SimplyScripts Discussion Board
Blog Home - Produced Movie Script Library - TV Scripts - Unproduced Scripts - Contact - Site Map
ScriptSearch
Welcome, Guest.
It is April 26th, 2024, 9:00am
Please login or register.
Was Portal Recent Posts Home Help Calendar Search Register Login
Please do read the guidelines that govern behavior on the discussion board. It will make for a much more pleasant experience for everyone. A word about SimplyScripts and Censorship


Produced Script Database (Updated!)

Short Script of the Day | Featured Script of the Month | Featured Short Scripts Available for Production
Submit Your Script

How do I get my film's link and banner here?
All screenplays on the simplyscripts.com and simplyscripts.net domain are copyrighted to their respective authors. All rights reserved. This screenplaymay not be used or reproduced for any purpose including educational purposes without the expressed written permission of the author.
Forum Login
Username: Create a new Account
Password:     Forgot Password

SimplyScripts Screenwriting Discussion Board    Unproduced Screenplay Discussion    Short Scripts  ›  Saved My Bacon Moderators: bert
Users Browsing Forum
No Members and 25 Guests

 Pages: 1
Recommend Print
  Author    Saved My Bacon  (currently 2534 views)
Don
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 4:19pm Report to Moderator
Administrator
Administrator


So, what are you writing?

Location
Virginia
Posts
16438
Posts Per Day
1.94
Saved My Bacon by Tim Westland - Short, Comedy - It's 1913 and a big city reporter travels out to the country to meet The World's Greatest Pig. 5 pages - pdf, format


Visit SimplyScripts.com for what is new on the site.

-------------
You will miss 100% of the shots you don't take.
- Wayne Gretzky
Logged Offline
Site Private Message
stevemiles
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 5:47pm Report to Moderator
January Project Group



Posts
745
Posts Per Day
0.16
Tim,

another competition entry perhaps?  Felt like a play on an old joke -- though not one I was familiar with so it worked enough for me.  A mean spirited little twist in the end.

I like the writing, very visual, though perhaps Farmer Davis’s intro could use a tweak.  That’s all I got.

Steve.


My short scripts can be found here on my new & improved budget website:


http://stevemiles80.wixsite.com/sjmilesscripts
Logged
Site Private Message Reply: 1 - 12
oJOHNNYoNUTSo
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 8:17pm Report to Moderator
Been Around



Posts
817
Posts Per Day
0.19
Tim,

Hahaha! Poor little guy! I bet he tasted great.

I would have liked to see the whole family get involved in this one.  Play on the heart strings for another page or two.  As far as the writing goes, it was heavy in some areas, but I enjoyed it as a whole.

Funny ending.

Johnny

Logged
Private Message Reply: 2 - 12
SAC
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 9:36pm Report to Moderator
Of The Ancients


… but some dreams do

Location
Upstate NY
Posts
3208
Posts Per Day
0.78
Tim,

Enjoyed this one.  Nice ending!  

Your action lines were a little heavy handed at times.  Short and to the point, yes, that was good.  But I'd recommend adding a period here and there to break up some of those sentences.  A few of them read a bit awkward.

Didn't really detract from the story, though.

I also enjoyed your dialogue.  It read fluidly.  Your characters did a good job of telling the story.  

Best of luck, Tim.

Steve


Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 3 - 12
TimWestland
Posted: September 11th, 2013, 11:20pm Report to Moderator
New



Posts
50
Posts Per Day
0.01
Hey Steven,

Thanks for taking the time to read it and glad you liked it.

This was a MoviePoet script, which has a limit of 5 pages. One goal is to make sure you have a complete story... the other is to make it as compelling as possible in a small space. Normally, I'd break up paragraphs, use a couple of flashbacks for Farmer Davis... spice it up. But space is limited. It's my only excuse

Thanks again for the comments/critique... it is the best way to learn and I appreciate it.

Tim
Logged Offline
Site Private Message Reply: 4 - 12
TimWestland
Posted: September 11th, 2013, 11:23pm Report to Moderator
New



Posts
50
Posts Per Day
0.01
Hi Steve,

Yup, another entry. And yes, this was based on a joke I heard a long time ago and which remains one of my favorites.  I like to think that it has finally received its due and that whoever came up with the joke would find it worthwhile.

The twist at the very end always kills me.

Thank you for the kind words about my writing... and I agree... I could flesh Farmer Davis out quite a bit. Now that I don't have the 5 page contest limitation, I might do just that!!!

See ya around the board, sir.

Sincerely
Tim
Logged Offline
Site Private Message Reply: 5 - 12
Reel-truth
Posted: September 12th, 2013, 10:20am Report to Moderator
New



Location
Brooklyn, NY
Posts
90
Posts Per Day
0.02
Tim,

I enjoyed this story very much. It read like a breeze for me. Dialogue was natural, and unforced.

It did have that feeling of an old past down joke. Which was good, cause' you nailed the dialogue.

What made me laugh the most, wasn't even the ending line, which was pretty funny though. It was ..

MILO
So, uh, how did your pig -

DAVIS
Name’s just Pig.          

MILO
How did Pig come to need four
wooden legs?

Davis reminded me as an extra from "Deliverance."..lol That's how I pictured him for some reason.

For me it made sense he didn't give him a name, and just names him pig. Fits more so giving the ending.

Overall, some funny stuff here.

Best of Luck Tim

Reel- truth




Logged
Private Message Reply: 6 - 12
TimWestland
Posted: September 12th, 2013, 10:07pm Report to Moderator
New



Posts
50
Posts Per Day
0.01
Thanks, Reel!

Regarding Pig's name... it's funny how some things come to you when writing a script. I could have gone for a funny name, but this just sort of seemed right... like what Farmer Davis would have done.

I'm glad the story gave you a laugh. That's the best kind of review!

Be well,

Tim
Logged Offline
Site Private Message Reply: 7 - 12
SilvaSly104
Posted: September 14th, 2013, 4:02pm Report to Moderator
New


Life is Art

Location
Vancouver, BC
Posts
60
Posts Per Day
0.01
Hi Tim

Great story for a short. Nice and to the point. Very enjoyable read, and the dialogue is superbly written. Great hilarious ending as well. Kudos

Silva Sly
Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 8 - 12
spesh2k
Posted: September 14th, 2013, 6:28pm Report to Moderator
January Project Group



Location
Harlem USA
Posts
1186
Posts Per Day
0.20
Hey Tim,

I liked this. It pretty much felt like an old-timey joke, told in script form. The writing was good overrall, though there were parts that could've been shortened:

"The unmistakably metallic SHUK SHUK of a shotgun locking and loading stops Milo in his tracks."

Could have been - SHU-SHUCK! Milo slows. Sees the business end of a shotgun poking out from a hole in the fence. He stops. (combining the above sentence with the sentences that follow).

Other than that, I kind of liked your detailed description, though it's not the style I prefer. But it's only 5 pages, so it was a breeze to read.

Dialogue was good, too, on the most part. There were times when Milo's dialogue felt forced - as if it was used to break up Davis's dialogue, kinda like filler.

Overall, nice work. I love jokes, and you brought a funny (though kinda corny) joke to life.

-- Michael


THE SUICIDE THEORY (Amazon Prime, 79% Rotten Tomatoes) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2517300/?ref_=nm_knf_i1
RAGE (Coming Feb. 2021) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8874764/?ref_=nm_knf_i2

Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 9 - 12
TimWestland
Posted: September 16th, 2013, 12:17am Report to Moderator
New



Posts
50
Posts Per Day
0.01
@Silva - Thanks. The ending (for me) makes the whole thing. I crack up over it.

@Spesh2k - Yup, it is an old joke, but probably not "old-timey". Thanks for the suggestions, critique and comments. Much appreciated.
Logged Offline
Site Private Message Reply: 10 - 12
LC
Posted: September 17th, 2013, 5:20am Report to Moderator
Administrator



Location
The Great Southern Land
Posts
7630
Posts Per Day
1.34
The main thing I wonder with this is whether it will translate to film well, visually. Cause effectively it's two talking heads and is more of a skit.

Not trying to rain on your parade, I just think it's an interesting proposition and I would be interested in hearing, if without the restriction of page count, how you would develop this further. Just a thought.  

You write really well - I especially enjoyed your jumping off 'description' at the top - which is crucial.


Logged
Private Message Reply: 11 - 12
TimWestland
Posted: September 17th, 2013, 2:23pm Report to Moderator
New



Posts
50
Posts Per Day
0.01
Hey LC,

First, thanks for commenting.

The primary method I would use to make it more visual is, as you'd expect: Flashbacks.

As mentioned, the page count limitation prevented me from using them... all I could do is have Farmer Davis describe the fire. A rewrite would solve this.

So I'd show the fire start as Davis begins the story in V.O.

We'd see Pig sniff the air, smell the smoke, bust out of his pen, run to the house, break in somehow (I picture him leaping impossibly through the kitchen window! haha) and drag the family out to safety.

I'd likely expand the story a tad, too... give the kid reporter a little more to do than just play the straight guy.

Thank you, btw, for your kind compliment about my writing. Like you, I think the opening paragraph is critical to hooking the reader into at least completing the first page. I'm glad it worked for you.

Be well,
Tim
Logged Offline
Site Private Message Reply: 12 - 12
 Pages: 1
Recommend Print

Locked Board Board Index    Short Scripts  [ previous | next ] Switch to:
Was Portal Recent Posts Home Help Calendar Search Register Login

Forum Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post polls
You may not post attachments
HTML is on
Blah Code is on
Smilies are on


Powered by E-Blah Platinum 9.71B © 2001-2006