A script is a document describing the narrative and dialogue of a comic book in detail. It is the comic book equivalent of a Television teleplay or a film screenplay.
In comics, a script may be preceded by a plot outline, and is almost always followed by page sketches drawn by a comics artist and inker, succeeded by the colorist and letterer stages. There are no prescribed forms of comic scripts, but there are two dominant styles in the mainstream comics industry, the full script (commonly known as "DC Comics style") and the plot script (or "Marvel house style").Jones, Steven Philip. "On Writing Comics", Accessed Nov. 28, 2008.
The creator of a script is known as a comics writer.
Peter David described his specific application of the full script method: "I break down each page on a panel by panel basis and label them as PANEL A, PANEL B, and so on. Then I describe what's in each panel, and then do the dialogue, numbering the balloons. I designate the panels with letters and the word balloons with numbers so as to minimize confusion for the letterer".David, Peter. "WHAT’CHA WANNA KNOW?", peterdavid.net, October 21, 2003 In addition to writing the scripts, Jim Shooter drew layouts for the artist in his early work for DC.
Comics historian Mark Evanier writes that this "new means of collaboration . . . was born of necessity—Stan was overburdened with work—and to make use of Jack's great skill with storylines. . . . Sometimes Stan would type up a written plot outline for the artist. Sometimes, not".Mark Evanier. Kirby: King of Comics (Harry N. Abrams, New York, 2008), p. 112 As comic-book writer-editor Dennis O'Neil describes, the Marvel method "requires the writer to begin by writing out a plot and adding words when the penciled artwork is finished. . . .In the mid-sixties, plots were seldom more than a typewritten page, and sometimes less", while writers in later times "might produce as many as twenty-five pages of plot for a twenty-two page story, and even include in them snatches of dialog. So a Marvel Method plot can run from a couple of paragraphs to something much longer and more elaborate".O'Neil, Dennis. "Write Ways: An Unruly Anti-Treatise", chapter in Dooley, Michael, and Steven Heller, eds., The Education of a Comics Artist: Visual Narrative in Cartoons, Graphic Novels, and Beyond (Allworth Communications, 2005, ); p. 187
The Marvel method was in place with at least one artist by early 1961, as Lee described in 2009 when speaking of his and Ditko's "short, five-page filler strips ... placed in any of our comics that had a few extra pages to fill", most prominently in Amazing Fantasy but even previously in Amazing Adventures and other "pre-superhero Marvel" science-fiction/fantasy anthology titles.
I'd dream up odd fantasy tales with an O. Henry type twist ending. All I had to do was give Steve a one-line description of the plot and he'd be off and running. He'd take those skeleton outlines I had given him and turn them into classic little works of art that ended up being far cooler than I had any right to expect.Stan Lee, "Introduction", in Yoe Craig, The Art of Ditko (IDW Publishing, January 2010), , , p. 9The October 2018 issue of DC Comics' in-house previews magazine, DC Nation, featured a look at the creative process that writer Brian Michael Bendis and artists Ryan Sook, Wade von Grawbadger and Brad Anderson employed on Action Comics #1004, which included pages of Bendis' script that were broken down panel by panel, albeit without dialogue."Breaking Down a Page", DC Nation #5 (December 2018), pp 6-7. DC Comics (Burbank, California).
Advantages of the Marvel method over the full script method that have been cited by creators and industry professionals include:
Cited disadvantages include:
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