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Somewhere Beyond the Sea by Nemo - Special Forces Marines undertake a time-critical mission and find something unexpected beneath the waves. Location: Body of water. Object: Item of advanced or electronic technology. Short, Sci Fi
No one is going to be able to make sense of that header without Google. Use something else.
Quoted Text
Four Special Boat Service Royal Navy Marines crouch down on the boat as it comes to a stop in the water, moonlight the only illumination for their clandestine activities
Again - just fo with Royal Naval Marines - don't need special boat services - it means nothing to anyone and adds confusion.
Okay - done with the nits.
I liked this story - the premise was very cool - thanks for the entertainment
Good story. However, it calls for a big budget and major special effects, which is exactly the opposite of what the challenge was going for. It's fun that the UFO turned out to be an experimental craft from the future, and that the occupant has no Terminator-like tendencies, but it sucked all the tension out of a story with a very interesting opening.
Was thrown off by Royal Navy Marines using miles. Doesn't everywhere outside the US use metric?
CONTINUOUS isn't necessary, there seems to be some time between those scenes.
This works really well, lots of short dialog clips will make it move by fast on screen, but it leaves us hanging at the reveal. There's no obvious implication of what will happen next, so it doesn't really consistute an end to the story. Great opening to a longer story, just not a contained story.
Was thrown off by Royal Navy Marines using miles. Doesn't everywhere outside the US use metric?
It's impossible to understand why we Brits do or use anything, we are strange. We are officially metric, but remain imperial for road distances (So yea, we use miles )
Writer
The writing wasn't too bad but can be made sharper. Was interesting enough to keep me engaged until the end although the ending was a bit of a come-down.
Can't see how this can be filmed on a tight budget though lol
First action line irked me right off for two reasons, but this just may be preference so do what you want to do, but.. All caps those NAVY MARINES since this is the first time we see them. And I like to know where we are before dealing with the action, so I favor the first action line of each new location to describe the area, then focus on what is happening. "A boat drifts to a stop beneath reflected moonlight. Four NAVY MARINES...etc"
Char intro's are bland. I've done this intentionally in shorts to save space, maybe the writer did, too.
Confusing action line. Why call it a bulky figure-of-eight shaped tubular unit? Just say jet pack.
Dialogue also bland and didn't feel realistic, possibly in part due to lack of char intro's so we never get a feel for the them. It just didn't work for me.
Stories, to me, should end with resolution or a cliff hanger. Not sure this qualifies as either, it felt like a let down.
I get this and I liked it. Well written, great idea but a few niggles. Clandestine activities with jet propelled equipment would negate each other, too noisy to be clandestine and the visors which glow would also negate the marines internal night vision and may be seen by others so again, not clandestine. Well done.
If at first you don't succeed........bribe someone.
Decent enough concept, though logic suggests they’d send drones or some kind of remote device in for a closer look. But that wouldn’t leave you with much of a story I suppose, so…
Dialogue doesn’t feel very military - these guys are supposed to be elite. Lots of questions - rather they’d just get on with the mission in hand.
Does the light rise to the surface or the Tic Tac? When the hatch opens, I thought the craft was still submerged.
Ending left me confused. Turner’s reaction suggests he knows something the others don’t - a danger of some sort. Yet Samuel the man-alien seems harmless leaving me with a mixed message to end on. Not sure what the intent is here. Too many questions.
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Pretty good. You had my attention, found it interesting. Personally, two things the almost ruined it for the. You choosing to call it a tic-tac made me think of, well, a freakin tic-tac. Second, the alien/human voice was way too casual for my taste. He’s kinda like no big deal, nothing to see here. Felt off. Otherwise, pretty good story here!