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I thought this one was okay, but kind of predictable right from the get go. Personal opinion -- and it's only my opinion -- but for me it works well as a metaphor. I see you stayed with the same era. I would have liked to have seen a more modern setting. Some nit issues I want go into. Overall, not bad.
I would've liked to see this in modern times rather than having it take place as almost the same era as the original TZ series came out. I love this TZ episode by the way -- way back in 2009, I was hired to write a feature kinda/sorta based on this episode.
But I felt like this was too similar to the TZ episode, but instead using communism/Russian spies/black listing, etc. This felt rushed -- which I'll attribute to the page limit -- but the transition from Tenbaum shooting two guys breaking into his house to a montage sequence showing the destruction of the town felt too rushed. There was no room to build things up, which again, is probably due to the 6 page limit. I do like the ending, but I saw it coming and assumed right off the bat the CIA MAN was bullshitting from the beginning. And, already knowing the TZ episode very well, of course it was easy to predict that the people would destroy themselves.
That being said, it was well-written enough and an enjoyable read.
Definitely something the deep state would do, have done… still do to this day; control and incite violence with nothing more than words: (insert any main stream media driven event here), then… that rammed down our throats 24/7 and voilà … instant lynch mobs born in every nook and cranny of the Republic.
Your story pretty much followed the closing narration of the original: “The tools of conquest do not necessarily come with bombs and explosions and fallout. There are weapons that are simply thoughts, attitudes, prejudices...to be found only in the minds of men…”
I believe the deep state has worked this narration into their framework as a creed. The CIA’s Project Mockingbird, a propagation of Joseph Goebbels belief; “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.”
Makes you wonder what big enough lie they could possibly come up with today to control, say… an entire globe? Just thinking out loud, your story is a thinker, no doubt. Works well with the theme.
You nicely summed up the last 4 years. Before 2016 I would have thought something like this was human nature exaggerated to the Nth degree but all we've had for years is the Nth degree.
Anyway, I haven't seen the original but I could see where this was heading. Some things just felt off and snapped the believability factor. It went beyond the Nth degree into Oth degree territory, which is a term I've just made up.
The Sheriff saying that if they don't find the spy in 24 hours the whole town is going to be destroyed is just too much to swallow.
And if they are convinced Mr Tenbaum is the spy, why do they go looking through the rest of the town for the spy?
I suspect the page restriction had a lot to do with this and you had to ramp it up faster than you wanted, hence it feels a bit off. Another draft outside the confines of the OWC should sort it out.
-Mark
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I thought it was too obvious what was going to happen. No sense of suspense or surprise. I wish it wasn't so The Andy Griffith Show. The setting really distracts from the storytelling.
You've got a good premise but you fail on the execution. There's a ton of "them" that you could've used, and you used "spy" and the CIA.
This episode always came up when I searched best TZ episodes - which is why I avoided it as I thought someone else was bound to use it - so I know very little about it.
Quoted Text
CIA MAN There is no spy in that town.
I'm pretty sure his partner would already know this information. Which means it's purely for the audience, which isn't great.
Hmmm seemed very over-the-top comical to me even though it says it should be a drama/thriller. The over-reaction doesn't seem all that realistic (At least I hope not - I still have a little faith in humanity left) but then again I don't know what the mentality of a 1950's American was.
A government experimenting on it's own citizens I can buy into though.
Swing and a miss from me, but well done for getting something in.
I would've loved to see how this could be written more contemporary. Work in social media, a deep-fake, or just any 'news' that's posted on FB. As it is, it just seemed too familiar to the original. We needed tech!
I read the Wiki page plot. "They comment on how simply fiddling with consistency leads people to descend into paranoia and panic, and that this is a pattern that can be exploited. " This is basically what the episode was about.
Unfortunately, you basically rewrote the same episode when the challenge was to take the idea and turn it into something new and different. For starters, I think you would've been better off setting this in modern times. Even ancient times would've been better than the 1950s. You could've also set this in any other place. Off the top of my head, a mental hospital where a new patient or head doctor comes in and upsets the apple cart. An office where a new boss comes in and changes things. Maybe even the boss lets his 12-year-old daughter run the office for a day. Anything really.
Writing was fine, but you failed the challenge, IMHO. I did not enter nor will I vote, so my comments don't really matter, I guess.
Lol, funny thing, Pia. This script is somewhat based on deep state activities etc, and as I was reading your comment, an advertisement for the “Google nest camera” was right above your post... I can’t make this up. So eerie...
This is a clearly written script and the message is timeless. Solid work.
It is a bit preposterous that the government would destroy an entire town to find a spy, but I guess something is needed to create panic. Is there another "threat" that you could think of to create panic? One that is not so outlandish? Maybe, for instance, the spy plans to release poison into the atmosphere that will wipe everyone out in the town.
I didn't buy the dialogue, it didn't feel natural to me. If I remember correctly, wasn't the point of this episode that the fear of an unseen threat tears the town apart? If that's the case then there shouldn't be barricades. The line, "...you just need words." is especially ironic when they literally installed barricades. It's more impactful if the townsfolk assume they're stuck, when they're not. The existence of the CIA guy also takes away from the original meaning.
The town felt small and sleepy, the mobsters being there felt out of place. This was basically a rewrite, but I didn't feel like anything new was brought to the table. I think the writer should consider adding some kind of spin to a story like this.