Review

“A Rather Lovely Thing” Offers Poignant Portrait of Early 20th Century Rebellion

Casey Mensing’s screenplay “A Rather Lovely Thing” arrives as an unexpected gem—a meditative character study disguised as a period drama that asks us to reconsider what we label as madness. Set in early 1900s Wisconsin, the script follows Mary Sweeny, a woman whose repeated acts of window-smashing across multiple states have made her both notorious […]

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GENESIS 4:24: A Dystopian Mirror Held Up to Justice and Fear

In an era where speculative fiction increasingly serves as cautionary prophecy, Torsten Guenter Freitag’s “GENESIS 4:24” arrives as a chilling meditation on justice, revenge, and the terrifying ease with which societies trade freedom for order. This screenplay—part political thriller, part dystopian nightmare—constructs a 2045 America that feels uncomfortably plausible, where biblical vengeance has been codified

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Park Bench Philosophy: A Review of “Mensch on a Bench”

A tender exploration of connection, faith, and second chances “Mensch on a Bench” arrives with an ambitious blend of romantic comedy and drama, centering on an encounter that feels both impossibly serendipitous and authentically human. Writer’s high-concept premise—a homeless Jewish man and a Catholic jogger finding connection on a park bench—promises the kind of interfaith,

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