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As you all know, the Black List is a mess. The way the votes are tallied is a highly flawed process. Scripts that were only seen by 20 people are going up against scripts that have been seen by 100 people. There are certain genres that get preference over others. Politics has started to influence voting in recent years. All this results in a bunch of vote tallies that are almost arbitrary at this point.

Which is why you’re lucky to have me. :)

Because I’ve read most of the scripts on the list which means I can give you the TRUE RANKINGS. And yes, I accept the disclaimer that taste is subjective. I am not the end all be all. But I’m pretty close! And I’m guessing all of you want to know which scripts from the list you should be reading anyway.

A couple of things to note before we get started. The way I’m going to be ranking is by memory. I’m not going to go strictly on my rating at the time. Scripts that got ‘worth the reads’ but lodged themselves in my brain will get graded higher than scripts that got ‘impressives’ which I’ve since forgotten.

Also, there are still a chunk of scripts from the list that I haven’t read yet and so those will not be appearing on the list. They are If You Were the Last, Enemies Within, Gusher, Bikram, Borderline, What If, Annalise & Song, Viceland, May December, Horsegirl, Fish in a Tree, Mouse, State Lines, Good Chance, Here Come the Bandits, Occupied The Sauce, Frenemy, Get Lite, Suncoast, Handsome Stranger, Margot, Tin Roof Rusted, and Yom Kippur.

If it makes you feel any better, I know I won’t like the large majority of those scripts (I still want to read Angela’s script and a couple others) which makes these 50 screenplays the real list. You ready to get started? Let’s go!

50 – REWIRED (10 votes)

Logline: Harvard. 1959. A young Ted Kaczynski is experimented on by Dr. Henry Murray during a secret CIA psychological study that may have led to the creation of the Unabomber.
Writers: Adam Gaines, Ryan Parrott
Reason: This script just isn’t my subject matter so that definitely played into the low rating. But even then, I felt that nothing much happened in the script. They didn’t choose an angle to best take advantage of this person’s story.

49 – DUST (7 votes)
Logline: A young mother in 1930s Oklahoma is convinced that her family is threatened and takes drastic steps to keep them safe.
Writer: Karrie Crouse
Reason: An entire script… about dust. Dust is the main character, the antagonist, the plot, the twists, dust, dust, and more dust. I have disliked some scripts before but this one got under my skin for some reason. I wanted things to happen and they just didn’t.

48 – MY DEAR YOU (11 votes) (Can’t find the review)

Logline: Based on a short story by Rachel Khong. A love story set in the afterlife about our struggle to let go of the past, even when our present is heaven… literally. Tess keeps searching for the love of her life without realizing he’s right there next to her the whole time, helping her look.
Writer: Meghan Kennedy
Reason: I know I read this script but I don’t remember anything about it. I think when the logline focuses more on feelings than what the actual plot is about, the script is in trouble.

47 – CHANG CAN DUNK (28 votes)

Logline: A young Asian-American teen and basketball fanatic who just wants to dunk and get the girl ends up learning much more about himself, his best friends, and his mother.
Writer: Jingyi Shao
Reason: There may be no script on this list that frustrated me more than this one. When you see this many votes, you’re expecting something special. But this was just some goofy little comedy with a kinda funny concept. I feel like there are 100,000 writers out there who could’ve written this exact same script.

46 – EMERGENCY (21 votes)

Logline: Ready for a night of partying, a group of Black and Latino college students must weigh the pros and cons of calling the police when faced with an emergency.
Writer: KD Davila
Reason: A tonal mish-mash of epic proportions. Is it a comedy? Is it a drama? No one knows!

45 – THE WOMEN OF ROUTE 40 (7 votes)

Logline: A struggling single mother must confront dangerous forces – and sins of her past – when her world collides with that of a serial killer. Inspired by the true story of Delaware’s only serial murderer, the Route 40 killer.
Writer: Erin Kathleen
Reason: I think the writer felt really passionately about the subject matter, which ultimately blinded them from writing an entertaining story. You have to learn to separate yourself from the material in order to come up with the best plot.

44 – CRUSH ON YOU (10 votes)

Logline: Summer on a secluded campus takes a dark turn for three college girls when a supernaturally sexy mystery man begins haunting their dreams.
Writer: Shea Mayo
Reason: You know I came across another review online of this script and the reader really liked it. So maybe I’m the crazy one. But this script felt half-baked in its best moments. A very lazy narrative that never intrigues or scares.

43 – EARWORM (9 votes)

Logline: A former music therapist is recruited to use a mysterious machine to dive into the memories of a serial killer on death row.
Writer: Austin Everett
Reason: Definitely one of the more interesting concepts on the list which is why I think it was one of the first scripts I reviewed. But it fell apart quickly. You could sense that the concept was too complicated and the writer wasn’t quite sure what to do with it.

42 – GABI SEEMS DIFFERENT (7 votes) (can’t find review)

Logline: After spending several years recovering from a devastating car crash that pulled her out of the spotlight, Gabi, a famous pop star, gets ready to perform again for the first time. But with the pressure mounting and her memory failing her, the young woman begins to doubt who she really is — and if Gabi really survived the crash at all.
Writer: Victoria Bata
Reason: This script exists like a fuzzy dream in my head. If I remember correctly, it was one of those “what is and isn’t real” type scripts, which, if not executed with a deft pen, can quickly get away from you.

41 – BLOOD TIES (10 votes)

Logline: Based on the New Yorker article by Nathan Heller. A true-crime thriller based on the story of two brilliant college lovers convicted of a brutal slaying. An obsessed detective investigates the true motives that led to a double homicide, and the decades of repercussions that follow.
Writer: Aaron Katz
Reason: Remember when True Crime was all the rage? What happened? I think the bar has been raised so when you get a script like this one that tackles a rather mundane true crime story, it doesn’t feel like it’s doing enough.

40 – RIPPER (15 votes)

Logline: London, 1888: When their friends begin dying at the hands of a brutal killer, an all-female crime syndicate, The Forty Elephants, must work together to take down the predator stalking them – Jack The Ripper.
Writer: Dennis MaGee Fallon
Reason: Another Jack the Ripper script. Is this number 82,567 for the decade? The logline sounds exciting but the script itself was rather tame. When you play in sandboxes that thousands of other writers are playing in, you have to bring something groundbreaking to the table.

39 – MURDER IN THE WHITE HOUSE (9 votes)

Logline: The President is murdered during a private dinner, and Secret Service agent Mia Pine has until morning to discover which guest is the killer before a peace agreement fails and leads to war
Writer: Jonathan Stokes
Reason: You gotta have the discipline and cleverness of Agatha Christie to write these whodunnits. If you take your foot off the gas for even a second, all the plates fall to the ground. The messiness in the plotting here was too much to overcome.

38 – THE NEUTRAL CORNER (13 votes)

Logline: Logline: A Nevada court judge who moonlights reffing high-profile boxing matches must face his demons when he’s assigned to the Olympic fight of an ex-con he’d previously sentenced for murder.
Writer: Justin Piasecki
Reason: I had to dig deep into the recesses of my mind to remember this one. From what I can recall, I was disappointed due to the fact that it’s a good concept that the writer didn’t exploit enough.

37 – FOREVER HOLD YOUR PEACE (19 votes)

Writer: Emma Dudley
Logline: On the way to her father’s wedding, a young woman still stuck in the closet hooks up with a female flight attendant, only to later find out she’s her father’s fiancé.
Reason: 19 votes? Come on. This is a standard concept that we’ve already seen before. It has a few nice moments but never rises above average.

36 – SATURDAY NIGHT GHOST CLUB (17 votes)

Logline: After being haunted by a terrifying entity, a twelve-year-old boy teams up with his eccentric uncle and three other misfits to form their own ghost club, investigating all the paranormal sites in town so that he can find and confront the ghost that’s tormenting him.
Writers: Steve Desmond, Michael Sherman
Reason: For one of the more fun-sounding premises, it was a bummer to read this and find out it didn’t deliver. Execution was sloppy. Not imaginative enough.

35 – RUBY (7 votes)

Logline: After her husband is attacked, assassin Ruby is lured into the open to hunt down those responsible, leading her back to the boss who wants to keep her in the fold at any cost.
Writer: Kat Wood
Reason: This is yet another Jane Wick script with average execution but it’s certainly more entertaining than half the scripts on the Black List, which is why I rated it number 35.

34 – NANNY (9 votes)

Logline: Aisha is an undocumented nanny caring for a privileged child. As she prepares for the arrival of her only son, who she left behind in her native country, a violent supernatural presence invades her reality, jeopardizing the American Dream she’s carefully pieced together.
Writer: Nikyata Jusu
Reason: This script has some good character moments between the nanny and the fractured rich couple. But it never quite figures out what it’s trying to do.

33 – THE BLACK BELT (15 votes)

Logline: Eighth grader Simon Paluska dreams of being a Taekwondo Black Belt, but he’s not allowed to take lessons. So he buys a Black Belt on Amazon for twenty-five bucks. Then, he has to use it.
Writer: Randall Green
Reason: This logline was funny but the execution never pushed the envelope. Be careful of “just good enough” execution. It’s a script killer. Push yourself!

32 – THE PEAK (7 votes)

Logline: A troubled young surgeon travels to a desolate peak to climb the mountain where her father suffered a mental breakdown years earlier, only to realize halfway up the rock wall that she might be subject to the same fate.
Writer: Arthur Hills
Reason: Maybe it’s because I’d read a couple of better versions of this idea already, but this never found a plot beat to elevate it above what was, for the most part, a tame idea. Great ideas need good execution. Decent ideas need great execution.

31 – HIGH SOCIETY (9 votes)

Logline: A depressed, progressive woman stuck in a conservative small Texas town starts micro-dosing the entire town with marijuana to make them all get along.
Writer: Noga Pnueli
Reason: Starts off promising then goes smoky. A little weird to have the main character actively drug an entire town. In a script that’s trying to make a morally superior political point through its main character, I’m not sure that was the right move.

30 – TWO-FACED (25 votes)

Logline: A high school senior attempts to get her principal fired after observing racist behavior, but she quickly learns he won’t go down without a fight.
Writer: Cat Wilkins
Reason: This is a pretty serious subject matter that’s dealt with so lightly I’m not sure the script ever found the proper tone. It just wasn’t as good as it could’ve been.

29 – COSMIC SUNDAY (9 votes)

Logline: A small percentage of the population is stuck in a time loop and have had to create a society that functions within the same day, repeated day in and day out. One man struggles to find himself for the first time in ages amidst a society clinging to a sense of normalcy.
Writer: MacMillan Hedges
Reason: I liked that it took an overused trope – the loop movie – and found a new way into it. Unfortunately, there are too many rules to this loop world and, as a result, the script became too messy to save.

28 – REPTILE DYSFUNCTION (11 votes)

Logline: A chemical leak in a local water supply in Central Florida wreaks havoc on the invasive population of pythons, leading a family to the fight of their life to survive.
Writer: Creston Whittington
Reason: The one thing I’ll say about this script is that it has a really fun setup. The problem is the execution isn’t good enough. Writer seemed too new to the game. Had so much potential!

27 – EMANCIPATION (8 votes)

Logline: Based on a true story, a runaway slave has to outwit bounty hunters and the perils of a Louisiana swamp to reach the Union army and his only chance at freedom.
Writer: Bill Collage
Reason: This one starts out really good then gets harder and harder to digest. Not light subject matter by any means. Have to be in the proper head space to read.

26 – THE BOY WHO DIED (10 votes)

Logline: A young girl creates a robot version of Harry Potter while her father simultaneously is treating Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe for a terminal disease.
Writer: Monisha Dadlani
Reason: I will just say this. This is one of the WEIRDEST ideas I’ve ever come across. And it almost works. But the weirdness becomes so overly weird that it can’t rebound from all the weird.

25 – NEITHER CONFIRM NOR DENY (26 votes)

Logline: An adaptation of David Sharp’s book The CIA’s Greatest Covert Operation that chronicles the clandestine CIA operation that risked igniting WWIII by recovering a nuclear-armed Soviet Sub, the K-129, that sunk to the bottom of the ocean in 1968.
Writer: Dave Collard
Reason: It’s an interesting story but gets bogged down by a lack of urgency. I don’t remember exactly what happened, but I remember that the thing takes place over like ten years or something. If this script could figure out its lack of urgency issue, it could be good.

24 – THE U.S.P.S. (11 votes)

Logline: Following in his murdered mother’s footsteps, Michael Griffiths enlists in the United States Postal Service… only to discover a mail route full of surprises and a job that means maybe, just maybe, saving the world.
Writer: Perry Janes
Reason: This script was way over the top. And I didn’t like the mix between the postal service and a secret agency. It felt unnatural. But it’s being made by Amazon so maybe I’ll eat my shorts in the end!

23 – I.S.S. (7 votes)

Logline: At any given moment in time there are roughly six astronauts living on the International Space Station (ISS). The station itself is divided into two segments one half Russian, one half American. When a world war event occurs on Earth, America and Russia find themselves on opposing sides. As such, both nations secretly contact their astronauts aboard the ISS and give them instructions to take control of the station by any means necessary. The six astronauts must each secretly choose between their friendships with each other and their allegiance to their country.
Writer: Nick Shafir
Reason: I’m such a sucker for sci-fi that I’ll basically read anything in the genre. This script doesn’t deliver for reasons I get into in the review. But something about it stayed with me enough that when I was ranking the scripts, I remembered it.

22 – A SINGLE POINT OF FAILURE (9 votes)

Logline: Journalists race to expose how Boeing knowingly misled regulators, pilots, and airlines to cover up a problematic flight software system on the 737 MAX, leading to two major airplane crashes and the deaths of 346 people. Based on real events.
Writer: Terry Huang
Reason: Ugh, it crushes me so much to prop up true stories. I want original stories, dammit! But, as far as true stories go, this one’s pretty interesting as it investigates how Boeing tried to pass blame on its own screw-up, which killed a bunch of people.

21 – A BIG BOLD BEAUTIFUL JOURNEY (14 votes)

Logline: After both attending the same wedding solo, David and Sarah embark on a big, bold, beautiful journey with a little help from their 1996 Passat GPS and a little bit of magic for the road trip of their lives.
Writer: Seth Reiss
Reason: This script has problems but I give it points for taking chances. If you like non-traditional love stories like 500 Days of Summer, you’ll love this

20 – ST. SIMMONS (11 votes)

Logline: When a very fat and possibly gay boy from New Orleans is visited by an angel called Barbra Streisand, he sets out on a holy crusade in daytime television to touch and save the soul of every obese person in America before his demons consume him – if only to make his daddy proud. It’s the true gospel of Richard Simmons.
Writer: Greg Wayne
Reason: Free Richard Simmons! This follows one of the most fascinating characters to ever become a celebrity. Does a good job delving into some of Simmons’s secrets and demons.

19 – 1MDB (10 votes)

Logline: The incredible true story of the multi-billion dollar Malaysian government corruption scandal which led to the conviction of Prime Minister Najib Razak and almost $5 billion in settlements paid out by Goldman Sachs.
Writer: Scott Conroy
Reason: To be honest, I just liked learning about this weirdo imposter who stole all this money and posed as a big shot… only to get away with it.

18 – BRING ME BACK (22 votes) (can’t find review)

Logline: When a woman on an interstellar voyage falls in love with someone during a cryosleep simulation, she attempts to discern whether the man is a real passenger on the ship or just a figment of her imagination.
Writer: Crosby Selander
Reason: Bring Me Back is probably the most high concept script on the list. And I certainly was intrigued by it. The problem is that it spans so much time and tries to do so much that it never quite finds its groove.

17 – BUBBLE AND SQUEAK (21 votes) (review no longer up)

Logline: Two newlyweds traverse a fictional country on their honeymoon but slowly realize they’re yearning to take separate journeys.
Writer: Evan Twohy
Reason: As someone who reads a lot, I appreciate when writers give me something different. And, holy cow, is that the case with Bubble and Squeak. This script is really weird. I’m not sure it all comes together in the end. But you can see why people remembered it enough to vote for it.

16 – WAR FACE (7 votes)

Logline: A female U.S. Army Special Agent is sent to a remote, all-male outpost in Afghanistan to investigate accusations of war crimes. But when a series of mysterious events jeopardize her mission and the unit’s sanity, she must find the courage to survive something far more sinister.
Writer: Mitchell Lafortune
Reason: I really loved the setup for this script. It gets a little crazy towards the end. But the ride getting there is fun.

15 – HEADHUNTER (29 votes) (review no longer up)

Logline: A high-functioning cannibal selects his victims based on their Instagram popularity, but finds his habits shaken by a man who wants to be eaten.
Writer: Sophie Dawson
Reason: I think Mayhem (Sophie) is a revelation. All of us love her here on Scriptshadow. She’s always delivered weird totally bonkers scripts. Headhunter is no exception. A bit too much like American Psycho for my taste but a killer (no pun intended) execution.

14 – THE MAN IN THE YARD (14 votes)

Logline: When a dangerous stranger shows up at her front door, a depressed widow must confront her own past in order to protect her two children.
Writer: Sam Stefanak
Reason: This one probably shouldn’t be as high as it is. But I can’t get this image out of my head of this guy whose features we can’t quite make out standing in the back of the yard, unmoving. That’s one of the most terrifying things I can imagine. Not the best execution but I would like to see this movie.

13 – EXCELSIOR! – 9 votes

Logline: The true story of the meteoric rise (and subsequent fall) of Marvel Comics and the star-crossed creators behind the panel: Stan Lee & Jack Kirby.
Writer: Alex Convery
Reason: When I die, make sure that they do a study on my brain to find out why I included a biopic in my top 20. But in all seriousness, come on, it’s Stan Lee! And the story behind his fallout with Jack Kirby is really interesting. This was an unexpected treat.

12 – PLUSH (8 votes)

Logline: Sex, money, and one schoolyard fad that took a nation by storm. Based on the true story of Ty Warner, the enigmatic entrepreneur behind a ‘90s toy craze that sparked madness, murder, and a billion-dollar empire.
Writer: Alexandra Skarsgard
Reason: I’m not Mr. True Story Guy by any means but the main character in this script was odd enough that I wanted to know more. And, of course, there’s the cutesy irony of becoming a billionaire by making tiny little stuffed animals.

11 – UNCLE WICK (8 votes)

Logline: An action comedy wherein Benji Stone, a lovable but deeply unpopular sixteen year old, is pulled into an international assassination plot by his uncle, a retired undercover assassin charged with babysitting Benji for the weekend.
Writer: Gabe Delahaye
Reason: Best pure comedy on the list. Great concept. Can see this movie being a hit tomorrow!

10 – POSSUM SONG (16 votes)

Logline: After discovering his secret songwriting partner dead, a country music star struggling to record new material makes a Faustian bargain with a family of possums who have taken up residency within his walls.
Writer: Isaac Adamson
Reason: This script took me back to the old Black List days, when every other script was dominated by animals! This one is bizarre in mostly a good way. Expect yourself to go through a lot of “WTF” moments with Possum Song, but, afterwards, being glad that you took the journey.

9 – SHARPER (17 votes)

Logline: A chain of scam artists goes after one wealthy family with the perfect plan to drain them of their funds. But when love, heartbreak, and jealousy slither their way into the grand scheme, it becomes unclear whether the criminals are conning or the ones being conned.
Writers: Brian Gatewood, Alessandro Tanaka
Reason: Okay, this one’s a little messy but as far as con scripts go, it’s the best one I’ve read in a while. The cons are fast and furious all the way til the last page!

8 – LURKER (11 votes)

Logline: An obsessed fan maneuvers his way into the inner circle of his hip hop idol and will stop at nothing to stay in.
Writer: Alex Russell
Reason: I started off rolling my eyes. I finished eagerly ripping pages away to find out what happened next. A great stalker story that feels very 2020.

7 – FLIGHT RISK (9 votes)

Logline: An Air Marshal transporting a fugitive across the Alaskan wilderness via a small plane finds herself trapped when she suspects their pilot is not who he says he is.
Writer: Jared Rosenberg
Reason: I love scripts like this. Tight quarters. Multiple secrets. High stakes. Twists and turns. This is a great little screenplay that contained enthusiasts will love.

6 – THE CULLING (10 votes) (newsletter review only – sign up at carsonreeves1@gmail.com!)

Logline: When a former priest returns home after an extended absence, he encounters the demon who killed his mother and must kill it before it possesses him.
Writer: Stephen Herman
Reason: This is a cool little horror film that uses a physical monster as a metaphor for the main character’s alcoholism. A good example of how to write a low budget single-location horror movie.

5 – GENERATION LEAP (7 votes)

Logline: After a global pandemic causes NASA to send a crew of astronauts into deep space to find another habitable planet, the crew is unexpectedly awoken from hypersleep and must survive a mysterious new threat that comes from the future generations they sought to save, and the one place they never expected – Earth.
Writers: John Sonntag, Thomas Sonntag
Reason: I probably shouldn’t have liked this one as much as I did. But I did. The concept is really clever, and once you realize what’s going on, you can’t help but anticipate who’s showing up next. Best pure sci-fi script on the list!

4 – THE GORGE (8 votes)

Logline: A brazen, high-action, genre-bending, love story about two very dangerous young people, who despite the corrupt and lethal world they operate in, find a soulmate in each other.
Writer: Zach Dean
Reason: This script isn’t perfect but I’ve never seen a setup like it before. And then it morphs into a love story, before morphing into a sci-fi horror adventure. Weird and uneven, but highly memorable. Writer Zach Dean, of course, just wrote Amazon’s biggest original movie, The Tomorrow War.

3 – MAGAZINE DREAMS (9 votes)

Logline: A Black amateur bodybuilder struggles to find human connection in this exploration of celebrity and violence.
Writer: Elijah Bynum
Reason: Dark. Very very dark. Not for the faint-hearted, that’s for sure. However, if you like scripts where you go deep into the psychosis of very unstable people, this one is a truthful portrayal of a warped mind. Uncomfortable but powerful.

2 – TOWERS (8 votes)

Logline: A businessman’s obsession with his competitor leads him down a rabbit hole of self-discovery, fantasy, and delusion.
Writer: Aaron Rabin
Reason: This script did an amazing job of keeping me guessing. It was offbeat, unexpected. The world we were in was weird and unpredictable. For writers trying to understand what a unique voice looks like, you’ll want to read this script.

1 – BIRDIES (16 votes)

Logline: When Tabitha, a struggling foster kid, wins a contest to become part of the BIRDIES, a popular daily YouTube channel featuring the radiant and enigmatic Mama Bird and her diverse brood of adopted children, she soon learns that things get dark when the cameras turn off.
Writer: Colin Bannon
Reason: The most original script on the list. The most timely script on the list. It was quirky but in an endearing way. The main character was so easy to root for. The villain was unique and interesting. This script hit all the marks and should’ve been voted as the top script of the year!

Final note: Have you read any of the scripts that I haven’t reviewed yet? Were they good? Should I review them next? Let me know in the comments!