REFERENCE
REVIEWS: AMERICAN FILM SCRIPTS
RR 2004/36
American Film Scripts
Alexander Street Press, LLC
Alexandria, VA
2003
URL: http://www.alexanderstreet2.com/afsolive/
Contact publisher; both annual subscriptions and perpetual access
pricing available
Last visited July 2003
Keywords Literature, Film, Theatre
Review D01 10.1108/09504120410513366
American Film Scripts is a highly indexed full-text database
of US feature film scripts. As of the October 2003 release, the database
will contain the text of 265 scripts representing a range of films
from the earliest days of film making (such as 1903s The Great Train
Robbery) to productions as recent as last year’s Scooby Doo.
Scripts are chosen for inclusion using a variety of criteria, including
awards won, critical acclaim, and historical or sociological significance.
As a result of extensive indexing, search capabilities are numerous.
For example, detailed records for each writer contain about 10
searchable data fields such
as name, birth and death dates, ethnicity, race and place of birth. Detailed
records for each script are even more extensive, including over 25 fields
of data information such as film release date, production company,
cast, genre,
character occupation, character sexual orientation (the last two are also
provided in the detailed records for each character) and abundant
subject headings.
The database is designed as a research tool for film, literature and US culture
scholars, pop-culture aficionados, historians, and others interested in US
cinema. In-depth indexing plus full-text content allow users to construct
detailed searches. For example, it is possible to find a film
script in which a US President
is depicted on a camping trip (My Fellow Americans) or to find all the scripts
from the 1970s through the 1990s the contain scenes depicting mental illness.
This unique resource is projected to become even more useful in
the near future as plans proceed to increase to 1,000 the total number
of film scripts
available.
Plans are also in the progress to provide digitized facsimiles of the original
scripts. A useful research tool for large universities with a research
interest in film studies or popular culture.
David S. Bell
Assistant Professor, Reference Services,
Booth Library, Eastern Illinois University,
Charleston, Illinois, USA

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