A talking dog? You been drinking the Disney Kool Aid! Dogs are not smarter than men. This is historically accurate fiction, if there had been a dog on the firing line someone would have eaten it. If it was a barking dog, it would give away your position and would have been shot, then after the skirmish, shot again. Story as indicated is from a novel, I am not shoehorning in a Lassie, Air-bud or Beethoven. But just so you know; there is a kitten, a cow, two crows, a songbird and a mannikin later in the story. Try scene 51. The animals all all live. I seem to like semicolons this morning. Come back I will be putting up the Treatment soon. I wish Stage 32 allowed multiple uploads to the same logline / screenplay.
Sorry John. the men show their humanity in other ways. Read the treatment, or better yet finance the script. LOL The novel was written in the eighties, I read it six or seven times before starting the screenplay. there will not be a dog. I appreciate the thought but it isn't going to happen and it wouldn't ring true. This is a realistic representation of the firing line in 1944, not Ken Barry's "Wake Me When The War Is Over." i knew you were not yelling at me sir you are too much the visionary for that.
NO by accurate I mean historical details such as equipment, situations, procedures, location. Except for the names and interactions it could well be on the ground footage. It does follow the bulk of the novel story but rearranged a bit to fit the media of film.
Treatment completed May 4,2012 on screen adaptation of the novel by and in collaboration with Keith C. Chase.
We have an actor's commitment for the MacDonald Character. Surprise, he is from Stage 32.
12 Primary Roles identified, 6 actor commitments, It is often more difficult to contact your choices than to get them interested.
Wow, Wish there was a role for a teen aged American Girl, this sounds like a great movie. I would love to read the whole thing!
A talking dog? You been drinking the Disney Kool Aid! Dogs are not smarter than men. This is historically accurate fiction, if there had been a dog on the firing line someone would have eaten it. If it was a barking dog, it would give away your position and would have been shot, then after the skirmish, shot again. Story as indicated is from a novel, I am not shoehorning in a Lassie, Air-bud or Beethoven. But just so you know; there is a kitten, a cow, two crows, a songbird and a mannikin later in the story. Try scene 51. The animals all all live. I seem to like semicolons this morning. Come back I will be putting up the Treatment soon. I wish Stage 32 allowed multiple uploads to the same logline / screenplay.
Sorry John. the men show their humanity in other ways. Read the treatment, or better yet finance the script. LOL The novel was written in the eighties, I read it six or seven times before starting the screenplay. there will not be a dog. I appreciate the thought but it isn't going to happen and it wouldn't ring true. This is a realistic representation of the firing line in 1944, not Ken Barry's "Wake Me When The War Is Over." i knew you were not yelling at me sir you are too much the visionary for that.
I pasted the treatment but only the PDF one-sheet is here, I'll have to look into that.
Try this link, the treatment appears there: https://www.stage32.com/profile/23594/screenplay/souvenirs
NO by accurate I mean historical details such as equipment, situations, procedures, location. Except for the names and interactions it could well be on the ground footage. It does follow the bulk of the novel story but rearranged a bit to fit the media of film.
The Novel returns to print in a second edition due out in late June / early July!
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