD was small and personal and you could still have conversations with the programmers I suggested adding a few basic wp functions useful for badly-self-taught typists, such as correcting transposed letters - I'm still waiting. Three years ago a script editor introduced me to Movie Magic, aka Screenwriter 2000, and today that's the one I use for all my TV scripts. It just works better than FD and is far less buggy. It has commonsense features like the ability to change the case of a highlighted block simply by pressing f12, rather than faffing about with the mouse. Note that FD just switches the case - Peter becomes pETER - but MM changes the whole word to PETER. Thats the sort of common-sense detail that makes MM easier to use than FD. Again, if in the middle of dialogue you type '(' Move Magic recognises you are going to a parenthetical and automatically adds a carriage return. After all these years and versions Final Draft 7 still doesn't! MM recognises names and capitalises them automatically, or puts them into uppercase if you like. It's just smarter than FD and less buggy. Some people grumble that Movie Magic hasn't been upgraded for years - but that's because it works fine as it is. Why fall for FD's marketing and go for the latest version, when all it does is change the design of the buttons on the menu bar? I have to say that I don't write in collaboration with anyone and so I cannot pass judgment on Collabowriter, which I think comes bundled with FD. If you have a writing partner who can't be there in person it might be useful (presuming it works.) If you're just writing a straight movie or TV script go for Movie Magic. Look for a cheap copy of FD 6 somewhere, so when you've written the script in MM you can dump it into FD for submission, as thanks to early adopters like me Final Draft is an industry standard now. The problem is in my opinion FD has used that status as an excuse to sit back on its laurels and focus on marketing rather than product improvement.
Brilliant upgrade September 4, 2007 James Beggs (Scotland) 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
Have been writing professionally now for four years and have to use final draft for the BBC amongst others. I upgraded to macs recently and, therefore, had to buy FD7. I searched high and low for 6 as this is the one I've been using for quite some time and I had heard and read a lot of bad reports about 7. Not joy with 6 so I bit the bullet... And I'm glad I did... It is excellent in every way and the scene card improvement is second to none. I'm not going to go into detail as I only got it yesterday but, suffice to say, I honestly think some of the reviewers here are too hard to please. Yes, there may be faults, but there always is in these things. Give it time before you start giving it a bad rep. 5 stars.
Only if you have to... August 7, 2007 Brian Levine 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
The only reason you would use this software is if you have to because everyone else on your project uses it. I prefer Movie Magic, but soon I'm sure we'll all be using something else...
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