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All That Remains by Breanne Mattson - Short, Gothic Horror - A woman hires a team of ghost hunters to contact her sister’s spirit and solve her murder. 12 pages, 5 characters, PG Rating - pdf, format
Just Murdered by Sean Elwood (Zombie Sean) and Gabriel Moronta (Mr. Ripley) - (Dark Comedy, Horror) All is fair in love and war. A hopeless romantic gay man resorts to bloodshed to win the coveted position of Bridesmaid. 99 pages. https://www.simplyscripts.net/cgi-bin/Blah/Blah.pl?b-comedy/m-1624410571/
I enjoyed this, the first half better than the second -- but there's a good story in here that could be expanded into a feature, for sure. The whole backstory about finding souveniers deserves to be written. Good work, especially for a OWC.
Clean writing - I like this one on that level. And I found the characters more entertaining than the shorts I've read so far. So kudos. )
Unfortunately, the story itself didn't work for me (as it's currently written) for a few reasons.
* Why was Tim so snarky and cynical? He's the one who volunteered to go on the hunt with the rest of the crew
* Emma as a ghost - she was there from the beginning of the story. Usually, ghosts are relatively ethereal things - so my gut reaction is that having her around from the beginning just doesn't work. She's interacted with the rest of the characters way too much for her being a ghost to be believable.
* Why would Emma/Erin think that a seance would bring forth the killer? As far as she knows, the killer's halfway around the world by now, and would have no way to know that they were bringing in ghost hunters anyway.
All that said, if the story were reworked...a tale about a man who kills a woman who finds his treasure... That's got potential. Would be interesting to see what you do with it.
This has potential, the characters were varied and enjoyable. The "twist" didn't work for me for the reasons above - I felt a little cheated as I beleive twists should have clues and subtle foreshadowing so that the observant reader has a chance of figuring it out. Solid writing and good idea.
This one feels like a refurb from last year’s open OWC. Right down to the guy in the wheelchair and coastal setting. Add a character and remove the storm, then presto. Apologies if I’m wrong. It’s a gut instinct. I think it’s endemic of the literal interpretation of the theme. The ghostly happenings read pretty hokey, trances, etc. This feels more like teen murder mystery than a gothic tale. We’ve also got another misunderstood ghost in the mix. Thanks for playing OWC.
Regards, E.D.
LATEST NEWS CineVita Films is producing a short based on my new feature!
I liked this and thought it was well written with a nice pace of reveal that changes the readers expectations as it progressed.
However, I share the disappointment in the ending.
The speech from Hicks about seemed a bit too exposed for me, like the reveal in a murder mystery when the killer thinks they will get away with it. Yet, it wouldn't take much to change this.
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
I enjoyed this quite a lot up until the finale - it was being well built up but I felt it was a let down. Just raised too many questions and felt it contradicted the tone of the first half. A ghost being, or pretending, to be a ghost hunter is a good idea but it just didn't work for me, the ending lowered the bar.
I did enjoy the set up and premise, nice setting too. Misunderstood ghost? Possibly. Gothic...umm, unsure.
This was okay, but didn't feel Gothic at all, except maybe for the cliffside setting. No real surprises, including the identity of the killer. That was way too obvious. This is one of those stories that would probably work better without the rule of the "good ghost" showing up at the end.
The good news - I read the entire thing because the writing wasn't bad at all.
The bad news - Reads like a Scooby Doo cartoon. The reveal of Hicks being the killer was so far from a surprise. Dialogue was quite painful. No Gothic Horror, IMO.
This is well written although it does feel very canned to me.
The gothic theme doesn't feel evident, only that it's kind of like a teenage murder mystery ghost story.
I think that Erin/Emma needs to have some kind of small foreshadowing that she is indeed a ghost. Something that the audience can remember as shown so as not to feel that they were deliberately lied to for the sake of plot.
As to the title, I don't think it's anything memorable as in the likes of Our Lady of Eternal Suffering. That one really tied the script with the title.
So yes, yours was definitely a good script. I think it just misses the mark though when compared to a few others that I've read so far in this challenge. High mark for your intro with the mood. I saw myself as being over in Newfoundland or something. Really good job with that.
Great opening, you set up the scene and the tone remarkably well.
Overall this is quite good. You have the elements of a great story here, but it's too ambitious for the page limit of the OWC. It deserves to be double the length or could be a feature with more characterization and set-up. Currently it's too quick and convenient.
A ghost hires a team of ghost hunters to help find her killer by faking a diary in hopes of luring him out in the open? Sounds like a Scooby Doo cartoon to me.
This story didn't really do it for me. It wasn't gothic, IMHO. It was just dramatic. Too many things were going on to set a proper mood.
A big mistake in your opening description (pet peeve!):
Quoted Text
A short distance down a winding path sits the old light keeper’s house, now a bed and breakfast with a burgundy roof and picket fence.
How do we know that this use to be the light keeper's house? And that it's not a B&B? You shouldn't tell us these things; you should show us. A large sign in front of the property, saying Lighthouse Keepers Bed and Breakfast would do.
Well written, but a bit meh I dunno about everyone else, but I knew Hicks was the killer when she told him about the diary, so the twist wasn't much of a twist.
Still, it has potential. Good job on submitting a nice effort
I had to reread the opening because I got confused with who was who. After that I finally figured everything out and thought this was clever.
I think the fake diary kind of defeats the purpose of the twist because Hicks winds up killing Erin anyway. So it's, like, what's the point?
Joan, I think, can be removed altogether. I didn't feel her character did much and Tim was just awkward all around. Those two brought the story down IMO.
But this was pretty good. Interesting idea and I liked the twist. Good job.