bMoviesMovie Pitch · Confidential
Prepared for @Dstudio_ai — we turned your tweet into a movie. It's 99% yours.
$EXHIBIT$EXHIBIT
Midnight Exhibit
The tweet this came from
x.com/Dstudio_ai/status/2066690366246682745?s=20 ↗The pitch — full draft
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Screenplay draft
Harlan Voss adjusted the brim of his fedora, the raven feather pinned to the band catching the red glow of the museum’s emergency lamps, and slipped past the service door at the rear of the Chronos Museum. Rain slicked the marble steps outside, but inside the Hall of Eternal Echoes the air hung still and chalk-dry. The glowing blue orb sat on a velvet pedestal beneath a single spotlight, its surface rippling like water under moonlight. Harlan had tracked it from a dig in the Sinai to a private collector’s vault and finally here, where the curators still believed it was merely a Phoenician votive lamp. He lifted it; warmth pulsed up his wrist and the nearest wall clock hiccupped, its second hand stuttering backward three ticks before resuming. A silver-haired girl stepped out of the nearest diorama, bare feet leaving frost prints on the parquet. Her dress was Victorian lace turned gray by decades of dust. She regarded the orb in Harlan’s hand, then raised one finger. The Battle of Waterloo canvas behind her rippled; miniature soldiers in blue coats climbed from their frames and marched across the floor, bayonets scraping marble. Harlan backed toward the exit. The girl smiled without teeth and the soldiers wheeled, now wearing fedoras and carrying lock-picks instead of muskets. Otis, the night guard whose jazz humming usually echoed from the Timepiece Gallery, appeared at the far archway with a flashlight and a taser. Before he could speak, the Victorian fog from the London diorama rolled across the corridor and swallowed him; when it cleared, Otis’s uniform had become a 1940s warden’s coat and his flashlight now projected sepia newsreel footage of an air raid. Harlan sprinted into the Egypt wing. The orb grew hotter. Sarcophagus lids creaked open and painted gods blinked, their eyes tracking the thief. Behind him the girl’s frost prints multiplied, each one rewriting the hieroglyphs on the walls into looping warnings written in his own childhood handwriting. At the midpoint the girl touched the orb through Harlan’s clenched fist. Time folded. The Renaissance wing ahead of him now abutted a Cretaceous diorama; a painted Leonardo sketch of flying machines had become actual canvas wings beating above a tyrannosaur skeleton whose ribs sprouted pocket watches. Harlan’s own wrist bore a fresh scar he did not remember earning. He saw, in a sudden mirror of the orb’s surface, that the girl was the daughter he had lost in a desert landslide fifteen years earlier, her silver hair the color of the sand that had taken her. The guards, now wearing the faces of men from that dig, closed in with period weapons that still fired modern rounds. Harlan dropped the orb. It cracked the floor and the fracture raced outward, turning every exhibit into a competing version of itself. Paintings argued with clocks; the clocks began to strike the hours of Harlan’s worst decisions. The girl stood in the center of the widening rift, frost spreading up her calves. He chose to reach for her instead of the orb. When their fingers met, the fracture reversed. Dioramas settled into a single, quiet night. Otis, back in his own uniform, walked past humming the same three notes of an old standard, unaware of the man crouched behind the Rosetta Stone replica. The orb, now dull and veined with hairline cracks, rested once more on its pedestal. The girl was gone, but a single silver strand lay across the velvet. Harlan left it there. He walked out through the service door into rain that smelled of wet stone and distant desert, the raven feather on his hat now tipped with frost that would not melt.
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