[Quick Summary: A tall, "perfect" man goes in search of his twin, who turns out to be a short, small time crook.]
I guess I shouldn't have been surprised that this draft was very well polished.
First, it was rewritten by last week's Harris & Weingrod, and second, the great William Goldman gave it a pass too.
I really liked that:
- the purpose of the energy flow in this script is to show character, and
- there's a control to the chaos.
For example, in the scene below:
- This is the scene that introduces the idea these are twins by using "twinning" behaviors.
- Julius is the taller, "good" twin.
- Vince is the shorter, "bad" twin.
- Notice the largest paragraph below is all one sentence, a
controlled roller coaster of a ride, much like sheltered Julius' experience of encountering a big city.
- Then note how the energy flow and momentum ramps up and lands on the moment Julius stands in the middle of the street, absorbing all of Hollywood.
- The writers are deliberately controlling the chaos with pacing and flow.
EXT. GRAUMAN'S CHINESE THEATER - MAGIC HOUR
Vince brushes himself off, hesitates a moment, pulling on his left ear with his right hand.
Immediately behind him, facing the opposite direction, is another man, also pulling on his left ear with his right hand. It is Julius --
-- Their backs are to each other. Without ever catching sight of one another, they move off, going their separate ways. Now, from this --
CUT TO:
EXT. DOWNTOWN HOLLYWOOD STREET - NIGHT
Downtown Hollywood in all it's sleeze. There's a museum and a scientology center and every fast food place imaginable and people shouting as they sell things, "flowers" and street food and there's a porno house showing Tight 'n Tender and there's young people dressed like punks and old people boozed out and pimps and druggies and guys slumped unconscious int he gutter and crowds of tourists walking this way, that way, and there's noise and little and one more thing --
--There's Julius, case in hand, staring around, taking it all in. We're a long way from his island now. He studies all the humanity swirling around him --
CUT TO:
CLOSEUP ON JULIUS
And you can see it on his face: He loves it.
JULIUS (almost a whisper): ...How wonderful...
WHAT I'VE LEARNED: I liked this script because it used cinematic language well. It uses words to convey how we should feel about images, but was readable.
I like to find Goldman scripts that are new-to-me, like this one. They are instructive since they are: a) easy to read and b) have great craftsmanship.
Twins (1988)(consolidated 4th draft, 4/27/88 with revisions)
by William Osborne & William Davies
Revisions by Timothy Harris & Hershel Weingrod and William Goldman