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Well, that was entertaining. Decent banter that wasn't too tiresome. It kept me reading to see where it was going. I had a pretty good feeling where it was headed so not too much of a reveal.
Question - The protestors on TV were yelling MOS? What's that?
Pretty okay writing here. Page one was numbered but I don't really care or understood why that's a 'rule' anyway.
Did the fact that the vampire is neutered have any bearing on the story? Wasn't sure if I missed something there.
The end saved this piece! I didn't see that coming, lol. So, good job on that! Until the end though, it read like a one sided political piece with no counter argument. My final thought on this is great job! I have nothing else to add.
Loved the twist! I thought for sure I was reading some delusional, deep seated ramblings of the writer. Fortunately, this was not the case, and I actually went back to re-read so I could "be in on it". Really fun concept. I could easily see this being expanded beyond a short film.
My only issue is in regards to the character of Stephan. He felt slightly too cartoonish. Some of the descriptions of him twisting his head to the side, wiping his entire face with his hands, pounding the desk in an exaggerated fashion... it caused me to picture an over-actor rather than the character himself. I think you can make his descriptions a bit more subtle and still get the point across. For instance, he doesn't need to both "violently grab" the remote and "angrily snap" the television to life. One of those two would suffice. Hope that makes sense.
Overall, an interesting read with a great concept and twist.
Well, that was certainly different. The ending was not what I was expecting, so good job throwing the hook on at the end. I was kind of hoping something would happen, because Stephen’s droning on about his situation was starting to get a bit tedious.
This is nicely written, but I think could do with a trim. We get Stephen’s point pretty early on, so eliminate some of that back and forth with him and Julie and move on to the ultimate reveal a bit sooner and I think you would have a winner here. Good effort and best of luck.
Some of my scripts:
Bounty (TV Pilot) -- Top 1% of discoverable screenplays on Coverfly I'll Be Seeing You (short) - OWC winner The Gambler (short) - OWC winner Skip (short) - filmed Country Road 12 (short) - filmed The Family Man (short) - filmed The Journeyers (feature) - optioned
Ok, entertaining for sure. Nice misdirection towards the end there. I think you do a very good job differentiating the characters through their dialogue. That's hard to do. But I felt that some of the it could be trimmed. Nothing more to add. Too much good advice already. Overall, nicely done.-A
This one was okay for me... I liked the twist. Overall, well written, though in the dialogue, there's some forced exposition. I get that Stephen was making a point, but there's a few lines of "You know this" and "You already know that" and "You know I'm not starving". If this information is already known between them, even though he's making a point, I don't think he'd be repeating it. That being said, the exposition is still well written and doesn't come across as TOO obvious, as if we're being force-fed information. Still a bit talky, though.
The Elevator Most Belonging To Alice - Semi Final Bluecat, Runner Up Nashville Inner Journey - Page Awards Finalist - Bluecat semi final Grieving Spell - winner - London Film Awards. Third - Honolulu Ultimate Weapon - Fresh Voices - second place IMDb link... http://www.imdb.com/name/nm7062725/?ref_=tt_ov_wr
First off, John, MOS is 'mit out sound' - no sound. Used in screenplays less and less these days, but there you have it.
I rather liked Stephen's boorish character and the back and forth was quite good, save for the fact I think some of the dialogue could use some contractions to sound more conversational and natural.
Regret-free meat. Yeah, like our RSPCA approved chicken here - killing with kindness, ha!
The main problem I have with this is it's not quite horror enough, (hmm, listed as Drama here, Horror under Don's list) and I wasn't invested emotionally. You had a lot of things to say via your main character and they were conveyed well, it's just I wasn't really moved by much.
It's good, well written, but in your effort to offload all that you wanted to say it came across as too thoretical and strident, if that makes sense - more author intervention than an actual character I can feel for.
This is an entertaining script. You can surely trim some dialogues. Also, IMO the last phone conversation is not needed. The moment he bears his fangs, that is the best moment to end this script. Smash cut to black. Over the black, blood-curdling, human SCREAM. Just an opinion.
Overall, it is a decent script with a great twist.
Not sure this could be filmed easily with limited access to sets but apart from that it was a great twist at the end. My problem with this is it is filled with exposition, lots of it. If you could find a way to show us more and tell us less, this would be much better.
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This was a nice concept and built up well to the reveal at the end.
The idea of an organization of vampires/creatures ruling the globe is not new but throwing in the idea of an outbreak like Covid throwing a spanner in the works of these supernatural elites is a neat angle.
The main problem is there is too much dialogue. It comes across as a bit of a monologue from Stephen at times. I was wondering if there were ways you could do more visually instead of verbally.
Julie’s closing sentence is perhaps a bit too ‘on the nose’.
As with a lot of fantastical premises it opens up a lot of questions, questions which in a longer script could be fleshed out but due to the nature of shorts are left hanging a little bit.
Is Julie a vampire too? If not how come she’s working for Stephen/the organisation – just for the money? If this organization controls everything you could maybe reference that somehow – e.g. show the president on TV and make a quip about whose pulling his strings, etc.
Is there some scope for more action here? Maybe a test vampire who has contracted a disease from biting affected humans, who is visibly decaying - just to visualize the threat to Stephen. Could Stephen be physically suffering from his food supply dwindling – could he be strung out because he can’t kill?
Julie was maybe a bit too blasé about her situation. If the affected can’t be eaten, does she become more appetizing? Is she a classic familiar to some extent? If she is a familiar has the appeal of becoming a vampire changed with covert-19 presenting a new vulnerability to them?
Why does Stephen give into his bloodlust at the end if the victim is contagious – could he kill Julie instead? The victim also is described as unconscious so the final scream comes out of the blue.
Good job overall getting such a big idea into 6 pages.
Surely finding a Covid-free subject can't be any harder than finding a virgin? I like Stephen's over-the-top persona, but he makes way too many speeches. Perhaps we could see some of the other "lethargic" vampires stumbling about because, being particularly susceptible to the virus, they're unable to hunt.
And the part about them being unable to procure any protective gear is hilarious--this would've been the perfect opportunity to lament the country's leader letting down one of his core demographics.
Julie is good as the typical obnoxious bureaucrat. But what if she wasn't a vampire, but a "straight" who's sold out the human race? Stephen, of course, is constantly threatening to "turn her," but Julie is protected against such an occurrence because she's hosted a few too many venereal diseases. So maybe she's the one always threatening to take a bite out of him?
Although there was definitely a twist, it didn't come across as surprising to me, as you gave things away early on, or at least it appeared like you did.
For me, it's just very dull, 2 talking heads, lots of long winded dialogue. Nothing interesting for me.
Maybe a bigger problem for me is that although this is based around the COVID pandemic, it's completely made up. I just thought the challenge was to write something real.