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Writes a screenplay scene in industry-standard format (slugline, action lines, dialogue) from a scene brief and character notes, ready to drop into a draft.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:scene-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Writes a screenplay scene in industry-standard format — slugline, action lines, and dialogue — from a scene brief and character notes, ready to drop into a draft.
Expands video episode outlines into visual scene-based scripts with location, atmosphere, action, dialogue, and inner monologue. Designed for downstream storyboarding.
Rewrites screenplay dialogue to improve subtext, differentiate character voices, and remove on-the-nose writing. Useful for flat or interchangeable dialogue in final drafts.
Diagnoses and repairs flat, purposeless scenes using the want/obstacle/outcome framework. Every scene must change the story's state.
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Writes a screenplay scene in industry-standard format — slugline, action lines, and dialogue — from a scene brief and character notes, ready to drop into a draft.
Required: Scene location and time of day (INT./EXT., setting, DAY/NIGHT); what must happen in the scene (the dramatic function — what changes, what is established, what is seeded); the characters present and what each one wants in this scene Optional: Character voice notes (register, verbal habits, what they will not say); where this scene falls in the story (act and beat); the preceding scene (what the audience has just seen) and following scene (where this needs to land); target length in pages; the writer's specific concerns about the scene
Industry-standard screenplay format throughout. Slugline (INT./EXT. LOCATION — DAY/NIGHT), action lines in present tense, character names centered in caps above dialogue, dialogue in sentence case. Parentheticals used sparingly — maximum one per character per scene unless essential. Target length: 1–3 pages (approximately 55–165 lines of formatted text) unless otherwise specified. No title, no page numbers, no header — scene text only, ready to paste into a screenplay document.
Location: INT. SOLICITOR'S OFFICE — DAY Scene function: First meeting between Elliot and Daniel (half-brothers). Both believe the other is the obstacle. Neither is prepared to see themselves in the other person. By the end of the scene, the audience should see the resemblance even if the characters don't. Characters:
INT. SOLICITOR'S OFFICE — DAY
A conference table. Legal pads, water glasses. BRENNAN, 60s, sits at the head of it. He has done this before.
ELLIOT, 42, enters first. Suit, no tie. He takes the chair nearest the door without looking around for a better one.
A beat. Then DANIEL, 28, enters. He stops when he sees Elliot.
They look at each other. Both of them do a version of the same thing: take in the face, file it, look away.
BRENNAN Thank you both for coming. I know this is—
DANIEL I have representation.
BRENNAN Of course.
DANIEL I wanted you to know that before we start. I'm not coming in here without options.
BRENNAN Understood.
ELLIOT (to Daniel) How old were you when you found out.
DANIEL I'm sorry?
ELLIOT About him. When did you know?
A beat. Brennan doesn't intervene.
DANIEL I always knew. My mother told me when I was seven. Why?
ELLIOT Seven.
DANIEL Is that relevant to the estate?
ELLIOT I found out eleven days ago.
DANIEL (beat) That's not my fault.
ELLIOT I know.
Silence. Brennan opens a folder.
BRENNAN The estate comprises the property at—
DANIEL Why are you looking at me like that?
ELLIOT I'm not looking at you any particular way.
DANIEL You are. You're doing this—
He stops. Presses his mouth closed. Goes formal again.
DANIEL (CONT'D) I'd like to proceed with the valuation.
BRENNAN Of course. The property at Lakeside Road has been assessed at—
ELLIOT You look like him.
The room goes quiet. Daniel doesn't answer immediately. When he does, his voice is careful.
DANIEL So do you.
Brennan finds something in his folder that requires his full attention.