Screenwriter Thad Alexander (THE SHADOW KILLER)

In the heart of Bangkok, Detective Aran Chen, a defiant inspector haunted by his past, pursues the elusive “Shadow Killer,” a ruthless serial murderer. Armed with his sharp instincts and lethal martial arts skills, Aran battles through the city’s underworld, uncovering a chilling link between the killer’s motives and his own scars. As the lines between justice and revenge blur, Aran faces a deadly confrontation that will test his resolve and redefine his destiny.

Get to know the writer:

1. What is your screenplay about?
Shadow Killer is a grounded crime thriller set in Bangkok, following a police investigator haunted by his past as he hunts down a mysterious serial killer. As the body count rises, he relentlessly pursues the murderer, relying on sharp detective work and his martial arts skills. His past looms over him, threatening to cloud his judgment, but he pushes forward, determined to stop the killer. The chase builds to a brutal final confrontation, where his skills and resilience are put to the ultimate test.

2. Why should this screenplay be made into a movie?

Shadow Killer is a bold, high-impact reinvention of the action genre, fusing a gripping crime investigation with bone-crunching martial arts combat. In a world where thrillers often fall into predictable formulas, this film keeps audiences on edge with relentless action, shocking twists, and a hero who fights both a deadly killer and his own past.

With one or two game-changing twists leading to a high-stakes, brutal finale, Shadow Killer delivers exactly what modern audiences crave—an electrifying, no-nonsense action experience that’s as smart as it is thrilling. It’s a ride that never lets up, never holds back, and most importantly, never forgets to entertain.

This isn’t just another action movie, it’s the one that will leave audiences breathless.

3. How would you describe this script in two words?
Relentless and thrilling

4. What movie have you seen the most times in your life?
Probably the Princess Bride, it’s a classic but it’s a good classic and one that never gets old.

5. How long have you been working on this screenplay?
I formulated the idea about 3 or 4 years ago but finally put it into words this last year so all in all it’s been about 4 years in the making.

6. How many stories have you written?
I have always loved storytelling but never really got into it until recently. That being said I have written multiple scripts and have a few already on the backburner that I’m still working on.

7. What motivated you to write this screenplay?
I love martial arts movies, I used to watch Jackie Chan and Chuck Norris as a kid then as I got older I branched off into different actors like Tony Jaa and Scott Adkins. All this to say I love the genre and I wanted a fresh take with a blend of the gritty martial arts action and an interesting story.

8. What obstacles did you face to finish this screenplay?
Formatting was the biggest obstacle I faced, I hadn’t really ever formatted a proper screenplay before so that took time and effort trying to learn all I needed to learn about that. Besides that, this story and screenplay actually came together pretty smoothly for me without many obstacles.

9. Apart from writing, what else are you passionate about?
give me anything in the entertainment industry and I’m fascinated by it, whether it’s directing, acting, behind the scenes work etc. It all fascinates me. Apart from the film industry I am passionate about fitness and health and take that area of my life very seriously.

10. What influenced you to enter the festival? What were your feelings on the initial feedback you received?
I was looking for a way to get my writing seen which seems to be increasingly difficult.

11. What genres does your screenplay fall under?
Action, crime thriller, and mystery

Screenwriter  Jane Dafoe (REWIRING JADE)

A fierce forty-something woman tries to escape traumatic memories by participating in the Ironman triathlon, only to be diagnosed with CFS. As her life unravels, she clings to an unlikely friend who helps and then hinders her journey to recovery.

Get to know the writer;

1. What is your screenplay about?

This film is centered around the protagonist Jade, a 40-something newly single woman who is very driven in her work life and with her athletic pursuits.

On the surface she appears to be chasing her dreams, but in reality, she is running away from a nightmare.

This film explores themes of how people cope with trauma. We’ve all seen stories about people who dive into counselling, others who self-medicate or those who sink into depression. In this story, the character doubles-down on pursuing her goals. We know that society celebrates and admires driven people. In this story Jade’s drive causes her life to unravel, and she sinks into a state of self-loathing.

This film also deals with themes of identity. Jade struggles with the loss of her identity because she defines herself by the things she does, not who she is at the core. Rewiring Jade explores the complex relationships Jade has with unlikely friends who both help and hinder her journey.

2. What genres does your screenplay fall under?

My screenplay is a character drama or a dramedy. It may be important to note that this is not a sports movie (even though the Ironman is a small part of it).

3. How would you describe this script in two words?

Inspiring and bittersweet.

4. What movie have you seen the most times in your life?

Probably a tie between The Wizard of Oz, Witness, Goodwill Hunting and Silver Linings Playbook

5. How long have you been working on this screenplay?

For five years

6. How many stories have you written?

I made several short documentaries in my role as a fundraiser, however, this is my first feature film.

7. What motivated you to write this screenplay?

I struggled with a chronic illness for a decade and my recovery felt transformational. When I came out the other side, I was not the same person as before. Writing this script allowed me to process and release the traumatic memories, making it a cathartic experience! Adding unexpected humour to the story helped me take my power back from an experience that almost destroyed me.

This film is not literally about me – rather it is inspired by what I went through. While the characters are fictional, a few are inspired by a combination of real people and imaginative elements.

While snippets of the story mirror real events, the main similarity that aligns with my experience is how Jade felt in certain situations. I have also tried to be as realistic as possible about the impact of CFS, but it has been toned down for the film.

8. What obstacles did you face to finish this screenplay?

There were two main obstacles. One was time, as I work full-time as a fundraiser. Therefore, I was working on it during evenings and weekends. In order not to burn out, I took long breaks.

This was helpful as it allowed me to look at scenes with a fresh perspective.

While this film is inspired by true events, it took some time to let go of my attachment to the actual events and focus more on what made the best story.

9. Apart from writing, what else are you passionate about?

I am passionate about wellness from a 360-degree POV. I am being certified as a Rieke practitioner. I am passionate about inclusion and social justice.

10. What influenced you to enter the festival? What were your feelings on the initial feedback you received?

This festival has been running for nine years and has complimentary reviews. I was particularly excited about the podcast opportunity because it allows me to share my passion project with a broader audience.
The initial feedback focused a lot on the illness that the main character Jade struggles with. I understand that is natural as there are almost no stories about chronic fatigue syndrome.

However my hope is that audiences see beyond the illness to the broader themes in the film. I did not set out to write a ‘disease movie of the week’. Rather my focus was on creating well defined, intriguing and relatable characters that the audience cares about.

11. Why should this screenplay be made into a movie?

This story could be described as a mash-up between Silver Linings Playbook and The Big Sick. Rewiring Jade may have broad appeal with its themes of identity, friendship, loss, and ultimately hope and resilience.

Today’s Writing Deadlines: March 23, 2025

Submit to these exciting festivals today. Festivals that offer feedback from the industry, plus performance videos.

BIOGRAPHY Novel Festival

Get FULL FEEDBACK on either the 1st chapter or entire novel book from our committee of professional writers and writing consultants. Get your novel performed by a professional actor at the festival.

NEW OPTION: Or, just submit for an actor performance reading transcript of your novel (any 5 pages of your book). Great way to promote the sales of your book if you’re already published.

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NEW YORK Science & Nature Screnplay Festival

This festival has a guaranteed 4-tier set up for each accepted script. (No matter what, all screenplays submitted receive FULL FEEDBACK on their work.)
1) Full Feedback on your script
2) Actors performance video reading of your script
3) Blog interview promotion.
4) Podcast interview on the Film Festival ITunes show

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DEATH Short Story Contest Festival

Submit your DEATH short story to the festival and we will automatically have it performed by a professional actor and turned into a promotional video for yourself.

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Today’s Podcast: Filmmaker A.L. Pruitt (The Rich Kid Rules)

The Rich Kid Rules (Ep. 1: 362 Rules of a High School Dropout), 59min., USA
Directed by A.L. Pruitt, Makenna Perkal
A new kind of coming-of-age crime drama series with horses, dance, a dysfunctional family, and an upstairs/downstairs romance with a reverse Cinderella story twist.

http://therichkidrules.com/
https://www.instagram.com/therichkidrules

Subscribe to the podcast:

https://www.instagram.com/wildsoundpod/

https://www.facebook.com/wildsoundpod

Watch Today’s Festival: WILDsound Feature Film Showcase: I WANT TO BACK HOME. Spain

Watch Film: https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/i-want-to-back-home

Ana, 14 years old, coexists with the terminal illness of his mother and his father’s sorrow . One day, her aunty and her daughter, Laura, the same age as Ana, propose her to live in another village. That will change the lives of Ana and Laura forever.

http://www.miguelangelmengo.com/quiero-volver-a-casa/

Movie Review: The Rich Kid Rules (Ep. 1: 362 Rules of a High School Dropout)

Synopsis:

A new kind of coming-of-age crime drama series with horses, dance, a dysfunctional family, and an upstairs/downstairs romance with a reverse Cinderella story twist.

Project Links

 Instagram

 Website

Review by Victoria Angelique:

The pilot episode for a new teen drama series, RICH KID RULES, follows the clichéd forbidden love story of teenagers with the twist of the mafia added in to lead the suspension in what will be the continued storyline throughout the narrative. Typically love stories follow a wealthy boy meets a poor girl and they fall in love. This story twists it when Frankie begins working at the stables on Sandy’s property. They have an instant attraction, but neither of their mothers approves of this budding relationship. 

Frankie and Sandy are complete opposites in personality. She’s a bit out of touch with the real world, clearly sheltered from the reality that soon comes crashing down on her when her mother is arrested by the FBI and she learns that her family is intertwined with what appears to be the mafia. Apparently their wealth didn’t come from raising horses as she was led to believe, but through organized crime. She speaks in a very formal manner, whereas Frankie speaks in a casual way. Frankie is protective of Sandy. He’s been raised to be the perfect gentleman, unaware of how to protect his friend from a world that he knows nothing about as he’s forced to make a choice to stand by their new relationship or disappoint his mother by quitting his job on the ranch as he leaves Sandy to fend for herself. 

Many questions are left unanswered by the end of the first episode. Sandy isn’t sure who she can trust, because even her own mother and psychologist, Dr. Engel turned out to be involved with organized crime. Sandy and Frankie question if there is anyone left that hasn’t hidden their identities as they must make deals with the devil in order to save her mother from a lifetime in prison. 

This series has potential through suspense with the added bonus of romance. It’s an innocent love that will have to stand the test of time to see if it can endure the hardships of a cruel world as Frankie and Sandy immerse themselves into the world of organized crime.

New Film on the Platform: the other land / l’altra terra, 13min., Italy, Drama/Environmental

Watch Film: https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/watch-the-other-land

Sofia, the young owner of an important avant-garde farm in Salento, recalls during an interview how it all began with the scent of bread that her peasant grandparents made with their own hands and offered her when she went to visit them as a child. A simple gesture of love that remained in her heart and that changed her life forever.

https://www.instagram.com/danielepignatelli_/

Director: Daniele Pignatelli

Writer: Manlio Castagna

Stars: Alessandra CarrilloStefania CiccarelliBeatrice Pignatelli

Today’s Podcast: Filmmaker Moriah Doepken (COOP)

COOP, 19min., USA
Directed by Moriah Doepken
After sustaining a bad injury, a stubborn retired sheriff must learn to talk with his estranged son as they build a fence together, or risk losing the relationship.

Get to know the filmmaker:

What motivated you to make this film?

I love Western films and one day had the idea of “What happens to the sheriff of the town after he’s retired and the town no longer needs him?” And working with the brilliant writer Jeffrey Hein, we expanded this idea into what you see now. We both loved the idea of a man stuck in the past and whose toxic masculinity could be the basis of a lot of problems for him in a more modern world.

What were your initial reactions when watching the audience talking about your film in the feedback video?

I loved seeing people take all sorts of interpretations away with them after watching it, because what x, y, and z may represent to me comes across totally differently for each viewer, which is so cool. And I want there to be discourse on if the characters made the right choice or what the coop itself represents!

Subscribe to the podcast:

https://www.instagram.com/wildsoundpod/

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Watch Today’s Film Festival: WILDsound THRILLER/DRAMA Shorts Festival

Watch film: https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/wildsound-thriller-drama-festival-march-2025

See the fill lineup of films:

They, 15min., Iran
Directed by Seyed Morteza Sabzeghaba
Group of Dezfoulion people leaving the city so sadly dressed of war to return to their families, at this time jets attack them.

https://www.instagram.com/ms.sabzeghaba

STATUE, 9min., Iraq
Directed by Brwa Kamil Atar
After killing his father, he tries to restore life to his mother, but thinking about his age

LA DER DES DER, 8min., France
Directed by Patrice Guillain
«If the last surviving soldier of the first World War wanted to get rid of the terrible burden that kept him alive … his name would be Simon Rosenberg.»

IN CORPUS, 3min,. Spain
Directed by Ignacio Rodó
A man is surprised by the arrival of a meteorite in his room.

https://www.ignaciorodo.com/
https://instagram.com/ignacio.rodo

NOT THE CLOWNS, 11min., Germany
Directed by Marcel Flock
After the autistic young actress Cassie fails an audition because she can’t show fear, Cassie seeks solace with her autistic younger brother Dave, who is a movie geek. Together with her current boyfriend Levi, they watch the horror movie “Not the Clowns”, which soon shifts the boundaries between dream and reality for Cassie

https://www.instagram.com/marcel.flock15/