I have never seen a short about a deaf boy tht included the necessary silence to tell his story. This is the thing I also like the most about your concept: the way you sparingly use sound. (It reminds me of the film "All i see is You" where this is done with the protagonist's sight.)
The absence of sound is also the ting that drew me in right from the start and kept me wondering. You could even consider to go extreme and don't have any sond at a...
First of all I would like to say excellent job, writing the script is the first battle. Now as always I wish you and your script the best and that my critiques do not offend but rather help you grow. With that being said let's get down to the nitty-gritty. My first and biggest critique is, Don't explain your action, I know this sounds weird but here is an example: EX: "The boy remains still 'as' he does not know what is happening"- Your reads and...
Okay, so, up until the tragic ending, I really wasn't sold on the story. I didn't buy that a father had no idea his son was deaf until the kid was 5 years old. Unless it was just sheer negligence. Other things I had a hard time buying -- that the son knows sign language after 2 sessions (unless I missed something) and the father does not. Both are learning at the same time, right? So they'd be at the same level, wouldn't they? The father says he...
Amidst the shadows of her troubled past, Zoey, a teenage girl haunted by her father’s untimely death and family secrets, embarks on a transformative journey to confront her pain, uncover truths, and ultimately find forgiveness and self-discovery.
Kaitlynn Dawn Prescott is one week away from a wedding she had in her mind since she was 15. Every thing is set. All that’s left is her fiancé and groomsmen to fly from California, and her step father from Puerto Rico. What could go wrong? It’s Sunday, September 10, 2001.
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