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SimplyScripts Screenwriting Discussion Board    One Week Challenge    February 2011 One Week Challenge  ›  Revenge of a Sea Witch - Feb 2011 OWC Moderators: Grandma Bear
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  Author    Revenge of a Sea Witch - Feb 2011 OWC  (currently 3134 views)
Don
Posted: February 26th, 2011, 11:56am Report to Moderator
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So, what are you writing?

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Revenge of a Sea Witch by Henry Pierrepoint - Short - Two seafaring thieves pick the wrong person to rob.

A February 2011 One Week Challenge script. - pdf, format


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wannabe
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 12:52pm Report to Moderator
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I really liked these brothers.  Even though they were criminals, I felt sympathy for them and that's quite an accomplishment in only 10 pages.  

Great description of the fog rolling in, nice tension there.  

I liked this story.  I think there could have been a tad more info on why the sea witch was somehow attached to the man they killed.  For me that was vague and should have been explained a little more.  All in all it was a cool story with characters I cared about.  Nice work.

Nitpicky Stuff:

“Any trace of air movement had ceased well over an hour before and the normally turbulent sea had become glassy calm.” – unfilmable description.  How do we know what it normally looks like or what it looked like an hour ago?  Be careful of these types of unfilmable statements in your narrative:  “A sudden flush of utter vulnerability courses through his body.”” he seems to lose all sense of time and distance.”” He feels as though he has walked a mile without reaching his destination.”” His mind churns with the possibilities of what he has just touched. Deep down, he hopes – he prays - that his brother had become so frightened that he had lost control of his bladder.” – you can’t tell us what people are thinking and feeling.  You have to show us somehow.  That’s one of the things that makes screenwriting so challenging.

You have a lot of “ings”.  try to keep those to a minimum.  “After tightening a rope at port side, he joins Sig at stern.”  Maybe—He tightens a rope at port side then joins Sig at stern.

Why aren’t your pages numbered? And you’re missing FADE IN and FADE OUT.
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bert
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 1:14pm Report to Moderator
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I liked this one alright.

Some of the passages were wasted and unnecessary, such as telling us what happened to air movements hours ago, or what Orren might be hoping and praying for.  Losing some of those overtly descriptive passages that offer nothing visual would tighten this up a bit.

The tension on the boat is good enough, but I was disappointed by the end.  I kept expecting some late "Tales from the Crypt" sort of moment where the ultimate fate of these men is revealed to us -- but instead got a lady on a hill, which did not do it for me.

When Barber says, "Now is not the time, son", I was like, "Um…yeah, it is."  If not now, when?  

So this one does not find itself at the top or the bottom.  It is a solid entry that lands somewhere in the middle.


Hey, it's my tiny, little IMDb!
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DarrenJamesSeeley
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 1:38pm Report to Moderator
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The FADE IN police are going to come after you...

In any event, let's get on with it.


Quoted Text
moon (light)...purple hue.

First time for everything. Usually moonlight is rather pale, and movie moonlight is sometimes light blue. But purple...hokey-doke. Could be supernatural stuff, I'll let it slide.

Sig should drop the "Orr" of his dialog, p1. I know his buddy's Orrin- but it still reads odd. They are brothers, and may have a shorthand speech, but I'm tempted to wonder if there are any oars on the boat. Just me I 'spose, "Orr"--it just does not sound right. That's all. Sig calls him Orr a few times as the scrript goes on, but as I re-read the line, I could drop the Orr and lose nothing.

I was a bit worried about some of the early exposition, a wee bit of it seemed forced (to me, anyway) but the mood is set, so it mildly works.

Then, WHOOSH  p6- the author starts getting Wordy, second guessing what is seen:


Quoted Text
Silhouetted by the light, someone - or something - is standing
within.

He turns his head toward the stern and listens
for something – anything – but the low drone of the motor drowns
out all sound.


A Silhouette would take on the form of what object, be it a person or thing is there. It cannot be both; the 'something-anything" isn't needed because the motor drowns out everything else.


Quoted Text
He feels as though he has walked a mile without reaching his
destination.

He hopes – he prays - that his brother had become so
frightened that he had lost control of his bladder.


Un-visual inner state of being. And did he piss himself, or did he hope his brother did?

Some diaalog spills over onto the following page but with no CHARACTER (CONT) above it.

All in all, not bad for a OWC, but the piece falls apart for me halfway though because of the odd choice to go internal and not external. You might want to keep an eye out for that sort of thing.






-DjS





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Electric Dreamer
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 2:30pm Report to Moderator
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Good on ya for entering the fray commonly known as the OWC.
This one has a promising atmosphere, but it's mired by unfilmables and exposition.
The leads seemed pretty timid for thieves and wayward killers.
The dialogue foretold everything so no chance of any surprises here.
I was bummed we didn't get to see the gruesome death throes.
No one was impaled on a mast or strangled with a pocket watch chain. Alas.
But you did manage a consistent narrative which is more than some entries. Kudos.

E.D.


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screenrider
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 4:32pm Report to Moderator
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This one fell flat for me.   A tough read, very little payoff.   I can tell you put a lot of work into it creatively-speaking, though, so good job on that.   Some of the decriptions need to be trimmed.  Congrats on completing the challenge.  Not an easy task.
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leitskev
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 5:20pm Report to Moderator
Of The Ancients


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Straightforward story. Would like to see a twist, something different. Or maybe something to make one think of this if they find themselves at sea in a small boat.

The gypsy comment didn't fully match up. There really wasn't a reason for them to fear a sea witch based on that. Maybe create some reason for them to be afraid. If the witch lives on a local idland, seems they would know of her, and maybe her husband. If they then knew it was the witches husband, they could be struggling to get to the shore as fast as they could.

Maybe could describe the killings a little. The witch is pissed, maybe she'll mess with them.

But there is something here to work with. Brothers at sea, crooks with a conscience, an island witch. Keep working on it.  Decent first draft.
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grademan
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 5:43pm Report to Moderator
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Predictable yet solid story * over did it on descriptions like “the light from the full moon is now a memory” * don’t beat the reader with the just desserts the brothers got * interesting how two sea men didn’t see the fog coming until surrounded - must have been the purple haze from the moon * several parts of this would play well on film
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Dreamscale
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 7:37pm Report to Moderator
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Oh man...no, no, no...so many problems going on here.  I'm not even sure where to begin, but I'll try.

Your title is God Awful.  Maybe you ran out of time and had to throw something up, but any other excuse is unacceptable.

You start out writing in the wrong tense ("Any trace of air movement had ceased well over an hour before and the normally turbulent sea had become glassy calm.").  Scripts are written in the present tense...always.

So many unfilmables everywhere.  So much crazy novelistic, overly detailed prose.  So little story.

Just didn't work in any way, sorry to say.
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c m hall
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 7:49pm Report to Moderator
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I like the story, I think you create great atmosphere and nervous, interesting characters in the 2 brothers.  There's really too much inner turmoil and unspoken emotions and FOG for this to work as a short film, I think.  Good story, though.
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Ryan1
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 7:56pm Report to Moderator
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One major problem I had with this script is that you don't show us one of the most important parts of the story:  the murder of the old man.  These brothers talked and talked about it, but if you had started your script with that scene, you wouldn't have had to use all that page space on their dialogue.  You could have shown us the look on the old man's face and the brothers' reaction.

So, a big part of the story was missing, IMO.  We never understand the connection to the sea witch because we never got to meet the old man, who maybe could have spoken some parting words as a warning to the brothers.

This script did have some good atmosphere, but just not enough substance for me.
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Sandra Elstree.
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 10:08pm Report to Moderator
Of The Ancients


What if the Hokey Pokey, IS what it's all about?

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I like the title. I like the setting on the boat and the fog rolling in.

Here:  

ORREN
You knew damn well what you were
getting yourself into, brother. This ain't an honest man’s trade.

SIG
But it didn't need to end like that.

*I didn't know what the characters were talking about.

Good for you for completing the challenge.

Sandra



A known mistake is better than an unknown truth.
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Ledbetter
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 10:25pm Report to Moderator
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Okay,
Not a bad story. The talk back and forth felt a little forced for me. Where you lost me was when this script went into 2 straight pages of action and description.

On and on it went and by time it was done, so was I.

You have to break that stuff up. Give it to us in bits and pieces, not by the slab.

Shawn.....><


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khamanna
Posted: February 27th, 2011, 11:57pm Report to Moderator
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They killed an old man for two coins but why? Were these some kind of special coins? And why the old man took the coins when he boarded the boat with them.

The witch and I assume it's the old man's wife knew they would be on the boat killing her husband? Otherwise how she would know what they were doing and avenge his death?

I'm asking too many questions perhaps but this left me with questions.

Also, for some reason I never felt for the killers. Although maybe I'm not even supposed to fill for them but since these are your main characters.

The old lady's revenge was a good twist however, somewhat cool - a wife turns out to be a sea witch.... It's just it was a bit unexpected for me.
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stevie
Posted: February 28th, 2011, 4:07pm Report to Moderator
Of The Ancients



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This had a good feel to it - challenge wise - but there was a fair bit of clutter in the writing.
Too much intro and then exposition.

The formatting was fine but you need to cut about 4 pages from it, to make it tighter.

Nice effort though



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