Showing posts with label director. Show all posts
Showing posts with label director. Show all posts

Saturday, July 9, 2022

P. I. Frank Brown: Coffee or Bourbon?

It's midnight. I have been sitting in my car for hours.

The rain has been a blurry vail over my car all night and is causing a low-set fog as it rests on the streets.


When on a stakeout, you have to be patient, but I have

only a little coffee left, and it is cold. I finished my last burger about an hour ago and knew I should have picked up some donuts before blending in. I'll wait 15 more minutes, and if I see no one, I'm going in. I need to verify the cases I choose—better.


My name is Frank, Frank Brown, and I'm a private

investigator. I try not to take these overnight cases, but something about this one made me curious. 


After drinking my last sip of cold coffee, I thought, who

usually goes to a blood bank at 1 a.m. five nights a

week? And on top of that, this guy looks whiter than the

moon on a clear night. I'm still sorting through the crime

photos—while endlessly sitting here waiting and thinking

to myself, does this person have a bizarre fetish and

have anemia? That idea cancels itself out pretty fast,

considering what I have on the shortlist—this guy is very

fit and is never out in the sunlight. 


The only background I could find on the mysterious John

Smith I am looking for may not even be his own. The

age—that I got from my client—was only an approximation

of Mr. Smith's actual age. Including his location, country,

and city of origin, the man turned up to be born 60 years

before the person I am searching for was ever an

accident. I wish I had brought a bottle of bourbon instead

of coffee.


I watch the curtains light from behind the window in front

of his apartment. My attention is now on the door and

nothing else. The light behind the window curtains goes

black. I wait a minute, then two, and watch as no one

exits the door. 


I hear the walking of hard-heel shoes on concrete and

see nothing. I look in my rearview mirror and see who

I'm waiting for, walking down the street away from my car.

How, how is that possible—


I quickly sit my now empty coffee thermos on the

floorboard. I open my car door with a large part of my

weight and have my trigger hand wrapped around the

pistol butt. 


Standing next to my car, I do not see him. He was not

running, and the fog wasn't too dense to hide him that

fast. He vanished!


As soon as I take my hand off the pistol butt, I feel two

fingers touch me—one on each temple.  My vision starts

to fade fast, and my body becomes weak. During the

lowering of my eyesight and the altitude of my head, I

look for his reflection in the car window, but there is no

reflection to be seen. Before my eyes close all the way, I

have one more thought—


I wish I had brought a bottle of bourbon as old as

Mr. Smith.

Thursday, February 18, 2021

Buffy High Concept

               A High Concept Script and Synopsis

I read a synopsis and a script this morning that my friend wrote 13 years ago, and the High Concept partly was Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I liked it! I wonder why he waited so long to give them to me. I guess I wasn't the chosen one—or am I?

Saturday, July 11, 2020

A Dead Man's Story (parts 1-36)

 A Dead Man's Story (parts 1-36) 
Available on my timeline @WriterMDW
On Twitter, Gab, & Instagram
or download parts 1-36 free in an ebook
New parts will be posted to the story
on Monday-Friday. 


Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Operating System Zero ep.5 (A Flash Fiction Serial)



If you missed episode one click here to read.
If you missed episode two click here to read.
If you missed episode three click here to read.
If you missed episode four click here to read.

Episode 5

Curtis:
     "What's wrong with you two morons," She says as she slams the door.
     The house was ransacked, and blood splatters strewn across the walls. Rick and I each take a seat to rest or bones while we watch her continue what she was doing before she saved our asses.
     “Who is she,” I ask Rick, never taking my eyes off her.
     “How in the hell do I know,” says Rick.
     “Well she lives next door to you, ” I say.
     “No, she doesn't… Tom lives here,” says Rick as he slowly glides his eyes across the splattered walls that are dripping blood in a few spots.
     He sees a tennis shoe attached to a leg coming from under the sofa sitting crooked to the wall halfway across the room. He taps me on the arm softly and points to the couch.
     “Is that your neighbor?” I say as Rick stares down at the tennis shoe and the leg saying nothing.
     I nudge Rick on the arm and say quietly, ”Is that Tom?”
     Rick stands up slowly, moves over to the backside of the couch and puts his hand over his mouth ready to puke. I can't help but watch Rick as his options have come to an end and clearly view what little food he had eaten in his emergency bunker shooting as projectiles from between his fingers.
     "What's going on in there, " I hear the lady yell from the back of the house as I watch Rick spit what's left from his mouth and fling what hangs from his hand onto the wall covering dry specs of blood.
     "Rick," I say quietly as I motion with my hands for him to return. He shuffles back to his seat wiping the remainder off his hand onto his pant leg.
     Rick and I sit curiously wondering who the lady maybe or simply what her name is. She has our weapons including the System Zero GPS device.
     "Do you have a secondary sidearm on you hidden anywhere?" Says Rick.
     "No, what about you," I say.
     "Nothing for incapacitating her in an immediate response," says Rick, "what are you doing?"
     "I am trying to get a feed from the chip," I say as I tap on the chip behind my ear.
     "Come on Curtis," says Rick, "I didn't help design the chip but can guess it's only a receiver."
     "Hold on a second,"  I say as I keep tapping on the chip.
     Rick and I hear a small beep from the System Zero device sitting in the same room our protector, but also our captor is located.
     "Cut that out," she yells while still working on something we are clueless about in another room.
     "Who are you," I yell to her. We wait and hear nothing.
     "Yea, who are you lady," Rick yells.
     She walks back into the room we are sitting in and says, "I'm the only person you should be trusting right now." She throws me a strange looking pistol then throws the same type pistol to Rick.
     I look at the gun she threw to me and say, "I don't get it."
     "I'm going to have to agree with my friend. I don't get it," says Rick
     "Be careful with the firearms, they will go off," she says as we inspect them showing them no respect.
     "Lady they are made of plastic and are just toys," I say as I point the gun at Tom's tennis shoe his dead foot resides in to prove my argument. I pull the trigger.
     Tom's tennis shoe explodes with no remorse and liters the room even further but this time with rubber, bone, flesh, and substantial chunks of sticky blood.
     I pause with a blank look on my face and stare at the so-called toy pistol.
     "Watch where you're pointing that thing," eagerly says Rick as he gestures his words.
     “The guns are not toys,” she said,” they may resemble them but are in no way just toys.”
     I stand up and say, “Excuse me but who in the hell are you,” as I sternly look at her expecting nothing but the real answer.
     “My name is Sherry, I am a bounty hunter,” she says.
     “Why did you kill Tom,” Rick says.
     “I didn’t…”
     “He sure looks dead to me,” Rick says with a smart ass tone in his voice.
     “Look guys, I am here to get collect as many items as possible from Tom’s 3D Printer,” she says.
     I hold my gun pointing it toward her with my finger around the trigger. “Thanks for saving our lives outside but we need some answers and when I say answers I mean we need the whole story.”
     She points at her gun safely not to pressure me into pulling the trigger on my gun and says, “Who’s gun killed the zombies?” Her gun looked exactly like the ones she had handed Rick and me.

TO BE CONTINUED...


Big Green Publishing

Here are some books I have short stories in that are on Amazon, Barnes & Nobles, BAM and Kobo








Monday, July 16, 2018

The Serial Killer Newsletter Issue #2

The Serial Killer Newsletter issue #2 is now on Amazon. You can read it for free if you have Amazon Unlimited if not it's only $0.99 which we use to help promote it. Reviews on Amazon are greatly appreciated. TSKN #2 Amazon link amzn.to/2JsWfhc



Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Subscribe To The Serial Killers Newsletter




Is Now On Kindle,

New Issues Every Month!


The Serial Killer Newsletter
Subscribe to TSKN for new issues and updates
Which do you favor? *


Monday, June 4, 2018

Interview with Mark Wright (Author & Screenwriter)

To read more interviews, book reviews and short stories, follow J.A. Sullivan at her blog Writing Scared  https://writingscaredblog.wordpress.com

 Interview with Mark Wright (Author & Screenwriter)

Mark Wright (Writer MDW)

Upon joining Twitter last summer, I began following @MidnightGore who had just released The Serial Killer Newsletter (TSKN).

“Imagine an “underground” newspaper where the editors and authors are those that committed the crimes. They write in and describe and justify their killings for the entertainment of their readers. The reader gets to follow these killers as they recount their experiences.” – excerpt from Games, Brrraaains & A Head-Banging Life, https://gbhbl.com/special-feature-the-serial-killer-newsletter-midnight-gore/

Within minutes of reading the first issue, which included two stories, each from the perspective of the perpetrator, I was hooked. So, I reached out and began a conversation with the man behind Midnight Gore, Mark Wright.

I soon found out that he had worked in the film industry for years, in many departments. His favorite departments were script writing and directing. And while Mark still loves being a storyteller, he’s begun to channel his creations through the written word, leaving the world of cinema behind him.

Since the first time I reached out to Mark, we’ve had great conversations about books, movies, and many other random life events. When I asked him for a formal interview, he was a little tentative, but decided to go along with it. While he may be new to the world of short stories and novels, this guy knows horror!

WS: Many times, horror movies get a lot of hype before release, but are a big let down to fans. Where do you think they go wrong?

MW: The hype is done as a promotional effort to help people gain an interest in a project ($) before it is released for wide public consumption. Me personally, when I see a large promotional endeavor taking place for a project, and see an overwhelmingly large amount of critics up-talking it, I lose interest. With that many people pushing it, there’s a reason why it is being overly promoted (usually not good).

WS: What do you look for in a great horror story, whether it be a film or a book?

MW: Action, Conflict, Thrill, Shock, Freight. Something that will make the story hard to forget when it is over; that is what makes a horror story memorable to me. These things can occur within a character, event, part of the plot (or plot change), and even if the antagonist prevails and lives at the end.

WS: Who has influenced your work the most?

MW: I am a big David Cronenberg fan. I love his imagination and how he puts a story on film. William S. Burroughs opens doors in books just like David Cronenberg does on films to me.

WS: What’s your favorite horror story?

MW: Oh geez, that’s a hard question! Movie: Videodrome; Book: not sure. Recently, Bret Easton Ellis has been on my mind.

WS: What was your proudest achievement in film?

MW: Kill Kill. I loved the people I worked with on it, and a version of it was released in black and white. It was meant to be a black and white noir film. I turned the story over to Eric Fisk and he is working on a pre-story to it. He will also be working on a part of the story where the film ended. He will be writing this in book format.

WS: In your latest issue of TSKN (#3), you announced joining Big Green Publishing. How did this partnership come about?

MW: My friend, Eric Fisk, owns Big Green Publishing and likes what I do. He was needing content and I was needing promotion, it worked out for the best of both of us. He is good at what he does, and I am very lucky to be on board.

WS: Your story, Deadly Dreams, which appears both in TSKN #3 and Big Green Publishing’s site, is based on a script you wrote. What’s been the biggest challenge in transitioning the script to written word? What’s been the easiest part to translate?

MW: The hardest part was creating more to the story. The story was taken from a short film script. When rewriting it, I needed to add to the beginning of the actual story and more to the end. The story, when in literary format, was freed because I didn’t have to worry about a shooting budget. I was able to add more conflicts and plots to the story (which have not been released yet) that lets the concept and main character become more entertaining to a reader. The easiest part of the story was putting the parts back in that I was limited from when writing the short film script.

WS: What has been your favorite short story to write so far?

MW: The Grindhouse 42nd Street Killer in TSKN #2.


WS: That’s still my favorite of your short stories too! Lastly, what advice would you give to new authors or screenwriters of horror?

MW: No matter if it is a reader or an audience never let them get bored. NEVER.

A big thanks to Mark Wright, for taking the time to speak with me. I hope you enjoyed this interview, and if you would like to know more about the author and his works, check out:

Places to find Mark on Twitter: https://twitter.com/MidnightGore 
https://twitter.com/WriterMDW 

Visit Mark’s Blog: https://writermdw.blogspot.com

Subscribe to The Serial Killer Newsletter on Mark’s Blog: https://writermdw.blogspot.com for early release dates on Kindle

Big Green Publishing authors: http://biggreennation.com/

And, you can follow Big Green Publishing on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BigGreenPublishing

“To read more interviews, book reviews and short stories, follow J.A. Sullivan at her blog Writing Scared: https://writingscaredblog.wordpress.com


Sunday, June 3, 2018

New Stories Every Week!



New Stories Every Week!
If you are a Film Director or Producer
and looking for the perfect story to film. 
contact me at writermdw@gmail.com