Script File

Briana Blitz: Strong Lightning: A Tale of Two Women

My spouse was watching Hallmark and I told her it was all sappy pieces of crap. She told me I ‎could not write a screenplay that was not a parody of Hallmark. I said I could, and using the ‎working title, “Sappy Piece of Crap.” She said, “Dare you.” I thought about the challenge for a ‎while and remembered how I come from Bucks County PA, near Quaker Country. The Quaker ‎make furniture out of tree sap, and they work on farms, where there is manure. ‎

If a homeless person arrived with sap and manure, the screenplay title would refer to the heroine, ‎not the script. Of course, the idea is for the heroine to be a positive role. If the heroine was a ‎college graduate, with skills not seen by the public, the heroine would play that role. The script ‎would cast a light on all those with skills hidden by attributes we perceive to be crap, and our ‎role as the public, in manifesting those abilities. If we posit a farmer allowing her to stay on his ‎lot, and a foil, the homeless person’s opposite trying to get them together, we have the ‎foundation of a serious romantic comedy. Briana Blitzen is this homeless girl’s opposite in every ‎way. She is also the protagonist. The antagonists are the hero and heroine, Ben Boker, and Beth ‎Erev. The result is, “Beth Erev: Daughter of the Evening.” The novel breaks down to two movie ‎scripts. Briana Blitz: Strong Lightning is the second. It is 114 pages with 172 words per page.‎ Below is the Summary and log line for public use.

Tired of playing office politics, homeless Beth Erev has given up on society. Wealthy Ben Boker ‎has been burned on one too many dates, and has become more interested in his livestock than in ‎people. He allows Beth to build a wigwam on an unused portion of his sprawling 160-acre farm. ‎Ben's mother, Leila, asks her Financial Advisor, Briana, to date Ben with hopes that they marry, ‎or at least that Ben not date poor women. Briana tries matching him with homeless Beth Erev.‎

Matchmaking is the game; Ben is the pawn; Beth is the Dame. (Log line)‎

This story teams with imagery from Quaker country, from Philadelphia and as far away as ‎Battery Park, New York. ‎

  • Charles W. GIll
    Writer
    GROWING UP IN LEVITTOWN, AGAIN!, EIGHT FRIENDS FROM WASHINGTON D.C. (GROWING UP IN LEVITTOWN, AGAIN!, Romance in New York
  • Project Type:
    Screenplay
  • Number of Pages:
    114
  • Country of Origin:
    United States
  • First-time Screenwriter:
    Yes
  • Student Project:
    No
Writer Biography - Charles W. GIll

I am Charles W. Gill, and I grew up in Levittown, PA, about 40 miles from Sellersville, where ‎my movie project, "Beth Erev: Daughter of the Evening," is set. I am a graduate of Kent State ‎University and studied Pastoral Studies at Loyola University of Chicago. I am working on my ‎movie script project, "Beth Erev: Daughter of the Evening." I have written eight novels, ‎Including, "Romance in New York," "Beth Erev: Daughter of the Evening," "Eight Friends from ‎Washington D.C.," "Growing up in Levittown, Again," and interpretations of the Gospels. ‎

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Writer Statement

My spouse was watching Hallmark and I told her it was all sappy pieces of crap. She told me I ‎could not write a screenplay that was not a parody of Hallmark. I said I could, and using the ‎working title, “Sappy Piece of Crap.” She said, “Dare you.” I thought about the challenge for a ‎while and remembered how I come from Bucks County PA, near Amish Country. The Amish ‎make furniture out of tree sap, and they work on farms, where there is manure. ‎

If a homeless person arrived with sap and manure, the screenplay title would refer to the heroine, ‎not the script. Of course, the idea is for the heroine to be a positive role. If the heroine was a ‎college graduate, with skills not seen by the public, the heroine would play that role. The script ‎would cast a light on all those with skills hidden by attributes we perceive to be crap, and our ‎role as the public, in manifesting those abilities. If we posit a farmer allowing her to stay on his ‎lot, and a foil, the homeless person’s opposite trying to get them together, we have the ‎foundation of a serious romantic comedy. Briana Blitzschnell is this homeless girl’s opposite in ‎every way. She is also the protagonist. The antagonists are the hero and heroine, Ben Boker, and ‎Beth Erev. The result is, “Beth Erev: Daughter of the Evening.”‎