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Man of a Thousand Masks by Christopher Reid (Takeshi) - Short, Comedy - A man discovers that when he changes his avatar on his computer, it's not the only thing that changes. 22 pages - rtf, format
I just read this, Chris, and I am wondering now if this is the reason you were asking about the premise to Cameron's new project. Don't worry -- you are pretty far removed from what he was doing.
This is actually a marvelously absurd premise -- the kind where you go, "I wish I had thought of that." And you did a good job with it, too.
But I have to bust you on the format, as will most readers, I suspect. I've seen you reading stuff -- you know what it's supposed to look like -- and I am wondering why this is so far removed from the proper standards.
Anyways -- I'll leave that to the format police -- as I liked this story pretty well and would encourage readers to stick with it and see it through to its very clever conclusion despite the format.
At the very least, try to make it to the bottom of page 2 -- where you wil find a very pleasant surprise as to the direction this story will take -- and that will probably be enough to draw you along. It caught me completely off-guard, and I suspect it will catch you, too. The Hillary Swank line later is fabulous.
But you will lose some readers because of the format, Chris. There are plenty of format snobs that will open this up, take one look, and then shut it back down without even giving it a chance. I'll give you a "great job" for story, but that other issue should really be addressed before you start on something new.
But I have to bust you on the format, as will most readers, I suspect. I've seen you reading stuff -- you know what it's supposed to look like -- and I am wondering why this is so far removed from the proper standards.
I don't know about that Burt. I have four printed scripts in front of me from Simply Scripts regulars, not to mention a copy of True Romance and I can't see a huge difference between the format of them and the format of mine.
But hey, if someone can make any suggestions that will help me improve my format, I'll gladly take them on board.
I'm glad you enjoyed it, I enjoyed writing it. It was one of those stories that just fell into place really easily.
And yes this was the reason I asked about Cameron's new project. I had just started writing this when I heard that he was making a film called Avatar, so given the premise of my script, I thought I'd better look into it. Avatar would have been a great title for my script too, but ah well, he beat me to it.
Ha-ha-ha-ha! I got a kick out of that one. I can't really say much without spoiling the fun, but you've got a good story here. It works well within itself, and I really couldn't add much to it. Well done.
As the official format police, here's where that went wrong there.
1. Don't use italics or bold. 2. Use 12-point Courier (or Courier New or Courier Final Draft) font, not Times New Roman. 3. Names should be indented to 2.2 inches, not centered. 4. Wrylies should be indented to 1.6 inches, not centered. 5. Dialogue should be indented to 1 inch, and be no wider than 3 to 3.5 inches, not left justified. 6. Description should be no longer than four lines. Easy fix, though, just double space it every four lines. No loss of content, just need that double spacing.
Hope that answers the format question.
Well done on the script though. That was priceless.
I'm actually very curious as to how this got a format rating. George already explained, so I won't bother.
Anyway, this was a solid story and at times laugh out loud funny.
*Kane and Kev. Opening scene of a short script, these guys have 2 short names that start with K and it's kind of easy to get confused. *I think Eden is a pointless character. He doesn't do much except introduce the Bad Taste Ball. He also humors Kane on the phone, but that could have been done by Kev. *That Hillary Swank line has to be one of the funniest pieces of dialogue I've ever read on this site! Hilarious! *I also liked your "mask" selection. Tarantino robbing a bank, then Dakota Fanning popping up, and of course this couldn't have been complete without Chuck Norris.
Overall I enjoyed your story very much. Funny, original, well written. The only thing that hurts you is the format, but as Bert said, I'm recommending that readers give this a chance because it truly is a hilarious story. What I think you should do is clean up the formatting and make it look nice and pretty and then resubmit it.
Very impressive debut, Chris, Takeshi, whatever you like to be called. I look forward to reading some more of your shtuff
Thanks for the comments guys. I'm glad you all liked the story; the format issue has been a bit disappointing. However, Kevan was good to enough to fix it for me and I've resubmitted it. After seeing what it looks like reformatted I totally understand what you were saying, it looks heaps better now. So hopefully the new version will be up soon.
Great work, boy! Neither the wrong format of it made it bad, because it is a jewel.
As George said the dialogues are great!
I have just one comment. It is about the elements inside this nice and well written script, they are good to be inside a short story and you will have lot of people that not necessary knows SimplyScripts reading it.
Thanks Helio. It's an interesting point you raise about the wider public not knowing what Simply Scripts is. But, I think today's younger generation are pretty computer savvy and would be well versed in the use of avatars. Anyway, I don't mind making the audience work a little bit; I like films that make me work a bit. However, given the cast of characters I've got in this script, I can't ever see it being made into a short film, unless it was an animated short.
Wow! Nice one, Chris. I think you completely turned the SS script upside down. It's a script featuring SimplyScripts but not strictly about SimplyScripts nor does it exclusively feature SS members. I thought this was very clever and very funny. The highlight for me was the aftermath of Kane's Quentin Tarantino bank robbery. One thing that kind of bothered me, however, was Kane's attempt to make sense of his transformation. The reality is outrageous enough as it is but Kane's theory that he's become a shapeshifting ghost is even more so. It didn't seem realistic. I think he'd try to come up with an answer that makes more sense instead of less. Also, how is Osama Bin Ladin even able to get home after everyone recognizes him. He'd be caught in a flash, I'd think. Why not have him wearing sunglasses at first then have him take them off and have everyone recognize him? Just a thought. Other than that, an excellent SS debut. Well done.
Thanks for that James. You're probably right about the shape shifting ghost idea. Perhaps he could think that Kev punched him and he's hallucinating due to a bout of concussion. So he goes back outside to Kev and says "Hey, did you belt me before?' to which Kev could reply "Who the hell are you?,” thus confirming that he's not hallucinating.
As for Bin Laden being grabbed in a flash, I envisaged him going to the shop and being seen by women and children, not people who could grab him. I guess I could have made that clearer in the text. Alternatively, Osama could go to get his newspaper from his letterbox and get spotted by someone who calls the authorities.
Chris, I read through the script and took some notes as I went. I didn't read any comments on this script , so if I say something that's already been said, just ignore.
First off, the formatting is way off. Pick up any screenwriting book at your local bookstore and it will tell you the proper format for scripts.
In the beginning it said about 10:00 am. THis can be fixed by writing MORNING in the master scene heading. THe time of day is not important unless it is critical to the story, which I found it wasn't.
Cut back on what a character is wearing. Again, it's not really important to know what kind of clothes a character wears. If you must, just keep it to a few words.
Try adding scene descriptions, but keep them short.
Limit your paragraphs to four sentences. This is to avoid a reader to "zone out" and keeps his/hers interest.
Try using "Continuing" secondary headings. E.G. You have INT. LOUNGEROOM - DAY when it should be INT. LOUNGEROOM - CONTINUING This tells the reader or director that it's not a new day.
A master scene heading is needed for Eden's place before the INTERCUT.
A just a few minor typo's I found:
Dam is spelled Damn
I think you should get the hell OFF of my property, instead of OF
"grabs the bag FULL of money, instead of fall
Now to point out the positive.
I found this script to be very entertaining and funny. I couldn't stop laughing about the Hillary Swank bit. I also found this very clever and original. It would make a great short.
This was about as funny as something in script form can get - imagine it as a movie.
Maybe you could change the website to something neutral - that doens't exist. Like make the website name be FORUMS or something.
Towards the end it gets a bit jumpy, and a sfunny as it is, with the formatit just seems amatuerish. The writing, dialogue is fine, but fix your format and it will win one of Rapture's awards in 2007.
Thanks anti and Ben. I've already been hammered over the formatting and that's been fixed and resubmitted. Anti, I'll take your other formatting issues into account for the rewrite. Thanks again guys.
This is pretty good. It has a very good concept and pretty good execution. I’m not even getting into the format thing because it’s apparently already been worked out.
Story wise: at first I was disappointed that it was never explored as to where exactly these powers came from but abandoned that notion because it had such a sort of artsy Charlie Kaufman feel to it. As with something like Being John Malkovich, it was easy to suspend the logistics of it. And that’s a good sign. It takes good writing to do that.
I didn’t find it quite as funny as it was made out in some of the previous reviews but I’m not sure comedy was the true intention here as much as was the creativity and curiosity of it.
Of course, actually trying to film this would be near impossible unless you found good look-alikes for all the famous people who appear. As far as the story, though, it was a job well done.
I'm surprised you read it with the dodgy format. I was thinking about sending you a PM when the reformatted version was up. Anyway, it’s funny that you mentioned Being John Malkovich, I was almost going to say this is BJM meets the Twilight Zone in my logline. I'm glad you noticed the similarities between this and BJM, because like BJM I decided not to explain the logistics of it, trusting that the reader would accept that it's a farce and suspend disbelief.
As for making this into a film, I could probably make an animated short out of it, but I actually wrote it thinking it could never be made, which meant I could let my imagination run wild.