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Hey Dustin. Thx for taking a look. This was kind of a late night experiment. Will definitely cut/rewrite some of the vague/cryptic stuff. May expand on it as well. But the end is supposed to be: Paul takes the offering/blood from the chalice off the table, implying he really wants to drink it. Will definitely work on it but just one those quick, weird ideas I guess.
I thought It was more interesting not to specify what they were really. To me they were a symbol of Violent, feminine power that the masculine essence has created over time. They're just turning the tables " so to speak."
Good writing. You're able to get the story across well. Didn't see much wrong at all. I'd go easy on the fades, cut to stuff and the ellipses though. To indicate the passage of time I'd use LATER or MOMENTS LATER, or whatever's most suitable for what you want to do.
You need to have the woman on the phone as (V.O.) otherwise it appears she's magicked herself into the room with him.
I just noticed you do for her last dialogue.
You need to cap either Woman or the name you give her when she first appears, even though I imagine she's the same one as was on the phone.
It varies with minor characters who appear in a script. If they don't talk or do much and have a fleeting length around then they don't need capping. But if you're not sure you're better off capping them when they first appear.
The end does seem a bit too vague. Even for one who's often as obtuse and oblique as myself. I did have a fondness for extremely obscure references in my scripts. Managed to tone this down as time went on. Otherwise I feared I may disappear up me own arse.
So I looked up some stuff on the painting. I could pretend I already knew a load. But that'd be a bit too sad.
Hmm, that didn't help much. I see from your ealier posts you have an explanation of what you were getting at. I think you'd need to put a bit more of the idea into the story. You don't have to spell it out but the reader should be able to find the meaning, or one similar from your script. At the moment I don't think there's enough in there for them to do this.
But it's good. Needs a bit more. Nevertheless, well on the way.
I was somewhat disappointed by the lack of sheep, keys and cake. But a cracker did make an appearance. That went some way to making up for their omission.
This was very well-written and I love your descriptions. You paint a very good picture with your writing. I don't have any complaints really except that it doesn't seem like a whole story. At the same time, it works. The only other thing I noticed is when you wrote:
Quoted Text
He swallows hard. Pain. Hunger. Confusion.
I get that he's been turned into a vampire (or at least that is what I'm assuming) but how will the audience know that he's hungry? I see what you did was more of an artistic move, but if you're going to describe him being hungry, I would say something along the lines of "He licks his lips in hunger as he stares intently at the photograph."
This seems like the beginning of something more and I would be interested in seeing what you would do if you ever expanded on it. It seems like a good script to use for an experimental film since it's one location and barely any dialogue.
Good job
Sean
BOO-NANA BREAD From ghosts and zombies, to witches and swamp things, this banana bread will scare you silly, and leave you wanting more!
Thanks for the read and comments. All valid and very helpful. Just have this and the pilot up and both fairly rough drafts but I totally see what you mean with the obtuse stuff. Gotta nip that. The painting thing needs some more work like you said. A bit thrown in there. Thx again. Definitely helpful. Maybe can figure out how to throw in a sheep as well.
Maybe can figure out how to throw in a sheep as well.
Oooooh. Don't tempt me.
If I didn't have a lot on I'd finish my opus "How The Rams Got Their Revenge On Roger Cake."
Alas, Time to do eludes at the mo. I did an early draft and sent it to Ken Loach's people. They sent back a very nice letter. Well, it did end with the line "Don't ever contact us again or we will inform the authorities. You have been warned." I think they were just being funny. They did point out I wasn't.
Thank you for reading. This was definitely a spur of the moment experiment I guess. Probably shows. Thanks for pointing out the hunger thing. Good advice and will use that/keep an an eye on that stuff moving forward. Totally get what you're saying.
If you have anything posted, let me know and I'll read and get back to you.
Re: 'The Death of Marat' painting - I'd personally delete the word 'infamous' - that word has negative connotations. I get the feeling you're going for highly prized as opposed to notorious in this context i.e., that it's a famous image..
Aw, we don't get Saltine crackers in Oz anymore - that took me back - not sure about using the brand name - cracker biscuit would do.
Jimi, overall you've some nice imagery here - very nice visuals however I'd stick to describing what your audience actually sees - in other words: delete 'strange wound' - that's obviously how your character feels/reacts to the wound, but the wound is just that, something he wasn't expecting to see and is horrified to see.
The way it reads it appears that Paul actually squeezes the wound re the pus and the placement of the fingers - ewe! Would he do that, and why? If he's going to do that and I get a distinct horror vibe from this then perhaps have something horrifying come from the wound i.e., save the pus for after he squeezes - or maybe something else oozes out.
I'd get rid of the SMASH TO BLACK as it's more a directorial thing and I'm not sure you need to go that far but I see what you were going for in your head, so not a big deal imh.
If he's 'lethargic and disoriented' - articulate that via images of him perhaps grabbing his head in pain, perhaps his POV - the room spinning? ... when you write: 'he stumbles' you do actually show it there, and that's what I'm getting at here. Get the images in your head onto the paper a bit more. Don't take short cuts with description. But still be economical, that's the trick.
I didn't really get what he was checking his pockets for? The 'frustration' indicates that I probably should have? I'd just go with what we can see once again, onscreen: 'He checks his pockets'
The description for the girl's 'service' could do with a little revamping imh. Just a few tweeks - however, the flavour of it is there.
'wrapping his brain for memory' I think you might mean: 'racking his brain'
'We'll call her, FIRE.' If the latter is her name, it should be capped.
'filling it with a little bit of blood' considering she's filling it I'd leave out the 'little - just give us the image of blood dripping from her arm into the cup or even running, or gushing'. Nice image.
'swipes the essence from the table' - I second Dustin's comments on this one: - perhaps he 'snatches it out of her hands' or 'grabs for the chalice' - throws the contents down his throat.
Speaking of the word: 'essence' - you use it twice - once in relation to the dripping tap (water droplet) at the top of your script, and then again in the final scene. A suggestion re the water: perhaps: 'disappears into the void/darkness/'.
I"m being picky, Jimi cause I gather you're reasonably new to this. Having said this you've evoked some really nice visuals and I could clearly picture it all taking place. There's a really effective tone to it too. Few tweaks and it'll jump off the page even more.
Jeepers, we women are evil temptresses aren't we?
P.S. I meant to add a few notes re story. As a self-contained 'short' I think this is just a little light-on. Mind you, a 'short horror' filmmaker wanting to add to his showreel could add nicely to his repertoire with this.
If you wanted to make it a little more intriguing in terms of story I'd add to this by showing some of Paul's other life - the family in pic for example - how did he get in this situation... apart from the bleeding obvious - hee hee, no pun intended? Alternatively, this could be part of a bigger story i.e., feature length.
Thanks so much for taking the time to read a relay these helpful comments. A bit new to the screenwriting world and learning a lot quickly. This site being extremely helpful for the short time I've been on here.
All your comments ring true and extremely helpful. I must admit A bit of "face-palming" going on over here. Of course noticed some of these mistakes reading after I sent It in. Hopefully learn to give a good polish/edit before throwing it out anywhere for a read. And knew right away the cryptic stuff just wasn't gonna cut it. But I think I'm getting it.
All the specific notes are very helpful. Might write some down on sticky-notes and slap em' around every room.
Glad you felt there was some good things going here. Visual and other wise. Yes. Story wise. Very Lite. Definitely thought of adding a whole preface/backstory to Paul before the motel room. May go back and try that. This was a bit a of an experiment but a good one. Learned a lot.
For what it's worth - anytime you need a read on anything send it my way.
I'm going to echo in a summary what has already been said really.
Nicely written, you have the knack for writing, just need to learn how to format scripts properly. You said you were fairly new to screenwriting so this all comes with time and practice.
The basic formatting rules can be found online, and there's some great free software out there to guide you. When writing keep in the present tense and try to describe what the audience will actually see at that point in time. A little artistic flair is fine, something that helps the reader set the scene and a way to add your own voice to the script. Just try to find the right balance so it doesn't take up too much space in the script or detracts from the story.
I sussed out the guy was turned or turning into a vampire (or that's how I read it anyway) fairly early on so there were no surprises for me, no exciting twists etc. but this reads more like a scene and you are practicing how to write, so it's fine as it is. I'd just suggest trying to challenge yourself by coming up with a beginning, middle and end; a complete story. One which leads the reader down a path they want to travel but have no idea where it leads. That's the hard part, writing styles and formats can be learned - the craft is telling a great story that people love to read. IMO anyway!
Best of luck.
Mark
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