Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Zombie Day Care Apocalypse - Screenplay Synopsis

While I’m a novelist, truth is I enjoy the challenge of writing screenplays too. And I say challenge because while a screenplay generally is between 100-120 pages, it’s actually more difficult and challenging to write a compelling script since most writers run towards verbose. It’s actually easier to build a character with more description, internal thoughts and emotions and dialogue without those constraints.
And while I like to write my paranormal/sci-fi/thrillers (my current series is “The Projection Room” books 1 and 2, which are available on Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble), I do love a good comedy, and perhaps it’s because of the chick in me, that I have a soft spot for romantic comedies too. For instance, I’m looking forward to “Fifty Shades of Grey,” because I know it’ll almost be as funny as “Beyond the Valley of the Dolls,” which was a hoot.
Anyway, I  currently have my own rom/com listed up on Talentville.com titled “Zombie Day Care Apocalypse.” And yes, it’s really a romantic comedy, that is only indirectly about zombies.
zombiedaycare
Here’s a synopsis:
Former zombie filmmaker, Victor Chesterfield, is heartbroken. His wife Olivia, a high school drama teacher, has had enough of his foul moods and flying off the handle. Even though she might still love him, she leaves. Olivia just can no longer tolerate his dramatic outbursts. She claims she prefers her drama on the stage.
When his best friend and employee of the quirky American Science and Surplus Store, Eddie tells him that Olivia misses the man he once was that was so much fun making his gawd-awful B-movie zombie flicks, they decided it’s time to brush off an unmade script titled “Zombie Day Care Apocalypse” and convince her to make once last zombie movie with them.
Olivia is reluctant to jump back into her zombie killing catsuit since her colleagues don‘t know about her B minus movie past, and she wants to keep it that way. That is, until two of her slacker students blackmail her in exchange for parts when they discover the script that Victor hands her. She had hoped her colleagues would never know of her less than stellar thespian forays into zombie-dom, but like Michael Corleone and the mob, these students want to drag her back into B-movies. She finally agrees to make Victor’s movie provided he cast her two students and have them do all their own stunt work.
After Victor mortgages their house to make the film, he enlists all the anxious employees at the store to help them make the film. Too late, Victor realizes why it’s never wise to make movies with small children, as it’s akin to herding kittens. The two slackers wish they had never agreed to do their own stunts. The store and neighborhood is in total chaos, and Olivia makes life for Victor bumpy at best. All the while everyone involved has the time of their lives making, “Zombie Day Care Apocalypse.”
The inspiration for Victor was a combination of Sam Raimi (Director of the Evil Dead and first Spider-Man franchises), Victor Fabian from a movie titled “Once More with Feeling,” about a temperamental symphony conductor with Yul Brynner as Victor, and Ari Gold of Entourage. I got the idea while reading Bruce Campbell’s book, “If Chins Could Kill: Confessions of a B-Movie Actor.”
Anyway, if you inclined to read movie scripts for the heck of it, and are in the vicinity ofhttp://www.talentville.com, feel free to give it a read. AND if you’re a movie producer and in the market for a romantic comedy – I can be reached via this blog, LinkedIn. Twitter or Facebook and yes, Talentville.com as well.
Copyright for this script is on film with the US Copyright Office.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

The Blurred Lines Between the Supernatural/Metaphysical and Science

“I suspect that my theories may all depend upon a force for which philosophers have searched all of nature in vain.” -- Isaac Newton.
Little known fact--Isaac Newton actually wrote three times more on theology and the Bible then he did on science. It’s true. He even taught himself Hebrew to further his search. Newton came further in understanding the physics of time and space than any man in his age, which is why his mathematical and natural philosophical works are considered the foundations of scientific exploration today still.
That’s why I think the lines between science fiction, the metaphysical and the supernatural are often fuzzy at best. For instance, while Ray Bradbury is considered a science fiction author (Martian Chronicles), much of his work had a metaphysical bent to it. A perfect example is “Something Wicked This Way Comes,” which is definitely not science fiction. By the way, I highly recommend that book and especially the movie version.
Stephen King wrote “Tommyknockers,” which is about an alien infiltration/infestation, and therefore falls under the science fiction genre banner, and yet his body of work is far more supernatural than not. I find that King had to say on the matter interesting as well. He stated in a Rolling Stones interview that while he wasn’t crazy about organized religion, he chooses to believe in the existence of God. He states that his writing about the supernatural so often reflects that somewhat. I think that’s reflected strongly in “The Green Mile,” which is one of my favorite King books.
As I stated in a previous blog about a character I created, Dr. Casper Layton, I noticed that many of the scientists that were involved in this nation’s “Manhattan Project,” had a strong believe in the supernatural. While theirs was a perverse occult belief, it is nevertheless a strong belief in the supernatural. A realm outside the understandable and observable world in which we interact.
It would seem I’m not the only one, and far from the first too, that has noticed this connection. I recently put the following book on my wish list, “Modern Alchemy: Occultism and the Emergence of Atomic Theory,” by Mark Morrisson on Oxford Press. In addition, Dusty Skylar, author “Nazis and the Occult” seemed to also notice that our foes in were also intrigued with both science and the metaphysical connection as well.
Why am I mentioning this? Book 3 “The Projection Room: Our Brother’s Keeper” is with my publisher at the moment, and it is much closer than the previous two books to science fiction. However, I’m working on the final book of the series this very moment. In book four, Bruce Mallory discovers that Georges Bosque’s paintings still exist and where they’re hidden. He and Baker are in a race to find it before the villainous Casper Layton does, but Bruce also feels compelled to figure out why these two paintings are so different than any other paintings he projects and animates in the projection room. Why did the other paintings previously react, but no longer do when put in the room. To do that, he must delve, study and discern what Bosque did that was so different from any other of paintings, even though Bruce repulsed by what he has to study and find. Even though he risks his life and perhaps his soul to solve this puzzle.
I’ve been told that the Projection Room series has been difficult to categorize (see link- book 14 out 15 of the list) Is it science fiction? Is it paranormal thriller? Personally, I think it’s both and why not. The lines between science and the metaphysical have been blurred throughout history.
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/lists/best-indie-books-2013-we-found-difficult-categoriz/