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Another child with cancer story. I have the same thought here as I did with the other one I read, how come these children are alone in their rooms? Usually if a kid is fatally ill, parents, relatives, friends, whatever take turns to be with the child. They are usually not left alone.
Just when I thought Laura was a bitch, Jessie turns out to be a MAJOR one.
Okay, I don't know, maybe this is something families actually have to deal with nowadays, but in the end, I hated everyone but Jake.
Good job, just didn't make me feel very good at all.
On page 1 you mention cell phone buttons. Is this like a flip phone? This isn't a big deal or anything, just something I noticed.
Also on page 1, you first refer to the 30 year old woman as Laurice, then later she Laura. Also, with the ages you mentioned, this would mean that Laura gave birth to Jessie when she was 13. I'm not sure if that was intentional or not.
Typo on page 3, you wrote laying instead of playing.
The emotion from Howard on page 4 is great.
Typo on page 5, you wrote slept instead of spelled.
On page 6, "are you kidding me" should be capitalized.
The escalating of the anger was really well done. And I loved how it ended.
Ooh, too saccharine with the Hollywood sentimentality at the end, and sorry to say I found the content of this one a little off. He's going to discuss the kid's life (5 years of it) and how much it'll cost them, and in front of the kid?! The wife needs to dump this guy straight away. The family dynamic here is really screwed up so you portrayed that very well, just not my thing, sorry.
Quite a few typos too but that's often to be expected if you're under the gun with an OWC deadline.
Now that's a dysfunctional family. Seemed a bit far fetched though and a cheesy conclusion.
What I didn't get was the doctor giving Jake 1-5 years but in the next breath tells them that he could recover??? Even after that info the step mum wants to dispose of him as an inconvenience? To sure up funds for her daughter's uni? That's some f'ed up family, so well done in building that dynamic in the story.
Another typo I noticed was 'what' instead of 'wait' on pg 3
A family bent on silent accusation finds a way to address the elephant in the (hospital) room of their terminally ill child. Touching premise and, good use of the theme.
Although the story flows well on page, the numerous typos make it appear rushed and forced me to decipher some of the dialog more than a few times. Still, a very decent effort for this challenge.
Lots of scrabble stories going around, spelling out feelings with tiles. This one was heartfelt in the end, but it seems a but odd for them to go there with that kind of conversation in his son's room. Totally irresponsible of those parents, but maybe not all that unrealistic. Money issues, I would guess, are the number one reason for failed relationships. But you did a good job at making Jessie totally despicable, which I think prompted a very good comeback from the father.
Another Scrabble entry, not bad using an array of emotions of a family split in half. Strange time to bring the emotions but for me it worked. I guess it was coming to that.
Good job... quite a few typos though but it is the OWC so I look past that.
Hospital elevators are not normally small suffocating spaces, in terms of elevators they tend to be larger than most because they have to get patients beds into them.
There a LOT of typo's, these quickly become quite distracting, definitely worth another polish. There's also some add phrasing e.g. dead empty of people.
As far as we know the cancer hasn�t spread at all - I'd kinda hope the Dr treating my son would know that!
The other scrabble scripts have been a bit forced with their word usage, but death and bitch seem much more natural in this one and that sequence works well.
Ending, not really feeling it, the tone of the previous bit was dark comedy, you could keep this going and have his final word as euthanasia or suicide ... just a thought.
Something here, but not working for me as it stands.
I'm interested in reading animation, horror, sci fy, suspense, fantasy, and anything that is good. I enjoy writing the same. Looking to team with anyone!
This started pretty good and was ok right up to when the arguing starts. Maybe if we have seen a few words go down before the accusations begin flying as it escalated a bit too quick.
Writing was good with a few typos ( small on mister). Was prolly hurried through deadline pressure and don't we all know about that!
The margins and formatting here looks off, I would use some different software if I were you.
I would suggest adding some subtlety to the characters' actions and their dialogue. Things explode very quickly and much of what they say is on the nose.
IMHO none of the characters behaved in a very believable way and it didn't really work for me. Good try though.
This one raises a point that is very real. It's why so many second marriages involving stepchildren have trouble or end in divorce. The various dynamics (eg., "you love your own child more than mine") never completely go away. I easily see a situation like this developing, even if only in thought and not explicitly expressed. In most cases, it probably wouldn't happen in front of the poor cancer victim. Nonetheless, for purposes of the script, the writer chose to play it out right there via the game as a means of unleashing long-simmering resentments and jealousies.
Touching story but full of misspellings, lots of on the nose dialogue, some format issues.
This script could do with some more subtly. Show don't tell. For example, when the mom and dad fight over mounting bills with the Dr., instead of coming out and saying something along the lines of "we can't pay for this," maybe have the mom going over a stack of bills nervously, or on the phone with creditors. Gives some extra insight into your charterers and makes them more believable. The on the nose dialogue really hurts here as there is a lot of emotion to be explored and you cut yourself short by having it seem so wooden.
But a touching idea and a very sad story. This could easily get some tears flowing if you go all out on tugging our heartstrings.