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Drowned by Austin B Steel (ABSteel) (OWC name - Gemma) - Short, Thriller - A man finally overcomes his guilty conscience after two decades of struggling with the death of his younger brother. August '07 One Week Challenge entrant. - pdf, format
I would've liked this one better if it wasn't so full of technical flaws. Don't write your actions passively--"The kids are asleep"--WRONG--"The kids sleep"-RIGHT. You did this several times throughout the script. But I've done this sometimes too so don't feel too bad.
In the beginning you describe the tent as "Jimmy's tent" whn Jimmy has not even been introduced yet.
Another gripe I had was the dialogue. It wasn't completely bad, but I honestly got the impression these kids were gay or something. Who in the blue hell would call his father "daddy"? They sounded either a lot younger than they were, or just girly.
The characters were all extremely hard to tell from one another. None of their personalities were that unique and the fact that we got no physical descriptions of them did not help.
That being said, I did enjoy the story to an extent. So, please don't take this like I hated it or something. I'm just trying to help you out.
While there are technical issues, I did not find the excess of problems that Julio's comments suggest. Still, you might consider better familiarizing yourself with "spec style."
As for one of the character's calling his father "daddy." Much of the story takes place in the past. So perhaps this is forgivable.
The story, itself, was, I thought, a little tedious -- parts dragged, particulary the childrens' dialogue.
The biggest problem that I had with the script, though, was the end. "It was all a dream." These type of endings often leave the reader feeling cheated.
I also enjoyed this one, in a way. As Julio pointed out above, there were a few technical faults throughout. I also think it could have benefited from another two or three pages of stuff around the middle, to really set up how guilty Jim feels in his later life. Obviously the guilt is implied, and I'm not quite sure how you could have shown that he was guilty, but I'm sure it could be done and it would imrpove the script a little bit. Overall, this was a good script. Good, not great.
I didn't feel for the characters too much at all though. Brother blames himself for the death of his little brother. Other than that, there's nothing(but its 11 pages, so I understand)
The ending suggests (to me) that Jim is at peace now, because he saved his brother (in the dream?) so there is a solid ending to it.
The first thing I noticed as I started reading was that the 13- and 12-year-olds called there fathers "daddy." Now I know that even I didn't talk like that when I was 12 and 13. So these kids seem like momma's boys more to me. And suddenly, they change as Jimmy begins to curse at his little brother. Weird.
Why did you change Jimmy's name? You introduced him like he was a new character, yet, he's the same. Instead of introducing him all over again, you could have said, "Jimmy, now aged to 30, sits on the bed..." or whatever. And also, you'd think that if him and Lisa are married, which I'm pretty sure they are, he would have told her about what happened already.
The ending didn't really satisfy me, either. I don't really like some "It's just a dream" stuff used in many movies shown now these days. And with Tyler waving at the end, it reminded me of the remake of The Amityville horror, though, Tyler doesn't get sucked under the floor by a demon ghost thing. Hehe.
I think the Jimmy\Jim thing is just to hammer home the adulthood angle. He is no longer a child,etc. He's a man with a woman in his bed and they like to get down...
it's a touching story, but not a thriller. Why change jimmy since it was established as his name. I think it's best to keep to not confuse the reader something I've learned. The scenes also moved fast or I prob read it to fast which is good; so I'll chose the latter. descriptions were concise and characters were alright.
Gabe
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/
This one has a good story but suffers from bland storytelling. It needs punch.
Example: Luke picks him up. Ruth cries. They walk to the house.
In the above description, two parents have just discovered their son is not breathing. What’s missing is the excitement that should be filling the situation. You’re just telling us the physical actions without actually describing the events. This is more like a police account than actual storytelling. The emotion and the passion is what pulls the reader in.
No one seems overly excited by the event of a young boy drowning. You have to put yourself into the situations of each and every character. How would the character react emotionally? This needs to be there.
Luke’s son is dead and all he says is, “It’s okay. Let’s just bring him inside.” It’s completely inconceivable that Luke would be so indifferent about this. Where’s the frantic CPR? Not just from Jimmy but from Luke? Where’s the hurried going for a doctor or whatever? Where’s the genuine reaction?
I don’t know if a marina would allow that particular boat to be docked there -- haha.
They fall asleep - this is a slippery slope for a description. You could cut this line altogether. But kudos to you for actually making the idea of spending a night in that rickety old houseboat sound romantic.
How could Tyler and Jim stand face to face? Tyler is 10 and Jim is a grown man.
At the end, Ruth came out of nowhere. But no Luke.
I’m not sure I understand the story. I assume Tyler offers Jim some sort of redemption through a dream where Jim succeeds at saving him. I could actually accept that. It’s skimming the lines of acceptability but I could - if the writing were punchier.
So this is a descent story that didn’t get told as good as it could have. You’ve got to put some bite into it. It needs the description and the dialogue to reflect the situations more accurately. As it is, it comes off, like I said, like a police report. It’s just step by step the events that took place. It needs that spark of emotion to give it life and it could be turned into a genuine story of a man coming to terms with the past.
I liked the beginning of this. It worked for me; however, as it went on, problems started arising.
For instance: When he tells his wife what happened and says, "Yeah, but just don't expect me to swim." His wife laughs. That is totally inappropriate for the character you've portrayed her as. I don't think you want her to be heartless.
Also, the father after the calamity says, "It's ok, let's just bring him inside." Again, this just isn't right. Unless the father doesn't really care or is some kind of emotionless person, he would be crying or determined to bring his son back to life somehow, even though inside himself, he knows the boy is gone.
I think with some revisions, you could make this work because it's a plausible story. Kids can easily put themselves into dangerous positions without trying too hard.
The little boy wanting to be with the big boys is so very realistic and right away I felt for him and too for Jimmy because he feels it's his fault and has to live with it for the rest of his life.
I think you've done extremely well with this, but you probably ran out of time and just tried to finish it quickly.
I don't know why Jim dreamed that Tyler pushed him overboard. I guess it was his conscience thinking that he wanted to die or deserved to die, but it's probably showing Tyler in a poor light.
This would have been a more uplifting story if you would have worked harder at the (I can't think of the word I want--it's like remission, starts with R... don't you hate that.) Ah! Got it! Reconciliation! If you would have developed that aspect, it would have had closure. Yes, in the dream he saved him, but it was all sped through and like I said, Tyler pushed him off, so it didn't quite work.
I liked this though and I think it only needs a bit of tweaking to be really good.
I have been away -- and will be for a short while longer -- but since this one has already been bumped, I want to jump on here and let you know that yours is one of the first that I intend to read upon my return.
You have certainly piqued my curiousity, Mr. Steel -- you can decide for yourself whether that is a good thing or a bad thing.
i know I'M not one to talk about endings man, lol, but i liked it until that dream stuff.
The descriptions i'm iffy about. Only because it kind of seems ... like a step by step type thing.
ex- jim falls down. Jim gets up. Jim runs.
That's how it sounds. I don't know if i'm even saying it right. But it needs more "OOMPH"(reccomend saying that out loud 3 times)
But If you don't understand what i'm saying, it's okay. It's late and i'm highly caffeinated.
Ending: ehh. Overall: needs more Oomph.
Good job though. Kept me interested.
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