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Ahoy Beans on Toast - Guess you can't go wrong with any 'Lynyrd Skynyrd' song... or can you? Anywaz, could be a green writer behind this. Not sure. If not, accept my apologies. I wished you had thought up another way for Shaw to kill Leary than what you've done here. Um, something a bit more original, but hey-- that's just me. The writing needs tightening. Good job on getting one in. Best of Irish luck! _ghostie gal
I was going along with this until the end which, sadly, fell flat. And that’s because we have no idea who he was sending the photos to. Was it Learys wife, the 5-0, FBI? Something far worse maybe? That’s where it loses me. This reads like you just didn’t finish it, or ran out of time. Seems you had a good story going until that end.
First one so far where I don't know the song particularly well.
So some pretty standard post-Tarantino stuff here, love or hate it. This is the kind of stuff that got me into writing so I can't knock it!
The big issue with this one for me is that it's hard to really align ourselves with one of these characters. Usually one or the other is more stylish/cool/interesting/troubled/whatever it may be, so that even in this amoral kind of world we can identify with and root for someone. But here, I'm not sure that you've built a story around a character with a clear goal that we can really identify with. There are a couple twists but those twists aren't going to land without us being invested in one of the characters' perspectives.
The idea of scrolling execution selfies and selecting the best one is extremely funny and I think there's room here to make this whole thing a bit of a joke about vanity and selfie culture even infecting the Tarantino killer set. But as is I'm not feeling like this takes us on much of a journey.
I'd also take a look at your action lines and consider how you can break things up, reword, and especially cut down in order to make for a more dynamic read. The trend right now is definitely towards sparseness of style.
This feels very much like a new writer...mostly because of how the action blocks are used...and the character intros...
Definitely need to do some studying on how to handle the descriptions/actions in a script. That's not a knock...we've all been there. Good news is, that part's pretty easy to pick up. The harder part is dialogue and story. And, you've got some real positives to work with there.
In fact, I quit reading the action blocks and only read the dialogue (for the most part). With that, things clipped along quite nicely. I rather liked what you did with Shaw. Asking for mid-swing photos was an interesting action for the character. Unexpected. It added real interest. Then scrolling through to find the best photo...that was epic.
The finish, unfortunately, didn't work for me. No idea who Brookman was sending the photos to, or why.
Bottom line: a few things to work on in the action blocks, and plenty to build off of otherwise.
Good job! Paul
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Not sure what to make of that one. Never heard of the song, and although I was listening to it as I read the script I missed whatever may have been intended.
Found the discription a bit clunky too. That said I thought you did a pretty good job with the dialogue, whic I think most people would agree is usually the harder thing to be good at.
Unfortunately the ending was a big let down for me as I had no idea what it was you were trying to get at.
After reading the previous comments, I'm going to have to agree. The story shows promise but I was left hanging at the end not understanding to whom the pictures were being sent. You had a little wiggle room at 3 pages to flesh it out some, but you did manage to get quite a bit of storyline into it. Anyway, I liked the premise, maybe after the challenge you can add a little more - or were you going for a cliff hanger ending? If so, nailed it!
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The concept of a hit man trying to get an action photo of himself on his last job is pretty cool--absurd, of course, but in the best possible way. I think the dialogue works pretty well. We don't know who the photos are going to at the end, but we don't really need to know. One complaint I have is about this line: Shaw stands behind Leary like a batter at the mound. I'm not sure how to imagine this. Do you mean a batter at the plate?
That crummy toad, Brookman. No honor amongst thieves. I really would have liked to have seen Shaw holding his own cell phone out with his left hand trying to get a shot of the beheading done with the right. Then he could have held the head up beside his own for another shot.
Too much?
34 - 0: Let's see if Accountability sticks this time...
I hate that expression: Green writer - New writer! It sounds something like you are are an imposter and need to back off a little.
I actually enjoyed the premise and found it amusing, if not a little weird. The only people I've seen post an execution are terrorist of a certain kind.
The ending was abrupt and could have been better thought out IMO.
But a decent job overall and a good song choice.
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You need to work on condensing the action/descriptions.
Does a samurai sword click?
Brookman seems to be double crossing him but we have no idea why. To set him up since he is retiring and knows too much? could be, but I think we need to know a little more about it.
Slightly weird that Shaw wants incriminating evidence about him. And it wasn't Brookman's idea to take the photos, so if he had a double cross plan then he just got extremely lucky, probably better to make it Brookmans idea rather than relying on sheer luck and coincidence. Hope you expand on this later.
Like Lew, I saw this as a scene, which was allowed in the parameters... so whilst I'd like to know where the pictures were sent at the end it isn't necessary in the scheme of things.
But it did feel a little formulaic within the scene, and I can't work out if the sword is a good thing or bad thing, kinda depends on the expanded script I guess.
I'm no hitman -- I just stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night -- but if I was getting pictures taken of my last hitjob, I would want it taken with my own phone. And if it was taken with someone else's phone, I wouldn't wait until I was gone to have him send me the photo and then trust him to delete everything. But again, I'm no hitman.
I didn't find too many issues with this other than just some logic stuff (like above), and leaving us in wonder over who the photos were sent to. Otherwise it was pretty well-written and very visual. Pretty decent effort here. Best of luck.
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This is a curious story that I like in some corners and am confounded by in other ways. The aging hitman on his last assignment is interesting. He pulls up in a "nondescript sedan when I wanted to see a Keitel-like Acura NSX — if just for posterity's sake. I totally agree with Gary in H Town. The old man would never use Brookman's phone to capture the moment. It would be Shaw's phone or no phone. What would have been interesting is if Brookman sent himself a copy using Shaw's phone. Then Shaw would notice this and have to go back and whack Brookman. Just saying.
If I were Shaw, I would have had Brook shoot a video. Live action from which he could pull a pretty good action still. Anyway, the ending could have used some foreshadowing. Maybe Brookman is communicating with somebody before Shaw arrives. We might assume B was talking to Shaw, but when we double back, we'll figure that there was a third person involved in the hit. This one needs some tightening and a bit of reconfiguring but it kept my interest from capture to final call. So good work.