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My statement was about me, how I came to discover I was meant to be a screenwriter, and what I hoped to accomplish through the program and beyond. It opened with an anecdote that conveyed the recurring theme of the statement, and was revisited in the end.
It was more of a story than anything else, but I didn't used script dialogue or format, I wrote it "straight," as you say.
I don't know what they'd think of you doing it the way that you suggest. My opinion? If you're writing in a non-traditional style to get noticed or stand out, then don't bother. If it's just the way you write, then go for it.
For the record, I was accepted to UCLA's screenwriting program last year with my Statement. I also used it with minor tweaks for USC and AFI, where I was bumped off both waitlists.
I don't say this to boast, but rather to demonstrate that the "straight" statement worked for at least one person.
I hope this was helpful and wish you the best of luck!
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| Posts: 804 | Location: USC | Registered: March 11, 2007 |    |
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Freshman
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By way of counterpoint, let me offer that I wrote something very weird indeed for UCLA.
See, I somehow managed to put off writing the stupid statement until the day of the deadline (shut up, I'm an artist). So when the Big Day arrived, I tried vomiting forth various approaches in a heated state of panic, with the predictably miserable results. Something--delirium, coffee, desperation--convinced me that this very *act,* or the malleability of purpose it exhibited, was of the deepest profundity. Whatever.
Anyway, I ended up taking the various scraps I'd written out of the garbage, typed them up, arranged them in reverse chronological order, wrote a little introduction about the anthropology of waste, and sent it in. I ended with an unedited transcription of the brainstorming notes I had made:
"why do you really want to do this? make a difference chance to focus, COMMUNITY, a huge debt to the movies stop being a goddam dilettante, california california california"
They let me in.
--IA
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| Posts: 93 | Location: New York, NY | Registered: December 18, 2007 |    |
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Freshman

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I think you can stick to your particular writing style, but at the same time adjust to the format. Mine was creative and slightly idiosyncratic, but also had a structure that nailed down systematically the points I wanted to project.
I probably wrote the gist of it in about a day and then spent a month and a half going back and editing, cutting, editing, cutting - but that's my workflow.
It did use literary devices eg. metaphor, imagery, analogy, however I stayed away from dialogue and hubris.
I wouldn't recommend going absolutely straight and formal. I think you need to give at least some of your personality to stand out. But this can be done in so many ways. I have to say, by the end , even though I edited it god knows how many times, it felt very natural to read. Who knows. Take a chance.
Best of luck, Daniel
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| Posts: 36 | Location: Beijing, China... Soon LA | Registered: May 17, 2008 |    |
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