Screenplay Coverage Comparison

AIScriptReader vs ScriptBook

ScriptBook has historically served studios and financiers with enterprise predictive script analytics. AIScriptReader is built for individual writers — coverage in minutes for $39.

Side-by-Side Comparison

What you get from AIScriptReader versus ScriptBook.

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DimensionAIScriptReaderScriptBook
Target userIndividual screenwriters, indie filmmakers, producers, and contest readers.Studios, financiers, and production companies — historically positioned as an enterprise script-analysis tool.
Pricing modelPay per report: $39 single coverage, $78 combo. No account commitment beyond signup.Enterprise / B2B pricing — typically not publicly listed. Contact for quotes via official site.
What you getStructured human-readable coverage report with logline, synopsis, characters, plot analysis, themes, market potential, and recommendations.Predictive analytics outputs focused on commercial potential, audience reception, and box-office indicators.
TurnaroundMinutes from upload to finished report.Varies by engagement type — check the official site for current service details.
Use case fitRevising a screenplay, preparing for submission, evaluating a draft as a producer or reader.Greenlight decisions at the financier or studio level — assessing scripts as portfolio assets.
AccessibilitySign up, upload, get a report. No sales call, no annual contract.Typically requires direct contact for access and pricing.

ScriptBook details based on the service's public-facing product information; for current pricing and feature changes, see the official site.

Different Audiences, Different Tools

ScriptBook and AIScriptReader both fall under the umbrella of AI script analysis, but they have historically served different audiences. ScriptBook positioned itself as an enterprise tool for studios, financiers, and production companies looking for predictive insight into whether a script is likely to succeed commercially. AIScriptReader is built for individual writers, indie filmmakers, and small producers who want a structured coverage report on their own draft.

That distinction shapes everything else. Enterprise tools tend to optimize for portfolio decision-making — give me a score, give me a recommendation, help me decide which of 200 scripts to pursue. Writer tools optimize for craft feedback — tell me what is working in my draft, what is not, and what to revise. They are answering different questions, even when the underlying analysis touches similar territory.

What AIScriptReader Delivers for $39

An AIScriptReader coverage report is built for a writer's eyes. It opens with a logline analysis and story overview, then walks through a full synopsis, character breakdowns with each character's function in the story, a structural plot analysis, themes and motifs, strengths and weaknesses with specific examples, market potential, and concrete revision recommendations.

The combo report adds development notes — a longer-form set of notes structured around overall impression, strengths and weaknesses, scene-by-scene selection of the most consequential scenes with detailed analysis, scoring across multiple dimensions, and a recommendations and summary section. The combo is $78. Together that is roughly the price of an entry to a single mid-tier screenplay contest, and you can run the same script through it again after revisions.

When Enterprise Tools Make Sense

If you are evaluating dozens or hundreds of scripts as part of a financing or production decision, the enterprise predictive-analytics model that ScriptBook represents has real advantages: it can score and rank scripts at scale, it can integrate with portfolio systems, and it gives finance-grade outputs framed for decision-makers above the writer level.

But if you are a writer working on your own draft, that model is mostly noise. You do not need a portfolio ranking — you need a coverage report on this script that tells you what to fix. That is what AIScriptReader is built to deliver, at a price that lets you keep using it across drafts.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is ScriptBook still available for individual writers?

ScriptBook has historically positioned itself as an enterprise B2B tool for studios and financiers. For current availability and access to individual writers, refer to the official site. AIScriptReader is explicitly built for individual writers — sign up, upload, get a report.

How much does AIScriptReader cost compared to enterprise tools?

AIScriptReader is $39 per single coverage report or $78 for a combo (coverage plus development notes). Enterprise script-analytics platforms typically use annual or per-project enterprise pricing that is orders of magnitude higher and is not publicly listed. For most individual writers, the enterprise price point is out of scope.

What does an AIScriptReader report contain?

Logline, synopsis, character breakdowns, plot analysis, themes and motifs, strengths and weaknesses, market potential, and recommendations. The combo report adds development notes covering scenes selection, scene-by-scene analysis, scores, and an action-oriented summary.

Can I use AIScriptReader for multiple revisions of the same script?

Yes — and most writers do. The pay-per-report model means each revision pass is its own $39 transaction with no subscription commitment. Running a fresh report after each major revision is a cost-effective way to confirm that fixes landed without paying enterprise pricing.

Is my script confidential?

Yes. Scripts are processed only to generate your report. They are not shared, listed publicly, or used as training data. Your draft is yours alone.

Try AIScriptReader Today

Pay-per-report pricing, professional AI coverage in minutes, and no subscription. Get a full report for $39 or a combo for $78.