The Not So Puppet Show: Season One, Episode Three by Thomas Typewriter

scripts, The Not So Puppet Show

———–<.thom.>———–

THE NOT SO PUPPET SHOW

Season One, Episode Three

“The Broken Book of Beasties: Book 1, Part 1”

By Thomas Typewriter

(c) 2025 jason arcand

———–<:type:>———–

FADE IN

Title sequence plays

FADE OUT
FADE IN

INT. BORDERTOWN MIDDLE SCHOOL LIBRARY, AFTERNOON
The curtains open and the stage-lights turn on. A floor-to-ceiling bookcase spreads across the back of the stage. Off to the stage-right side extends a short wall with a double set of doors for entrance and a single door for the librarian’s office. The door to the librarian’s office is open. The door has a plaque with the following text: “Ms. Weaver”. On the stage-left side of the stage sits a short wall containing a spinner rack filled with various young adult novels next to a metallic magazine rack. In front of the floor-to-ceiling bookcase sits two round tables with chairs. THOMAS TOPHAT enters the room through the wooden doors and throws his backpack into a chair at the nearest table.

THOMAS TOPHAT
“I’m back again.”

MS. WEAVER
(off camera) “Thought I’d see you again. I’ve just put out the newest issue of that magazine you liked. It is on the bottom shelf. Go ahead and get started and I’ll come out in a moment to sign your paper.”

Thomas looks over at the magazine rack. He walks over to it and leans down. Looking through the titles in the lower shelves, he spys the Not So Puppet Show zine Issue #3 behind a copy of Highlights and Newsweek. He picks it up and walks over to the table he threw his backpack onto. He sets down the zine and pulls his backpack over to the closest chair. Thomas sits down. From his backpack he removes a spiral notebook and pen. He then opens up the zine.

CUT TO OVER SHOULDER SHOT OF LOOKING DOWN AT THOMAS OPENING AND READING THE ZINE.

Thomas opens the zine, turning past the cover and first page with its publishing info. The cover is decorated with cut-out photocopied photographs. These would be photos so old as to be copyright-free and most likely sourced from discarded books. The first page looks as follows:



———–<.thom.>———–
THE BROKEN BOOK OF BEASTIES
“Book I: A Book by Any Other Cover”
Part One
By Thomas Typewriter and Primo Operahouse-Typewriter & Secondo Operahouse-Typewriter
(c) 2025 jason arcand
———–<:type:>———–

FADE IN

TITLE SEQUENCE
The title “The Broken Book of Beasties” appears far off in the dark screen, written in bright red flowing script. The word Beasties, unlike the rest of the title, is written in a thick slashing font. The title flies towards the camera and past the edge of the frame. The dark screen is filled with a shimmer as the following text appears in white block letters: “Book I: A Book by Any Other Cover”.”

ZOOM IN ON THE LINES “TITLE SEQUENCE PLAYS”


TRANSITION FROM THE BORDERTOWN MIDDLE SCHOOL LIBRARY TO THE BROKEN BOOK OF BEASTIES

FADE OUT

———–<.thom.>———–
THE BROKEN BOOK OF BEASTIES
“Book I: A Book by Any Other Cover”
Part One
By Thomas Typewriter and Primo Operahouse-Typewriter & Secondo Operahouse-Typewriter
(c) 2025 jason arcand
———–<:type:>———–

FADE IN

TITLE SEQUENCE
The title “The Broken Book of Beasties” appears far off in the dark screen, written in bright red flowing script. The word Beasties, unlike the rest of the title, is written in a thick slashing font. The title flies towards the camera and past the edge of the frame. The dark screen is filled with a shimmer as the following text appears in white block letters: “Book I: A Book by Any Other Cover”. It fades away in a shimmer. In the absence appears the following test: “Part One.”

PAN DOWN

The dark screen fades to light grey as the “Part One” slides off the top of the screen from the camera panning

TRANSITION FROM TITLE TO THE OVERLAP

The dark grey shifts in tone changing to dark clouds.

CONTINUE PAN DOWN

EXT. THE OVERLAP HILLS, DAYTIME
A series of forested hills in front of a forested snow-capped mountain slides into view. This is the Overlap Hills, one of the many realms used by the great wizard Orgle. They are named as such because they are areas of multiple different dimensions folded over each other by Orgle’s vast and great magicks until they create a pocket dimension. The Overlap Hills are not as well known as Orgle’s other overlaps such as the Overlap Hotel, the Overlap Waves, or the Overlap Trail. Yet, they do contain one of his greatest treasures. In the distance stands the Trilibris, Orgle’s special library. It appears as three different columns that seem to fuse with each other but also separate creating a kind of hyper-dimensional hourglass shape.


SHIFT TO XLS OF THE TRILIBRIS

CUT TO LS OF THE TRILIBRIS

CUT TO MS OF THE TRILIBRIS

CUT TO CS OF THE TRILIBRIS DOORS

TRANSITION FROM THE OVERLAP HILLS TO THE TRILIBRIS

ENTER THE BUILDING AND MOVE TO THE MAIN ROOM THROUGH A SERIES OF QUICK CUTS AND FADES

INT. THE TRILIBRIS MAIN ROOM, DAYTIME
The Main Room is a teardrop-shaped dome. The walls are covered in bookcases. Spiral staircases are scattered around the circumference. The bookcases are designed in a way that the books are stacked horizontally and vertically giving the impression of the folds in a human brain. The center of the room is a large open space filled with thick tables and chairs. The top of the dome is glass, stained a light blue, allowing natural light to illuminate the space. The bookshelves are illuminated by pendant lights within the rows. Each desk has a bulbous table lamp to illuminate in case the dome is not allowing enough light. Across from the entryway the bookcases stop. A large alcove is built into the wall. A dark wood wall decorated with gold and brass metal in long blocky snaking patterns illuminated by two torches. In the center of the alcove is a podium holding THE CODEXIAN. A very special book, it is separated from the rest of the main room by golden chains and small golden pedestals. A “Do Not Disturb” sign hangs off the chains.


CUT TO LS OF THE CODEXIAN’S ALCOVE

CUT TO MS OF THE CODEXIAN’S ALCOVE

CUT TO MS OF THE CODEXIAN

The Codexian is a thick book, with covers of a purple stone and thick leather binding. The front cover has a vertical row of three circles made from gold wire on the binding side. The other side is a snaking angular pattern similar to the patterns on the alcove walls. The pattern snakes down to two horizontal lines across the bottom portion of the front cover.

CUT TO CS OF THE CODEXIAN

A TRIUMPHANT MYSTICAL MUSICAL SCORE plays. The score plays for a few moments and then it stops with A RECORD NEEDLE SCRATCH.

PAN TO LEFT OF THE CODEXIAN.

A GREY MOUSE crawls up onto the podium. It tentatively approaches the Codexian.

CUT TO MS OF THE GREY MOUSE

The Grey Mouse sniffs along the Codexian, moving to the top corner. It starts to nibble on the edges of the pages.

THE CODEXIAN
“OWWWW!”

CUT TO MS OF THE CODEXIAN

The Round circles on the left of the cover open revealing non-organic golden eyes. The two golden lines along the bottom of the cover move as if lips or a mouth. The Grey Mouse stops chewing.

THE CODEXIAN
“Who did that?”

The Grey Mouse steps away from the Codexian

THE CODEXIAN
“Come on, I know you are there. Who is biting me!”

The Codexian’s eyes scan around the room. Ultimately they settle on the Grey Mouse.

THE CODEXIAN
“Oh, hello there. Were you the one chewing on my corners?”

The Grey Mouse blankly looks at the Codexian. It sneezes. A golden shimmer flickers in the air.

THE CODEXIAN
“Bless you.”

The Grey Mouse stands upright and nods at the Codexian.

THE CODEXIAN
(to self) “Well that’s new.” (to the Grey Mouse) “Let’s try this. Maybe what you’re truly hungry for is a story. If I tell you a story will you stop chewing on me.”

The Grey Mouse nods and then sits down.

THE CODEXIAN
(to self) “Definitely new.” (to the Grey Mouse) “I will need to open up to tell the story, so you may want to adjust your position.”

The Codexian opens and the Grey Mouse moves to the bottom of the podium top. The pages start to move, quickly moving to the middle of the book in a blur.

THE CODEXIAN
“Ahhh, here we go.”

The Codexian is open to a set of pages bordered in golden illumination but the actual area inside the border is blank.

THE CODEXIAN
“The Broken Book of Beasties.

From somewhere in the Trilibris A CHIMING TONE rings out. The blank page starts to fill with an illustration in a style that is a mix of woodcut block print and medieval illuminated scripts. A vast city fills the page.

TRANSITION FROM THE LIBRARY TO AN ILLUSTRATED STORYBOOK STORY

PAN IN ON ILLUSTRATION TO FILL THE FRAME

THE CODEXIAN
(voice-over) “Once there was a vast city filled with magic, wonder and charm.”

The illustration changes to the city in ruins with a giant burst of light exploding from the center of the city. Prismatic storm clouds fill the sky, raining storms down on the city.

THE CODEXIAN
(voice-over) “The city of magic became a city of too much magic, as the Great Rupture ravaged the city. Magic rained down like storms melting what was known and unknown equally.”

The illustration changes to people on hills outside the city fleeing. The city gripped in storms can be seen in the distance.

THE CODEXIAN
(voice-over) “Those who were able fled the city. The Great Rupture lasted decades driving one group further and further from the city.”

The illustration changes to a long stretch of landscape. Hills on the right give way to grasslands, then forests, and then mountains to the right. A group of refugees appears in the hill section. Fade to the group in the grasslands section and prismatic storms in the hills. The illustration changes more with a fade to the refugees in the forests The prismatic storms now fill the hill and grassland sections. The illustration shifts again. The refugees are now in the mountains section. The prismatic storms fill the hills, grassland, and forest sections. The illustration changes one last time. The refugees are gone and the prismatic storms fill the entire page. A THUNDER BOLT CRACKS. The Codexian turns the page.

THE CODEXIAN
(voice-over) “Past landscapes that ate lives, the refugees found a place of safety, or at least which they hope offered peace.”

The illustration area is filled with many tree branches. Colorful flowers grow along the base of the trees while animals can be seen peeking their faces out of the upper branches. The illustration changes with the trees sliding. They part in the center moving left and right. In the center of the screen sits a valley made from five rivers feeding into a lake in the center. There is a large island in the center of the lake along with a few small islands in sandbars scattered around the lake. The illustration changes again with the sun emerging in the clouds above the valley. Bright sunlight beams across the page. The illustration changes one last time with the illustrations of the refugees moving in from the left and right side of the frame and walking down to the valley. The Codexian turns the page.

THE CODEXIAN
“Having found sanctuary, the people set about building a new home for themselves.”

The illustration is blank but then small illustrations of people enter from the left and right sides. They break off into five groups, with the fifth group in the center made from the remaining few from each group. Each group then disappears into a cloud of construction dust. CONSTRUCTION SOUNDS can be heard. Slowly simple houses emerge from the construction dust. Once a house is finished the construction dust cloud disappears and the group looks at their work. Once all five houses are completed, the people CHEER.

THE CODEXIAN
“And grow they did. It was as if some creative spirit had been unleashed.”

The small people in the illustration then go to the area behind the houses and start constructing again. Rows of houses emerge from the dust. Once a house is finished, each group builds another behind it. Soon the houses recede into the distance. The construction dust finishes and the houses sit. The sun sets and the people go into their homes. The stars come out and then dawn breaks. Small people exit their houses and do daily chores. The sun rises and sets. Everyone goes back to bed. The day/night cycle speeds up to a blur until sixty days have passed. Time returns to its regular speed on the sixtieth day. The illustration shifts zooming in on a house in the background. A lady leaves at sunrise and walks two houses down to a bakery. She enters the shop and starts baking. Smoke starts to emerge from the bakery’s chimney. As the sun rises to mid-morning, the sign in the window changes from closed to open. The illustration changes to looking in through the window of the bakery. The Baker stands at the counter.

THE CODEXIAN
“And while everyone else was moving forward, one person was stuck looking back. Little did anyone realize she would change the direction of everyone’s life.”

The illustration changes to the baker at the counter. She has a sad far away look in her eyes.

ZOOM IN ON THE BAKER’S FORLORN EXPRESSION

TRANSITION FROM WITHIN THE STORY TO THE BORDERTOWNE MIDDLE SCHOOL LIBRARY.

FADE OUT

FADE IN

INT. THE BORDERTOWNE MIDDLE SCHOOL LIBRARY
A floor-to-ceiling bookcase spreads across the back of the stage. Off to the stage-right side extends a short wall with a double set of doors for entrance and a single door for the librarian’s office. The door to the librarian’s office is open. The door has a plaque over it with the following text: “Ms. Weaver”. On stage-left side of the stage sits a short wall containing a spinner rack filled with various young adult novels next to a metallic magazine rack. In front of the floor-to-ceiling bookcase sits two round tables with chairs.

MS OF THE OPEN ZINE

Thomas has the zine open on the table. He is writing down notes in his notebook. As he writes a note about the grey mouse he trails off and starts scribbling doodles of the mouse. His watch BEEPS.

CUT TO MS OF THOMAS

Thomas looks at his watch and realizes it is time to leave.

THOMAS TOPHAT
“Ms. Weaver?”

MS. WEAVER
(off-camera) “Yes?”

THOMAS TOPHAT
“Can I take this with me? I am only partway through.”

MS. WEAVER
(off-camera) “No. Magazines are not allowed to be removed from the library by students. You know that is the policy.”

Thomas stands and walks out of the frame.

THOMAS TOPHAT
(off-camera and softer tone) “Please Ms. Weaver. I’ll take real good care of it.”

MS. WEAVER
(off-camera) “Now, Thomas you know…”

THOMAS TOPHAT
(off-camera) “It’s just I’ve never found anything before that I wanted to read. Everything I read is just because a teacher or my parents tell me to. This is the first thing that I want to read. I really just want to know what happens next.”

There is a short pause.

MS. WEAVER
(off-camera) “Okay. But you must promise to be careful with it. Take good care of it.”

THOMAS TOPHAT
(off-camera) “I will. I will take great care of it. Thank you.”

MS. WEAVER
(off-camera) “You’re going to be late for your next class.”

Thomas reenters the frame and packs up his bag. He slides the zine in last, needing to adjust a few items for everything to fit properly. He then slings his backpack on and starts to exit.

MS. WEAVER
(off-camera) “Take care of it.”

THOMAS TOPHAT
“I will.”

Thomas exits stage-right.

FADE OUT

The Great Works Project: Season Six, Episode One by Thomas Typewriter

scripts, The Great Works Project scripts

———–<.thom.>———–

THE GREAT WORKS PROJECT

a puppet play in many parts

Season 06, Episode 01
a prologue

By Thomas Typewriter

(c) 2024 thomas typewriter

===========<:type:>============

FADE IN TO BLACK

From the bottom of the screen scrolls up the following text: “06-01”. It moves upwards, pausing a moment in the center of the frame, then continues upward, exiting the frame at the top edge. Immediately following that text’s exit, up scrolls “a prologue” from the bottom of the frame. It scrolls upward pausing in the center of the frame before continuing up and out of the top of the frame.

FADE OUT
FADE IN

THE VELVET CURTAIN

MS OF THE VELVET CURTAIN

A velvet stage curtain fills the frame. From below the frame THE VELVET TOUCH emerges. Remember that the Velvet Touch is a Helping Hand that wears long fingerless fishnet gloves. Each of their fingers, except the pinkies, are painted with a black or dark shade of fingernail polish. The Velvet Touch gestures a greeting at the camera and then reaches below the frame for a large cue card. They show the blank side to the camera and then rotate it. On the back, the cue card has the following text written: “A story…” The Velvet Touch then flips the card back around and now the blank side has text on it. It has the following text written on it, divided into two columns:

“a saw blade… a wand…
a castle… a quill…
a light bulb… a shield…
a harp… an outsider…”

The Velvet Touch rotates the cue card one more time. The writing of “a Story” on the other side has been replaced. It now bears the following text: “…in a progression…”. The Velvet Touch sets the cue card down off-screen, below the frame. They then grab the edges of the Velvet Curtain, opening them to reveal a dark screen behind them.

PAN IN ON THE DARK BEHIND THE VELVET CURTAIN

FADE OUT TO BLACK

GRIGIO COLORI
(offscreen) “Fade into black. From the bottom of the screen scrolls up the following text zero, six, dash, zero, one

FADE OUT
FADE IN

EXT. THE LONG HILLS, DAYTIME

The Long Hills are a connecting region appearing as a hilly combination of flowering prairie and rolling grassy plains. GRIGIO COLORI and THE OUTER ONE walk along one of the hills towards the back of The Long Hills.

GRIGIO COLORI
“Can I ask you something?”

THE OUTER ONE
“Sure”

GRIGIO COLORI
“You like these plays? This Thomas Typewriter stuff?”

THE OUTER ONE
“Sure.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“What do you like about it? ”

THE OUTER ONE
“Well, it makes me smile. I’ve always liked puppets and science fiction, so there’s that. But, and I’ve wondered about this too, and I think there is also this other part of it. I think I identify with Thomas. Like how he struggled with sadness and loneliness but managed to write this silly epic anyway helped me feel a little better about my own struggles.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“That was something we did discuss and debate a lot. We, and by we I mean myself and the other characters in the story, wondered if anyone was enjoying it. Was anyone being helped by our story? We couldn’t tell being inside it. We hoped we were helping.”

THE OUTER ONE
“Sure. I think you were. Maybe not as many as Thomas hoped for. He made so much art just on his own, with little recognition. Just going in everyday and writing some more, painting a little more. Maybe that was why he was lonely.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“I’ve read the scripts. He was lonely long before then.”

THE OUTER ONE
“You’re probably right. There was one other reason I liked his stories.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“Oh, what was that?”

THE OUTER ONE
“The characters.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“Present company included?”

THE OUTER ONE
“Present company definitely included.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“Oh you charmer, am I blushing?”

THE OUTER ONE
“Maybe a little.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“Should I continue reading.”

THE OUTER ONE
“Yes, please.”

GRIGIO COLORI
(opening scriptbook) “Transition to the Typewriter Abstract Puppet Stage.”

THE OUTER ONE
“I always thought that was a crazy name.”

GRIGIO COLORI
(to the Outer One) “Me too.” (looking back at scriptbook) “Fade out then Fade in to a field of darkness. The sound of typewriter keys click clacking sound out from somewhere in the distance.”

THE OUTER ONE
“That’s a sound we know all too well.”

GRIGIO COLORI
“True. That and light switches.”

FADE OUT
FADE IN

A FIELD OF DARKNESS

From off-stage the sound of TYPEWRITER KEYS CLICK CLACKING. Unseen lamps turn on in the dark and illuminate the suddenly appearing TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE

THE OUTER ONE
(off-screen) “You ever think we have all these different ways of the Typewriter Abstract Puppet Stage appearing because Thomas gets bored of writing the same thing?

GRIGIO COLORI
(off-screen) “I know I would.”

TRANSITION FROM A FIELD OF DARKNESS TO THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE

LS OF THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE

PAN IN ON THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE. AS THE CAMERA MOVES CLOSER MOVE IN ON THE MID-STAGE AREA.

TRANSITION FROM THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT TO THE MID-STAGE

The mid-stage curtains open and we continue moving inward. The mid-stage is undecorated. We move through it towards the Curtain of Clouds. The Curtain of Clouds part.

TRANSITION FROM MID-STAGE TO BACK-STAGE

BACK-STAGE: THE CONCURRENT DISTANCES

THE CAMERA PANS THROUGH THE OPEN CURTAIN OF CLOUDS UNTIL PROPERLY FRAMING THE BACK-STAGE BEHIND THE CURTAINS

Fog rolls across the bottom of the stage, with a background of nebulous degree. The landscape looks like a lost or unformed realm just outside dreams. VARIOUS DREAM-BUBBLES float across the stage both stage-left to stage-right and stage-right to stage-left. After a few moments, NETTE, ONDE, and AVEN along with the AEOLIPILE enter stage-left. They walk to the center of the stage and look around.

AVEN
“Do you see her?”

ONDE
“No.”

NETTE
“She could be anywhere. All this fog is messing up my vision.”

AVEN
“It is only going to get worse as we move more downdream.”

They look around while Aeolipile dances with a Dream-bubble in the background.

ONDE
“What do we do?”

AVEN
“I do not know.”

NETTE
“There has to be something we can do. We just need to think of something. Figure it out.”

They rub their faces in thought when a light bulb appears over Nette’s head. Aven and Onde turn and look at her. Nette reaches up and pulls down the light bulb. She then reaches into her pocket and pulls out another light bulb. She looks at them and smiles.

NETTE
“I’ve got an idea.”

AVEN
“We noticed.”

NETTE
“Did you bring anything with you? What supplies do you have?”

ONDE
“We left in a rush so we didn’t pack much.”

NETTE
“Fine. That’s fine, what do you have.”

ONDE
“I have some scrapwood and a few nails.”

AVEN
“I have some wire and colored glass.”

NETTE
“That will have to do. Ladies, while I will always advocate for solving your own problems, sometimes you need to ask for help. And sometimes you need to do both.”

Nette points at the Aelophile. Aven and Onde turn and look at the Aelopile dancing with the Dream-bubbles. Nette then points at the items in her hand. Aven and Onde turn and look at the items in her hands. Nette gestures between Aelophile and the lightbulb in her hand. Light bulbs pop on over Onde’s and Aven’s heads. Nette walks over and removes the bulbs, adding them to the other two she is holding.

CAMERA PANS OUTWARD

The Curtain of Clouds closes.

TRANSITION FROM BACK-STAGE TO MID-STAGE

THE CAMERA CONTINUES PANNING OUTWARD MOVING THROUGH THE MID-STAGE AREA AND OUT FROM THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE.

TRANSITION FROM MID-STAGE TO THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE

LS OF THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE

The Mid-stage curtains close. The unseen lamps over the Typewriter Abstract Puppet Stage dim and turn off.

FADE OUT

The Great Works Project: Season Two, Episode Ten script

Puppet play, scripts, The Great Works Project scripts

———–<.thom.>———–

THE GREAT WORKS PROJECT

a puppet play in many parts

Season Two, Episode Ten

By Thomas Typewriter

(c) 2020 thomas typewriter

———–<:type:>———–

FADE IN TO BLACK

From the bottom of the screen scrolls up the following text: “02-10”. It moves upwards, pausing a moment in the center of the frame, then continues upward, exiting the frame at the top edge

FADE OUT

FADE IN

INT. UNROOM NOT.SEVEN
The unroom Not.Seven is a vast space, a cavern of small and large. A wooden disc sits in the center, surrounded by waves of multi-hued grey carpet squares. Tall spindly metallic lamps attempt to illuminate the room.

OPEN IN POV OF THE OUTER ONE

THE OUTER ONE sits on a carpet square looking at the wooden disc in anticipation. The sound of TYPEWRITER KEYS CLICK CLACKING drifts in from some place far away by way of the wooden disc.

THE CAMERA MOVES OUT OF THEN INTO FOCUS

Unseen lamps above the wooden disc click on bringing the TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE into view.

TRANSITION FROM THE UNROOM TO THE TYPEWRITER ABSTRACT PUPPET STAGE

PAN IN ON MID-STAGE UNTIL IT FILLS THE SCREEN AND IS PROPERLY FRAMED

MID-STAGE: CURTAINS CLOSED
The curtains part and the stage lights turn on, with the sound of A LIGHT SWITCH CLICKING ON, revealing…

MID-STAGE: INT. THOMAS TYPEWRITER’S STUDIO
A desk sits in the center of the stage topped by a typewriter and a ream of paper. A book, a phone, and a pair of headphones sit on top of the paper. A sheet stands ready and loaded in the typewriter. A lamp waits to the stage-right side of the desk, a wastebasket pauses stage-left. A small bookcase, adorned with various houseplants, watches skewed off to the stage-right side. THOMAS TYPEWRITER is sitting at the desk looking off to the side, lost in thought. As his mind drifts, his fingers tap on the desk. TAP…TAP…TAP…

CUT TO CS OF THOMAS’ FINGERS TAPPING ON THE DESKTOP AS THEY SLOWLY DRIFT TOWARDS THE TYPEWRITER

TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…TAP…CLICK AS A TYPEWRITER KEY IS PRESSED. Thomas’ fingers pause. Then a second keystroke and CLICK.

CUT BACK

Thomas rotates into the desk and opens a drawer. He pulls out a small jewelry box and sets it next to the typewriter. Looking at the box for a moment he turns to the typewriter and starts to type.

THOMAS TYPEWRITER
(narration) “Biff found his life slipping out of control, and he felt scared.”

Thomas turns from the typewriter and pulls out a book, “Latchkey Kids of Randomness”, from his desk. He opens the book, carefully setting the bookmark to the side, and starts to read.

TRANSITION FROM MID-STAGE TO HIGH-STAGE

THE CAMERA UNCOUPLES FORM MID-STAGE AND PANS UPWARD. IT MOVES PAST THE TOP OF THE THE MID-STAGE SETS TO THE CURTAIN OF CLOUDS VISIBLE BEHIND THE SETS. IT CONTINUES PANNING UPWARDS, FOLLOWING THE CURTAIN OF CLOUDS. THE CAMERA MOVES TO THE TOP OF THE CURTAIN OF CLOUDS FINALLY STOPPING FRAMING THE HIGH-STAGE LOCATED AT THE TOP OF THE CURTAIN OF CLOUDS. IT STOPS PROPERLY FRAMING HIGH-STAGE.

HIGH-STAGE: CURTAINS CLOSED
The curtains part and the stage-lights turn on with the sound of A COMPUTER POWERING ON, revealing…

HIGH-STAGE: INT. THE CARRO’S OBSERVATION DECK
The Observation Deck is in a sad state, showing signs of excessive damage from the recent space storm. Wires hang from the ceiling. Scattered debris covers the floor. The amber emergency alarms are now dim. Smoke pours in from off-stage. A spiderweb of cracks are visible in the observation window. The sound of GLASS CRACKING resonates across the stage.

CUT TO CLOSER SHOT OF THE CRACKING OBSERVATION WINDOWS

The cracks grow and grow till the window shatters. The Observation Deck decompresses. ROARING WIND as all the loose unsecured items are sucked out the window. Soon the ROAR SUBSIDES as the last of the atmosphere escapes. Small bits of debris float by weightlessly.
ARG-0519, a diamond shaped Sat-bot in the employ of the Jovian, moves past the window casting a spotlight from it’s diamond like central eye across the deck. It scans the room then flies off. A few moments later a large simian-like gloved hand grabs the edge of the window.

CUT TO CS OF THE GLOVED HAND

The image cuts to black with the sound of A COMPUTER TURNING OFF. The High-stage curtains soon follow, closing on today’s episode.

TRANSITION FROM HIGH-STAGE TO MID-STAGE

THE CAMERA DISCONNECTS FROM HIGH-STAGE AND STARTS TO PAN DOWNWARD. IT MOVES TO THE CURTAIN OF CLOUDS, FOLLOWING IT TO THE BOTTOM. THE TOPS OF THE MID-STAGE SETS SLIP INTO VIEW. THE CAMERA CONTINUES DOWNWARD TILL PROPERLY FRAMING THE MID-STAGE.

MID-STAGE: INT. THOMAS TYPEWRITER’S STUDIO
Thomas sits at his desk reading. He reads a few pages then rotates toward his typewriter. Holding his place in the book with one hand, Thomas uses his other hand to hunt and peck at the keyboard.

THOMAS TYPEWRITER
(narration) “But still he moved forward.”

Thomas stops typing and resumes reading. The stage lights turn of with the sound of A LIGHT SWITCH CLICKING OFF, to which Thomas reaches over and turns on his lamp. The Mid-stage curtains close.

FADE OUT