Genre: Comedy
Premise: (Original Twit-Pitch Logline) Two partners in the newly created Douche Patrol try to expose a plot to douchify the masses through a reality TV show.
About: For those recently joining Scriptshadow, I held a contest a few months back called “Twit-Pitch,” where anyone could pitch me their screenplay on Twitter, as long as it was contained within a single tweet. I picked my 100 favorite loglines and read the first 10 pages of each (which I live-reviewed on Twitter), and then from those, picked the Top 20, which I’ll read the entire screenplay for. This is one of the finalists.
Writer: William A. Lawrence
Details: 103 pages
We’re back with another Twit-Pitch contestant. There are 20 finalists and as of now I have…….18 left to read. I’m so cruising. And I’m not going to lie – there’s a bit of planning involved in reviewing these scripts. I’m saving the ones I think are going to be best for last. That’s not to say I’m expecting the scripts I review early to suck. They just have little things that concern me here and there, like today’s script, Douche Patrol.
Douche Patrol has one of those loglines that makes you laugh but also makes you wonder, “Is this an entire film?” I mean can you extend a premise like this out for a full 100 minutes? That’s what I was worried about, even though I laughed my ass off during those first 10. Well, let’s hope William pulls it off. He’s been the epitome of an anti-douchebag to me on Twitter, so I’m rooting for him.
Late 20s Ryan Connor has a problem with douchebags. His parents were killed by one. Which is why he’s the star cop in a new police division specifically built to take down douchebags. If you’re driving a lime green Honda Civic, blasting obnoxious music, reclined 70% back, talking on your phone? The Douche Patrol is going to get you.
Ryan’s partner is the alcoholic overly shy Jenna Snow. Jenna believes just as much in taking douches down as Ryan. She’s just not as vocal about it. In fact, Jenna has such a problem voicing her opinion on anything, she’s turned heavily to the drink and secretly goes to public speaking courses at night.
After a routine takedown of a douchebag, Ryan and Jenna are led to a sex bomb MILF named Marlene Cardrow (think Sharon Stone). Marlene seems to be associated with a lot of douchebags, and they want to know why. But Marlene is cool as a cucumber. It turns out she’s a casting director for reality TV shows. It’s her job to go out there and look for douchebags to put on these shows.
That’s good enough for Ryan, who’s instantly smitten by Marlene, but Jenna’s not swayed. Something more is going on here. It takes her awhile to convince Ryan, but she finally does, and this leads them to realize Marlene is working for a huge reality TV show producer who’s using reality TV to douchify the masses so that he can get them to buy all the stupid douchey things that douchebags buy. It will take everything in Ryan and Jenna’s arsenal to eliminate this producer’s douchiness and stop the douchefying before it’s too late!
I’ll be frank with you – I’m still not sure what constitutes being a douchebag. I think about this often actually. Isn’t the saying that if you don’t see the big deal about something, then maybe you ARE that something? So maybe I’m a douchebag. I don’t know. I mean I definitely don’t own a lime green Honda Civic. So I’m probably not a major douchebag. But still.
All right, we’re getting off track here. Which is douchey. Douche Patrol is pretty much what I was afraid it was going to be. It’s a funny idea for about 25 pages, and then when story and character development need to kick in, it loses steam.
That’s not for lack of trying on William’s part. He does his best to add a story here. But the thing with really broad premises is that it’s difficult to add depth to them. Broad and depth just don’t mesh. That’s why broad usually works best in a half hour format (Seinfeld, Family Guy, etc.) where it doesn’t have to come up with some big elaborate storyline to keep you involved.
I mean take Jenna for instance. William worked really hard to create a developed character here, but it just didn’t fit. Jenna is an alcoholic?? In a movie about douche patrolling? That doesn’t work. Indeed, her storyline (where she sneaks off after work and downs bottles of whiskey) feels as awkward as cleaning up a used douche. In a drama, sure. But not in a kooky broad comedy.
Speaking of Jenna, if I were William, I would turn her into a guy. I know making her a girl is unique – but different doesn’t always mean better. In addition to that, the whole thing where she’s quiet doesn’t play. Scripts don’t work well with silent characters because we just end up forgetting they’re there. And again, in a movie as broad as this, you want the sidekick to be fun, not mute. Turning Jenna into a guy and making him a lot funnier is definitely the way to go here. Jenna, as she stands, is the worst part of the screenplay.
The plot also had problems. Once we arrest Lime Green Honda Civic Dude, Ryan seems hellbent on finding and questioning Marlene. But it’s never clear exactly why. She’s been seen in a picture with him, but I don’t know why that constitutes concentrating an entire investigation on her. Also, because the reasoning for questioning her is so murky, I’m never sure what he’s asking her for or about. I get that in general it’s about her hanging around douches, but again, that’s not enough.
If I were William, I’d establish that they’ve been looking for a MYSTERIOUS SUPER DOUCHEBAG (possibly the producer) for a long time. But as of now, he’s just a mystery man to them. There are no leads. When they find Marlene, there’s some suspicious backstory on her that alludes to her maybe knowing this Super Douche, and that’s why they go after her. There are fragments of this approach in the script, but they’re too vague. They need to be clear. Remember, this is the plot point that’s driving your entire investigation. It can’t be confusing.
This is where a lot of comedy scripts end up. They have funny moments, but not enough story. Coming up with a comedy interesting enough (and with high enough stakes) to last an entire 100 minutes is one of those challenges that screenwriters get paid the big bucks for. Make us care beyond the gimmick and you’re golden.
Genre: Historical (1986)
Premise: An unorthodox scientist is brought in to investigate why the 1986 shuttle, Challenger, exploded after take-off.
About: The writer of today’s script, Nicole Perlman, is writing Marvel’s “Guardians Of The Galaxy” script. Perlman is making Variety look good as she was listed a couple of year’s ago on their “Ten Writers To Watch” list. I believe Perlman wrote Challenger while still in college. The script finished on 2005’s inaugural Black List. There have since been two drafts (in 2008 and 2012) which I couldn’t get my hands on. I hear they address some of the questions I bring up in today’s review though. :)
Writer: Nicole Perlman
Details: 114 pages (March 20, 2005 draft)
On any other week, Challenger would probably be getting a more adoring write-up. Unfortunately, it’s coming on the heels of recent Top 25’er, The Ends Of The Earth. Maybe if the lead character was having sex with his grandmother, it might’ve had a better chance. But it turns out this is just your basic straightforward investigation flick.
Okay, maybe not that straightforward. The lead is 69 years old. And he’s dying of 2 very rare forms of cancer. And he was directly involved in The Manhattan Project. Some would even say he was the guy who gave birth to the atom bomb. So I guess Challenger wasn’t that basic at all. But was it good? That’s all that matters, right?
The aforementioned Dr. Richard Feynman is a physics professor at Caltech. Feynman is very much a scientist. He hasn’t combed his hair in 20 years. And the things that get him giggly aren’t Seinfeld re-runs, but rather mathematical equations that would stump even Will Hunting.
What makes Feynman different, though, is that he’s fun and easygoing. He likes cracking jokes, never taking anything too seriously, and flirting with girls a third his age. Even though there’s a cancer eating away at his stomach that will soon end his life, the man seems pretty upbeat.
That upbeat life is going swimmingly until, like the rest of the nation, he watches the Challenger space shuttle explode on TV. It was a big deal at the time because nothing bad had ever happened with the space shuttle. It was seen, in many ways, as flawless. But flawless space vehicles don’t go kaboom on their way up to space, do they?
An independent committee is immediately put together to find out what went wrong. But the deck is stacked. Everyone on the committee has close ties to NASA. Most of their jobs depend on them. So are they really going to blame the organization if they find out they did something wrong?
They have to look at least SOMEWHAT impartial. So they bring Feynman in. At first Feynman doesn’t want to be involved (refusal of the call!), but when whispers surface that there may be a cover-up, he’s all in. You see, Feynman’s life up to that point had been defined by his involvement with the atom bomb. He’s indirectly linked to a lot of deaths. He believes that if he can find out what went wrong here, maybe he can change that legacy. Maybe he can be remembered for saving lives instead of ending them.
As cute and cuddly a story as that is, the NASA brass could give two shits. They have an institution to protect. And they’re not going to let some renegade scientist come in and embarrass them. At the top of that list is former Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Rogers sees Feynman as the enemy, the one person who could screw this up. And he’s all over him from day one.
While the rest of the committee plays along with NASA’s farce of an investigation, Feynman breaks rules wherever he goes. For example, the rocket technicians have mysteriously all gone on vacation the day Feynman’s supposed to interview them. No problem. He finds them and interviews them anyway. Or when the committee is inexplicably not allowed to look at the wreckage, he pretends to be one of the seniors on a Kennedy Space Center tour to get his hands on the shuttle.
The investigation eventually leads him to something called an “O-ring,” which is supposed to keep the rocket fuel from leaking. However, it looks like the rings were faulty, that fuel DID leak, and that’s what caused the crash. The question is, why did it happen? And why wasn’t it prevented? What Feynman will find is that a lot of people inside NASA knew about the faulty O-rings but went ahead with the launch anyway. Now it’s a matter of naming those people, even if puts America’s entire space program in jeopardy.
Initial thoughts on this one? A good script! Especially if it was, indeed, written by someone in college. Whenever you have scripts like this one, you gotta have a great lead character – since the lead character is everything. A dying unorthodox sex-obsessed Manhattan-Project vet scientist? I’d say that’s a pretty darn interesting character.
The mystery itself is pretty interesting as well. There’s something about big powerful entities that are guilty of something trying to protect themselves that audiences love to watch. We want to see that entity go down. It’s why we were so obsessed with Watergate, with Penn State, with Maddof. We want people who think they’re above the law to be held accountable! Throw a likable underdog in there as the one who’s trying to expose them, and it’s hard to fuck that story up.
But therein lies the one major issue with Challenger. I’m not sure there’s a big enough conspiracy here. I mean there was a conspiracy, but it was kind of tame. There was pressure for NASA to launch the shuttle. A bunch of engineers said it was too cold. NASA ignored them and launched anyway. The o-rings busted as a result and the shuttle exploded.
I don’t know. I guess that’s bad. But it lacks the true nefarious evil decision that makes a conspiracy pop. I mean I still don’t know who made the ultimate decision to launch the shuttle. It’s just “NASA.” Even our villain in the movie, Rogers, had nothing to do with it. So in the end, I’m left wondering who I’m supposed to hate. Who I’m supposed to be happy went down. It’d be like writing The Shawshank Redemption without the warden character. At the end, the police decide there was a problem with “the prison” in general. How satisfying would that have been?
Not only that, but Challenger’s ending kind of…sorry but I have to do it…disintegrates. After Feynman threatens to expose his findings to the media, Rogers convinces him that if he does, the president won’t find out what really happened. So he says if he keeps quiet, he’ll attach Feynman’s findings in a brief to the president. Feynman then agrees to this!
Wait a minute wait a minute wait a minute. First, if Feynman exposes his findings to the media, and every newspaper in the country prints them…THE PRESIDENT WON’T FIND OUT??? That makes no sense whatsoever. But what really chapped my ass was that, Feynman, who we’ve established as an untrusting loner who does things his own way, agrees to this!!!
What???
This was a huge fault in the script (you never want your characters acting out of character – especially during crucial plot points) and when Rogers, of course, rewrote Feynman’s findings to make NASA look good, I was on Rogers side. I thought, “Good. If you were stupid enough to agree to that, you deserve to get screwed.” Not exactly the feeling you want your reader to have during the climax of the story.
So I think that ending needs to be cleaned up if this movie’s ever to be made. BUT, having said that, I do think there’s something here. The main character is a great one (until the late moment). The story is naturally dramatic with tons of conflict. And if we can establish a BIG VILLAIN who we get to see go down, the ending will live up to everything the rest of the story sets up. So with that said, I think this is worth reading.
What I learned: This script is a great reminder of the power of obstacles. When you set your hero off to achieve his goal, you want to put as many obstacles in front of him as possible. Those obstacles create conflict, which in turn creates drama, which in turn creates entertainment. NASA engineers refuse to talk to Feynman. The rest of the committee refuses to help Feynman. Feynman’s not allowed to look at the wreckage. Rogers is constantly trying to kick him off the investigation. His findings are stolen from his hotel. That’s the great thing about setting up a big clear goal, is that you get to throw a ton of obstacles in your hero’s way.
Genre: Horror/Found-Footage
Premise: After a viral video depicting a vampire attack hits the internet, a group of myth-busters go on a quest to prove it’s fake.
About: Anthony Jaswinski is an idea machine who unabashedly focuses on the high concept. He writes a lot of scripts with big stories and fast writing. One of his earlier scripts was “Kristy,” which although I didn’t read, was reviewed on the site by another reviewer and a lot of people loved. I did, however, review one of his spec sales awhile back, Advanced Placement. I also reviewed his script for the horror film, Vanishing On 7th Street.
Writers: Anthony Jaswinski and Luke Goltz (story by Jaswinski)
Details: 88 pages (March 19, 2012 draft)
Here’s what I’ll give Jaswinski. The man understands the hell out of high concept. He knows how to come up with a marketable idea that producers will want to make into a movie (girl trapped on college campus with people trying to kill her, everybody in the world disappearing, high school kid forced to kill a senator at his school). This skill is not to be underestimated because it’s one of the primary variables one must master to get a script noticed, sold, and made. Surprisingly, very few writers actually think about this. Instead, they’re off trying to write “The Ends Of The Earth 2: Lydie Has An Affair With Her Son.”
It’s not that you shouldn’t write things you’re passionate about – but until your writing ability catches up with your writing ambition, you should probably gravitate towards ideas that will get you reads, that producers will think, “Hmmm, this could be a film.” In that sense, you want to study writers like Jaswinski.
My problem with Jaswinski is on the execution side. With ideas as fun and “movie-ish” as he has, it’s unfortunate that they come off half-realized. Everything from the characters to the plot points to the story direction feels like a first draft – like he’s only diving skin-deep into the story’s potential.
Now, moving onto today’s script, it’s true that Found Footage films are about as “un-depth friendly” as genres get. The idea behind them is that they’re supposed to feel “real” real. Not “movie” real. So you almost want to avoid things like character arcs and first act transitions and the like. It’s gotta feel random. I think that’s why Blair Witch remains the best found footage movie yet (well, maybe second to Paranormal Activity). It really felt like those guys were lost, randomly walking around the woods.
Still, if the characters have zero depth, then the same rule that applies to “normal” scripts applies to these – We won’t want to follow the characters. We won’t care if they achieve their goal. We won’t care when they’re in danger. I’m not saying I loved Chronicle or that it should be seen as some FF gold standard, but at least with that script, we got to know the hero and care for him. We saw his dad beat him. We saw how he was an outcast at school. We saw that his mom was sick. For those reasons, I cared when he went off the reservation. I wanted to see what would happen to him – how it would all end.
I don’t get that here. I mean even the character descriptions are generic. One of the three leads, Lori, is described as “pretty with Seattle cap.” Or another, Kyle, is a “techno nerd.” These are the leads! After those descriptions, I don’t have any sense of the characters at all. And that’s a huge deal. Because I’m about to spend an hour and a half with them.
So what’s Garden District about? Well, a well-known internet myth-hunting team known as The Frankel Brothers interview a girl who thinks she’s a vampire. In the interview, to prove to the girl she’s human, one of the brothers opens a shade to let some sun in (I guess Frankel Bro 1 hasn’t seen Twilight, where vampires can walk around in the sun just fine). The girl gets angry, turns into a raging vampire, and while her skin is seared away by the sun, viciously attacks the brother and kills him.
The video goes viral, which is where our heroes come in. Chris, Lori, and Kyle are myth-busting second-stringers. They’re trying to be who The Frankel Brothers are. And they believe this is all a hoax, some clever use of CGI and lighting the Frankel brothers are using to increase their audience. Chris and Crew believe if they can prove it’s a hoax, that they’ll steal that audience away.
So they take a trip to New Orleans, where the video was shot, and start asking around about Paula, the girl in the video. What they learn is that there’s this whole underground community of people who consider themselves “vampires.” But they’re not real vampires. They just shave their teeth into fangs and live the lifestyle. They don’t have real powers like immortality.
Or do they?
The more people they interview, the more they consider the impossible. On the one hand, these people sure do seem like delusional freaks. But on the other, they exhibit strange enough qualities that maybe, just maybe, they really ARE vampires.
Eventually our crew gets an opportunity to interview the top dog, the leader of the Vampires (the “Sire”), and he grants them the interview in the very same building that the Frankel Bros. taped Paula in! Uh-oh, this is getting spoooooky. But shit really gets spooky when they pass out, wake up, and see that the building has been abandoned. It’s only then that they realize these vampires aren’t letting any myth busters out of this city alive!
Continuing with the positive, we do have a clear goal in Garden District. Our heroes want to prove this video is a hoax. They’re trying to infiltrate the vampire network to achieve that goal. So the script definitely has forward momentum. And that’s not to be downplayed. If I had you read all the amateur scripts I get, you’d see that most writers don’t even integrate that essential component into their story.
But on the stakes and urgency end, there isn’t much going on. What happens if they don’t prove the hoax? Nothing. They retain their status as “second-tier” myth-busters. Not what they wanted but they seem to be doing just fine with it. I remember reading a similar set-up in a found footage script awhile back and the writer established that the characters couldn’t financially support their website show anymore. They needed to make money off of it or else they wouldn’t be able to do it anymore. So when they went after their goal, it was clear that unless they succeeded, their blog was dead. Those are stakes. There’s something to lose.
Lack of urgency was also an issue. There’s no need to do their job quickly. I suppose they have their return flight they need to get their answer by. But again, this goes back to stakes. Who cares if they get the answer or not? It doesn’t hurt them if they fail so the urgency’s irrelevant. That’s why I say goal, stakes, and urgency are all tied together. You have to make them work as one to really get the most out of them.
Again, you don’t HAVE to use GSU when you write a story. Chronicle had scenes upon scenes of the characters exploring their powers that had no urgency. But Garden District’s story is specifically set up to take advantage of GSU (with the big goal), so something feels off when it doesn’t.
But all this is secondary to what I believe is the real problem here – and that’s that the story just isn’t explored enough. The ideas feel first-run. There’s a safe-ness and predictability to each choice. We know where it’s going all the time. Now does this matter with the demographic being 12-22? Does a 13 year old who hasn’t seen enough films to call things derivative really care? That’s debatable. But I like to believe you should push yourself on every element in your script. Don’t just give them what they’ve seen before. Try to do something different/new/challenging. I didn’t see any of that difference and therefore didn’t enjoy this. :(
What I learned – Make sure you’re giving us ALL THE INFORMATION we need in order to understand a moment. I see this happen A LOT. On page 62 of Garden District, we’re in a hotel at night, and one of the characters wakes up to hear scratching on the window. He slowly walks towards the window, trying to figure out what it is. Now while I’m reading this, I’m thinking, “Well isn’t he looking at the window? How does he not see what’s scratching it?” He gets closer and closer, and I keep wondering, “How come he doesn’t see what’s scratching??” Finally, when he gets there, it’s written that he whips the curtain open and sees nothing. Ohhhhhh! There was a CURTAIN there the whole time!!! That’s why he couldn’t see. But this was never conveyed to us so how was I supposed to know that a curtain was blocking his view? Had I known that, this scene would’ve been creepy instead of confusing.
Genre: Period
Premise: The true story of the Marlands, an oil magnate back in the 20s who were very controversial due to a shocking family development.
About: The writer here, Chris Terrio, has been kicking ass for a few years now. He wrote Ben Affleck’s upcoming “Argo,” which I reviewed on the site, and I believe he also rewrote one of Scriptshadow’s top screenplays, “Tell No One,” also for Ben Affleck to direct. But this is far and away his best script.
Writer: Chris Terrio
Details: 129 pages (September 2009 draft)
EDIT UPDATE: David O Russell is now directing with Jennifer Lawrence to star.
This script had been sitting on my computer for awhile with a big giant virtual sign on it that said, “Avoid!” I briefly checked out the subject matter online and all I remembered was that it was a freaking period piece that sounded boring as hell. But with the upcoming move and a million other things I need to do, I haven’t had time to meticulously carve out which scripts to review. Hence my lazy, “Oh, I guess I’ll just read this one.”
Well thank God for laziness! Because Ends Of The Earth is one of the best scripts I’ve read all year! I mean this is what screenwriting is all about! This is how you fucking write a story. I’m bursting with enthusiasm over this thing and scared I’m going to forget all the marvelous lessons it has to teach so I want to jump right into it.
However, before I do, I should encourage you to SEEK OUT THIS SCRIPT AND READ IT FIRST. E-mail me if you have trouble and I’ll try to point you in the right direction (subject line: “EARTH”). The joy of the read is the startling number of surprises that pop up along the way. If you google these people, a lot of that will be ruined. I’ll be spoiling some of that here since it’s public knowledge, but the story is SO MUCH BETTER if you don’t know.
The Ends Of The Earth introduces us to an old broken down hotel maid in 1976. She’s relegated to cleaning up used condoms and a gallon of vomit in one of the hotel bathrooms. It’s an uncomfortable scene to read. But it will become so much more uncomfortable in a few pages, when we learn just who this woman is.
While heading to the lobby, one of the elevators opens and an older man’s eyes pop when he sees the maid. There’s a recognition between the two, resulting in her turning and running down the hall. He doesn’t get out of the elevator in time, forcing him to get off on another floor and come back around, eventually tracking her to a maintenance closet. He bangs on the closet, asking her to come out, but she won’t budge. She’s too terrified. He finally slips a note under the door that reads…”IS YOUR NAME LYDIE?”
And so it begins. Who is Lydie?
Cut back to 1906. Yes, 70 years prior. Lydie is just 6 years old, a guarded little girl on a train. Think Newt from Aliens but a lot angrier. Her alcoholic mother didn’t even tell her she was getting rid of her. She waited until she was asleep and shipped her off in the middle of the night to her brother, Ernest Marland, who’s in Wyoming betting his entire savings on an ill-conceived search for oil, a bet that’s looking worse and worse every day.
While no one seems to be able to get through to Lydie, Ernest does. She softens a little around him, and a week later, Lydie turns out to be a good luck charm. Ernest strikes oil. A LOT of oil.
Years pass and Marland becomes one of the biggest oil companies in the U.S. He’s not Rockefeller, but he’s big enough to make Rockefeller nervous. And Lydie? Well, she’s the heir to this fortune, since Ernest’s wife dies of stomach cancer.
That, of course, means that every eligible bachelor in Wyoming is after Lydie. Yet nobody seems able to snatch her up. It’s not that she doesn’t like anyone. It’s just that her and her father are so close. That angry vicious little girl has become funny, kind, and engaging, all attributed to the way Ernest raised her.
Well, this is where shit gets real. Because – and this is the point where you’re either going to check out or read faster – Ernest and Lydie fall in love. Yes, father and daughter develop a relationship. It’s a shocking development, especially since you know this is based on real life. I mean it’s one thing for this to happen in the backwoods of Kentucky. But this is one of the most powerful men in the United States! It’s not like there are many places to hide when you’re that public.
So while they sneak around for awhile, it soon becomes impossible. And in a precedent that Woody Allen would use for inspiration later in life, Ernest nulls the adoption of his daughter and marries her.
Ewwwwwwwww. Right?
Well, yeah, ewwwwww. But here’s the great thing about this script. It sets up the most “ewwwwww” situation ever, and then works to make you sympathetic towards it! And not only does it succeed, you’re fucking rooting for their marriage by the end of the script. An incest marriage! Yes.
That’s because Lydie becomes one of the pioneers in helping workers and their families get medical care (relevant much??). This was unprecedented back then. If you got injured on the job – see ya. You’re useless to us now. If your kid was dying? Tough luck. We’ll send you a “Sorry for your loss” card and maybe let you come in late on Monday. Lydie changed all that. She wanted to do more for Marland’s work force.
But the cost of doing so was overbearing. And in the end, it would lead to the downfall of the company, which would eventually send Lydie down a path where she’s cleaning up used condoms and vomit in hotel rooms where nobody knows who she is. However, Lydie will get one last moment in the sun – a chance to put some closure on her life. Maybe, she’ll realize that despite all this pain, it was actually worth it.
Uhhhhh…can I just say this script was FUCKING AWESOME! And so unexpected. Period piece. aka Boringsville 99.9% of the time. Yet not this time!
Let’s start with the opening scene. When I open a period piece, I’m expecting it to be boring. Women in period dresses. People speaking funny. Maybe some horses. Here, we start with a maid cleaning up condoms and vomit who sees someone that makes her run for her life. That’s a freaking intriguing opening. Who is this woman? Who is this guy who recognizes her? Why is she running from him? So right away, from the very first page, I’m hooked.
However, I should point out, everything that followed this scene, DID NOT UTILIZE my precious GSU. That’s right. While there are elements of GSU (with STAKES being the most obvious – a relationship that threatens a billion dollar company!), for the most part, Terrio uses other story devices to keep us interested.
We start with the “building up” phase. This is a device you can use that usually keeps the audience interested. I’ve nicknamed it the “Goodfellas Tool.” We like to see people start from little and build up to become powerful. I don’t know if it’s because we enjoy watching someone we like succeed or if we know that sooner or later, it all has to come crumbling down, which that sick part of us really wants to see. But if you show your hero becoming successful over time, we’re usually into it.
This, of course, is followed by the big development in the story – the Ernest and Lydie kiss. This begins their relationship, which is intriguing because they must hide it from the world. This is always going to be interesting to an audience because the stakes are so high (their lives, business, and reputation are on the line if they get caught). So we’re on pins and needles hoping nobody finds out.
But then Terrio makes the bravest decision of the screenplay. He decides to show Ernest and Lydie come out to the world and admit they’re a couple. I was really worried about the script at this point because I thought, “Well how are they going to keep our interest now? There’s no secret. There’s no more building. Why would we keep turning the pages?”
This leads to the admittedly “softest” part of the screenplay, which focuses on Lydie realizing how little her company is doing for its workers and her determination to change that. But it manages to stay afloat due to the conflict resulting from the aftermath of her marriage. She’s shunned by the world, particularly her peers, for marrying…well, her dad!
On top of that, we just develop a lot of sympathy towards Lydie. While she may be the happiest she’s ever been (being with Ernest) she’s also the most miserable. And we want to see her rise up from that and be happy again. I’m not sure we would want that if Lydie wasn’t desperately trying to help other people (the power of a likable protagonist!).
The script REALLY picks up again, however, when Rockefeller Oil gets involved. They start seeing Marland as a threat, and decide to go in for the kill using incest as their primary weapon. The result is so ugly, I teared up. It was just horrible what they did to Marland and it destroyed their fortune, turning Ernest and Lydie into shells of their former selves. A tragedy of epic proportions.
Seriously, this has to be one of the most amazing untold stories ever. I can’t believe they haven’t made a movie about it yet. It’s one of those rare gems that’s not just an interesting chronicling of events, but a story with the kind of drama and conflict and twists and shocks you couldn’t make up if you tried. Someone said this was Gone With The Wind meets There Will Be Blood. And I’d agree. But I think this is better than BOTH of those movies.
I think what really stuck out to me above everything else was the love story. When these two first fall for each other, you’re like, “No!” But by the end, you’re rooting for them to be together. It’s one of the best examples of true love I’ve ever read. Love means doing anything for that person – whether it’s crossing familial boundaries or traveling halfway across the world to see them. It doesn’t mean words. It means WHAT YOU DO. And what these two do for each other is extraordinary and inspiring. It’s really beautiful to read.
I could go on for years about this script but I’m already late putting up the review so I’ll have to stop here. This is a wonderful screenplay and I’m hoping they get it cast soon because with the right actors and the right director, this has “Oscar” and “classic” written all over it.
What I Learned: So if you don’t have GSU, how do you keep the reader’s attention? Well, it ain’t easy. But my feeling is that the less GSU you have, the more CONFLICT you need. That means more conflict in each scene, and it means the conflict itself has to be more potent. From the very first scene we have conflict (a mysterious woman trying to escape a mysterious man), to later on when two people are trying to withstand their love for each other, to two people trying to hide their love from everyone else, to a woman trying to change a system that refuses to be changed, to an evil corporation trying to take our character’s corporation over. There’s always an imbalance (the heart of conflict) in “Ends Of The Earth,” and when you combine that with magnificent writing, you can write something GSU-light. With that said, I’d wait until you’ve been writing for a LOOONNNNG time before you try it. It requires a TON of skill.
Everybody always complains to me about my Amateur Friday choices. (complain-y voice) “Carson, you never pick Amateur Friday scripts fairly.” “Why does this guy get to go twice?” “This logline sucks. Mine’s better.” “How come I didn’t get picked?” “You play favorites.” Well NO MORE my friends! That’s because YOU’RE picking the next two Amateur Friday scripts!
Below, I’ve listed 20 loglines along with the first ten pages of each. Now I want you to pay attention to HOW you choose the pages you read. Since you don’t have time to read all 20, you’ll notice that an automatic filtering system kicks in. Based on what? The logline, of course. How interesting it sounds. If it seems like a movie or not. In doing so, you’re doing exactly what agents, producers and execs are doing. Take what you learn from that experience and apply it to your next script. Make sure your idea can stand up to this test.
Now I didn’t hand-pick these loglines. They were all picked randomly. I wanted to give you an opportunity to see what I (and others) get sent. As you can see, if you come up with a good idea, it’s pretty damn easy to stand out from the pack. The large majority of these loglines won’t get anything more than an eye-roll. I know that’s harsh, but this process is harsh. Nobody cares about your feelings (besides Scriptshadow of course!), which means if you want to succeed, you have to do better. There’s also no official tally here. Just tell me which loglines and pages you like the most in the comments section and I’ll go with whatever’s getting the most attention. Now have at it!
The Last Banana Tree (Dramedy) – Tensions rise in the Foster household as their oldest daughter plans a doomed fundraiser for the world’s last banana tree.
Wonderwall (Action) – A former black ops soldier now makes millions providing freelance security to criminals. But his newest client attracts every cop and criminal in the city, and she just may be innocent. Saving her forces him to be a soldier again.
Heavy Gravity (Sci-Fi) – When a spoiled celebrity athlete is framed for blowing up the floating Imperial sky palace, he escapes with a rag-tag bunch of Surfacer teens to bring to justice the Empire’s most notorious terrorist — it’s ruler.
Dear Melanie (Drama/Romance) – After receiving a letter from a recently deceased co-worker professing his feelings for her, Melanie leaps at the chance to go back in time and save him.
Banshee (Horror) – A woman tormented by visions of death must learn to control her rage with the help of a vigilante vicar, in order to find her son and save a sea-side town from a soul stealing Banshee.
Kings (Thriller/Dark Comedy) – A group of teenagers congregate to play a popular drinking game, but when sex, drugs, and angst raise the debaucherous stakes, they’ll have to reassess their friendships in order to survive the night.
The Big Bang (Comedy) – After a desperately inadequate man sells his soul to the Devil for “male enhancement,” he discovers that his newfound stature is more of a curse than a blessing and he must confront God to find true happiness.
Dark Space (Action/Sci-Fi) – Alex Chaser, a tenacious mechanic, has gone through life ignoring humanity’s perilous position in the galaxy; constantly abused and ignored by a powerful alien government. But when she learns she is the first human to acquire psionic abilities, Alex finds herself changing the trajectory of human evolution in ways she never could have imagined.
Dethroned (Romance/Drama) – A millionaire, lost his fortunes & company, has to adapt to a new life when he becomes homeless and now faces losing his wife & daughter.
Amerikanski (Crime/Drama) – An orphan is taken in by a gang of criminals in Northeast Philly and grows up to lead them in a turf war with the Russian Mafia.
Things To Do Before I Died (Dramedy) – After the funeral of his best friend a lonely estate agent with a drab existence finds her wish list and decides to complete it in her memory. But when the list leads him on a journey that uncovers her troubled past, he must question everything he ever knew about her before he can begin the healing process.
The Real Jeff Spencer (Romantic Comedy) – An average Joe – with the same name as a TV star – begins a text-messaging relationship with a Hollywood starlet who falls for him.
Headlong (Comedy) – wo Aussies roadtripping from Phoenix to Vegas pick up a recently turned zombie gang member, who carries a fortune in stolen gems. When his former gang comrades pursue, a wild chase begins…
Mad Dogs (Grindhouse/Horror) – A repressed teen werewolf tracks down her estranged father — the sheriff of resort that caters to the hedonistic pursuits of werewolves — but an outbreak of weaponized rabies turns their reunion into a fight for survival.
Blood and Water (Thriller) – After her lover is murdered, a disillusioned sheriff struggles to cover up the affair; but instead, discovers a conspiracy that threatens to wipe out her entire town.
Blood Star (Sci-fi/Action) -When the last Vampires on Earth realize their powers are fading, they must go in search of the source of their immortality, before they are hunted down by a vengeful Grim Reaper bent on ending their kind forever.
The Battle Of New Orleans (Historical Action) – Outnumbered by the British army as he defends New Orleans in the War of 1812, heroic but strict General ANDREW JACKSON joins forces with the charming pirate JEAN LAFITTE, but must compete against the captain for the affections of Jackson’s willful wife, RACHEL.
Doxide (Sci-Fi) – A mafia hitman is hired by the government to hunt down a group of extraterrestrials on the New York City waterfront.
Battleground (Sci-Fi/Action) – During World War Two, in the merciless, freezing wilderness of southern Russia, stranded American and German soldiers put their differences aside to fight off an alien invasion from another world.
The Lumber Hack (Comedy) – When the world’s greatest competitive lumberjack decides to make a come back, he must overcome his past mistakes and the reigning world champion to complete his quest.