Recap
A couple of weeks ago I wrote an article about my experience in the first round of the Creative Screenwriting Cyberspace Open writing tournament. After spending a weekend crafting a decent five page scene, I had made it to the quarterfinals.
Round Two
I was feeling good heading in to round two. 16 hours to complete the next assignment? Pshaw — piece of cake. I eat stress for breakfast.
The rules of round two were simple — you would be given a story premise at 5 PM and had to complete a 3 – 5 page scene, based on the premise, by 9 AM the next morning. What could possibly go wrong?
The Preparation
In anticipation of having to stay up all night and write, I had already started modifying my waking hours. I was getting up at noon and going to sleep at 5 AM so that I would be footloose and fancy free come competition day.
Oh they did not know who they were messing with! Heck, they might as well give me the winning check now.
On The Day
5 PM. I get the premise… This was not going to be a walk in the park.
The Premise
“Your PROTAGONIST’S allies have turned on him (or her). His reputation is now in tatters, largely due to his own screw-up — which has been magnified and broadcast by the ANTAGONIST. Write the scene in which the protagonist tries to win the allies back. The scene should include a heartfelt mea culpa. You may use any setting, era or characters in addition to the ones indicated, as needed.”
Hmmmm
Remember, unlike a real world scene assignment, this competition required that you come up with a unique concept for the world of the scene (i.e. a movie) and introduce/develop your characters — all within five pages. Now they throw a premise at us requiring “allies” — plural — to be in the scene.
At first I thought I could simply have the protagonist walk onto a stage, or some such, and offer his heartfelt apologies. That way I wouldn’t have to necessarily create and develop a number of specific allies in such a short page span.
But having my hero give a speech in that manner seemed lame to me. 25% of the score was originality after all, and that felt like a cheat. Nope, I was going to have to create a team of allies, each with unique personalities, having it out in an original location.
That Sounds Easy
Now all I needed was an original concept and location. Damn — was it really 8 PM already? Okay think brain, think!
9 PM
The plan for my scene finally crystallizes. I am ready to write.
Midnight
I have 2 or 3 solid pages. Things are looking good. I’m in the zone, wide awake and just hitting my stride with plenty of time left.
Feeling a little peckish, I take a fateful trip to the kitchen.
Fridges by Mother Hubbard
Bare! Except for some banana bread. One week old. Maybe two. But banana bread doesn’t go bad, right? It lasts on the shelves for months. Or maybe that was Christmas cake… Oh well, whadayagonnado?
2 AM
You know that feeling when you’ve been in the sun too long and you start to feel nauseous? Yup. As a tethered Ralph Wiggum would say, “I don’t feel right.”
But I was almost done. Only another half a page to finish the scene. Then maybe an hour or so to tidy things up.
Why was it so damned hot in this house?!
3 AM
Things are swirling. I was on a Charlie and the Chocolate Factory boat ride, with a pack of angry Oompa Loompas inventing a new farewell dance on my stomach.
CUT TO:
The too-gross-for-theaters deleted scenes of Trevor Will Never Eat Banana Bread Ever Again.
5 AM
All is lost. My main focus has shifted to simply surviving the night… and stopping the room from spinning.
8 AM
I look at the clock. I only need like a 1/2 an hour to finish this damn thing! But alas, I can’t even sit up without a wave of nausea overtaking me.
This year’s victory dance was not to be. I spend the rest of the day in bed. The almost completed script was never submitted.
The Following Day
The contest deadline had long since passed. But I did spend like 10 hours on this bloody scene. I figure, I might as well spend an hour polishing it off.
And so I did. It’s not my strongest work, but it’s not too bad given the circumstances.
If you’d like to take a look at how I tackled the premise, here’s my unsubmitted scene.
Would it have made the cut?
Moral of the Story
Never leave your fate up to questionable banana bread.
Dear Trevor, sorry to hear about your banana bread mishap. Thanks again for sharing. Really like your descriptions. I would have opted for as few characters as possible.
M. Lawrence
Hey thanks M. We’ll both get ’em next year. But yeah, it was the worst timing for the worst case of the hurls in years.
And you’re right — the number of characters I tried to develop for the scene was perhaps too ambitious. It didn’t leave enough time to describe the action of the final “act” of the scene as adequately as I would have liked. Problem is — by the time I figured that out, there was no turning back. 🙂