the three-act structure, loglines, and basic formatting — perfect if you're still figuring out why acts matter. From there they branch into a 'Feature Screenplay Masterclass' focused on act breaks, pacing, and rewriting, and a 'TV Writers' Room & Pilot Craft' course that teaches writers how to write a pilot, craft series bibles, and collaborate in a writers' room setting.
Beyond those pillars, Mentorboxx offers targeted workshops: 'Spec Script Workshop' with group feedback cycles, 'Dialogue & Character Lab' that isolates voice and subtext, and genre-specific deep-dives for comedy, thriller, sci-fi, and horror. They also have an 'Adaptation' module for turning novels or true stories into screenplays and a 'Showrunning & Production Essentials' course that covers budgeting, scheduling, and what producers actually look for. Practical features include live Q&A sessions, guest lectures from working showrunners, script coverage with notes, and optional one-on-one mentorships.
What I like most is how they combine craft with the business side: 'Pitching & Packaging' teaches pitch decks and logline hooks, while 'Career Clinic' covers submissions, festivals, and finding representation. If you want to
come out with a polished pilot or a festival-ready feature, mix a craft course with the workshop and the pitch clinic — I did something similar and felt a lot more confident pitching my spec after their feedback.