Pretty
soon I will be moving out of this dogshit council estate full of
jobless bums and crackheads. I've secured a better location, but
before I do, I need to do a lot of throwing out. Among the stacks of
lever-arch files that I've recently thinned out is one containing six
copies of a screenplay, originally wrote in 2005. Once Upon a Time in
Great Britain was conceived in 2004 and mostly written in 2005, but I
sidelined it when I started blogging at the end of 2006. It's a tale of an intelligent
but frustrated graduate who is unwittingly inducted into a terror
faction, and who starts to see strange correlations between his life
as a student and his life as a terrorist. Eventually I took it to a
writers group and started to redraft the whole thing, making it
sharper and more natural-sounding.
After
a full read-through with what was Writers Connect, a now-disbanded
writing feedback group, I wanted a short break before doing a 'final'
draft. That short break became some years, and this weekend I went
back over the drafts.
In
the annotations I made a reminder to check out Black Mirror, Charlie
Brooker's SF drama series: a group member had noticed some
similarities between the show and my screenplay. At the time I
couldn't find it on All4, or Youtube, or anywhere else. So having got
a Netflix subscription for Christmas, I've now managed to watch
Bandersnatch, the postmodern 80's choose-your-own-adventure story
about the computer programmer who finds himself being controlled by a
21st-centry entertainment service called Netflix (or more accurately,
you, the viewer making the decisions). This was one of Black Mirror's
later releases, but yesterday I managed to watch the pilot episode,
National Anthem, about the kidnap of a royal princess and a demand by
the hostage-taker for the Prime Minister to... well, do something
incredibly degrading. I won't spoil it. But it became almost true, to
the point that Brooker admitted, for a moment, that he thought the
whole news story was a joke on him.
So,
with National Anthem watched, I went back to the screenplay and ran
through the drafts. The version I used yesterday seemed to have been
updated from the notes on the printed drafts I had on me- corrections
I'd written had already been made in the file version- but I went
through them all, reading the screenplay six times, making a few
minor adjustments. Then what did I do? I found the more recent
drafts, with other ideas scrawled in the corner of the pages. I
remember going to an organiser's house, having a barbecue, and
sitting down and reading out the whole screenplay, with group members
taking several parts.
So
pretty soon I'm going to have to pencil off a day to go through all
those, more updated, copies too.
In
other news, my video of Liverpool Comic Con apparently went out on
Liverpool TV, a regional channel.
Ever seen a stormtrooper dressed as a Scotsman? You have now.
At
Sacha's / Golden Orbit's Comic Fair this month they dished out a free horror
comic, Tales from the Crypt presents The Vault of Horror. Originally
published in 1991, the comic has a 1950's retro feel with some very
weird, dated tales. No dates or references to human technology are
given, so some of these stories could have taken place any time in
the latter half of the 20th
century, but some were set way before the 90s. Entertaining, but
a largely silly short story collection.
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