I feel it is insulting to sound engineers and sound mixing crews who are so critical to take away this last monument and nod of thanks to their profession. No sound, no picture, yet so many forget this.
You quoted me so I'll respond.
The screenplay is not the finished product. The Oscar doesn't go to
sound mixing and sound editing based on what is written in the
screenplay. The screenplay is where the writer tells the story. How
can it be insulting to the audio team if a writer does not use uppercase
letters when writing the word "bang" in a screenplay?
In context of this discussion from 2010 it was said that readers need
sounds in uppercase in order to understand that the "bang" is coming
from the gun in the characters hand. That's what I said was slightly
insulting. Not that sound is unimportant in finished movies.
I always put all sounds in CAPITALS out of respect for their industry and for their near forgotten and overlooked profession - a respect that is so absent in todays world.
In short, it is MORALLY the right thing to do.
A writer is not showing any disrespect to the audio team when they
do not put each and every sound in their script upper case. A writer is
not being immoral if they do not use uppercase letters for sounds in
their screenplay.
The screenplay is where the story is told. It is not the place to show
respect to the audio team. And (in context) I feel the screenplay is
the place to show respect to the reader of the screenplay.
Is it morally the right thing to do to put props in uppercase? What about
set dressing? How about costumes? The art department deserves respect
too, do they not? Each department deserves respect. But the screenplay
is not the place to show that respect.