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Scene Map 60
# PG SLUGLINE
1 2
EXT COTTON FIELD SHACK. DUSK.
2 2
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
3 5
INT FORD SPORT TRAC PICKUP TRUCK. SUNDAY MORNING.
4 7
EXT MUDDY FARM ROAD. MORNING.
5 11
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S RECEPTION AREA. MORNING.
6 13
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
7 16
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
8 17
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S HOUSE. NIGHT.
9 18
EXT SUNSHINE STREET. MORNING.
10 19
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
11 23
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON.
12 24
EXT FOUR LANE HIGHWAY THROUGH SUNSHINE. LATE AFTERNOON.
13 25
INT SHERIFF’S OFFICE IN COURTHOUSE. MORNING.
14 27
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
15 29
EXT ANDERSON HOME. DAY.
16 34
EXT SUNSHINE COUNTRY CLUB BAR. AFTERNOON.
17 35
INT BEST WESTERN DINING ROOM. NOON.
18 37
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S BEDROOM. NIGHT.
19 38
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
20 41
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
21 42
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
22 45
INT WALTON’S TRUCK. DAY.
23 46
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON.
24 47
EXT OUTSIDE WALTON’S LAW OFFICE. DAY.
25 48
INT LITTLE AL’S HOME. LATE AFTERNOON.
26 48
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
27 50
EXT JITNEY MART PARKING LOT. NIGHT.
28 52
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
29 53
EXT WALTON’S TRUCK. NIGHT.
30 57
EXT ANDERSON HOME. GROVER STREET. NIGHT.
31 58
EXT ANDERSON HOME. MORNING.
32 60
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
33 62
INT SHERIFF’S TAHOE. MORNING.
34 63
EXT HOUSE ON THE BAYOU. DAY.
35 66
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
36 69
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
37 69
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. LATE AFTERNOON.
38 71
EXT COURTHOUSE STEPS. DAY.
39 72
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
40 73
INT JIMMY GRAY’S CADILLAC. LATE AFTERNOON.
41 74
INT JITNEY MART. NIGHT.
42 76
EXT SUNSHINE STREETS. NIGHT.
43 77
INT BEST WESTERN ROOM 27. NIGHT.
44 78
EXT BEST WESTERN PARKING LOT. NIGHT.
45 80
EXT DIRT ROAD. MORNING.
46 83
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
47 83
EXT JOE’S JUNKYARD. MORNING.
48 85
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY.
49 88
EXT OXFORD SQUARE. AFTERNOON.
50 91
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY.
51 92
INT COURTROOM. MORNING.
52 94
INT GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
53 95
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT.
54 97
INT GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
55 108
INT COURTHOUSE HALLWAY. MORNING.
56 109
INT GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
57 112
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
58 115
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
59 115
EXT COURTHOUSE PARKING LOT. AFTERNOON.
60 116
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT.
Scene Map
60
# PG SLUGLINE
1 2
EXT COTTON FIELD SHACK. DUSK.
EXT. COTTON FIELD SHACK. DUSK.
EXT. COTTON FIELD SHACK. DUSK. As credits roll, two six-year-old black girls play in the packed dirt front yard of a board and batten shotgun house on the edge of a cotton field. A woman on the porch calls to the girls. She wipes sweat from
2 2
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING. Yaloquena District Attorney Willie Mitchell Banks, 53, sits behind his desk studying a file. His receptionist, Louise, an attractive black woman with short hair appears. LOUISE
3 5
INT FORD SPORT TRAC PICKUP TRUCK. SUNDAY MORNING.
INT. FORD SPORT TRAC PICKUP TRUCK. SUNDAY MORNING.
INT. FORD SPORT TRAC PICKUP TRUCK. SUNDAY MORNING. Unshaven Willie Mitchell slumps in the passenger seat drinking a beer. Through windshield wipers slinging water he studies the steady rain. He looks out his window at the soggy gray cotton fibers hanging uselessly from rotting bolls.
4 7
EXT MUDDY FARM ROAD. MORNING.
EXT. MUDDY FARM ROAD. MORNING.
EXT. MUDDY FARM ROAD. MORNING. Ahead of Walton’s truck there’s a red full-sized Dodge van with a disabled tag and a chair lift on the side door. INT. FORD SPORT TRAC PICKUP TRUCK. MORNING. Through the rainy windshield they see the van. Walton slows
5 11
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S RECEPTION AREA. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S RECEPTION AREA. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S RECEPTION AREA. MORNING. Wearing a dark business suit, Walton places a stack of files on Louise’s desk. WALTON Has the Sheriff called?
6 13
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON. Walton walks into court, pushes through the swinging rail gate and places his file on the prosecution table. Takisha Berry slumps at the defense table, half-asleep. She’s wearing a jail-issued orange jump suit. Eleanor Bernstein,
7 16
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell sits in darkness in the big wooden rocker on his porch. Water drips from trees and eaves from an earlier rain. Everything is wet. He hears pea gravel crunching and sees a shadowy figure in
8 17
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S HOUSE. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S HOUSE. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S HOUSE. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell leads her to the stairway in the central hall. It’s dark in the house. WOMAN I want to use the shower outside.
9 18
EXT SUNSHINE STREET. MORNING.
EXT. SUNSHINE STREET. MORNING.
EXT. SUNSHINE STREET. MORNING. Willie Mitchell slows his Ford truck as he sees an arm extended from a black BMW sedan flagging him down. Willie Mitchell pulls over and walks back to the BMW. He shakes hands with Mayor Everett Johnson, a six-four, 275
10 19
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING. The Mayor and Reverend Bobby Sanders, a slender, young black man in a dark suit and white Roman collar like a Catholic priest, shake hands with the D.A. and sit down. WILLIE MITCHELL
11 23
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON. Willie Mitchell stops his truck in the circular drive at his front steps and walks inside. INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S HOUSE. LATE AFTERNOON.
12 24
EXT FOUR LANE HIGHWAY THROUGH SUNSHINE. LATE AFTERNOON.
EXT. FOUR LANE HIGHWAY THROUGH SUNSHINE. LATE AFTERNOON.
EXT. FOUR LANE HIGHWAY THROUGH SUNSHINE. LATE AFTERNOON. Willie Mitchell drives Ina home in his truck. They stop at a red light. In the distance there are a dozen people standing at the highway entrance to the shopping center housing the Jitney Mart, the local grocery store.
13 25
INT SHERIFF’S OFFICE IN COURTHOUSE. MORNING.
INT. SHERIFF’S OFFICE IN COURTHOUSE. MORNING.
INT. SHERIFF’S OFFICE IN COURTHOUSE. MORNING. Sheriff Jones walks down a narrow hallway and peers inside a reinforced glass window in a door, then walks in. INT. SHERIFF’S OFFICE INTERROGATION ROOM. MORNING. Takisha Berry sits at a table holding an infant. Two toddlers
14 27
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING. Sheriff Jones leans on the wall next to the D.A.’s desk. SHERIFF One of my patrol units stopped Jimmy Gray last night weaving all
15 29
EXT ANDERSON HOME. DAY.
EXT. ANDERSON HOME. DAY.
EXT. ANDERSON HOME. DAY. Willie Mitchell parks in the driveway on the side of the Anderson mansion in the middle of Sunshine, a stately Italianate red brick structure with Greek Revival flourishes. He knocks on the side door.
16 34
EXT SUNSHINE COUNTRY CLUB BAR. AFTERNOON.
EXT. SUNSHINE COUNTRY CLUB BAR. AFTERNOON.
EXT. SUNSHINE COUNTRY CLUB BAR. AFTERNOON. Jimmy Gray,53, 312 pounds, and Willie Mitchell sit at a table, both wet from the rain that interrupted their golf game. Jimmy tries to stand but his thighs and rear are wedged in the barrel-backed wooden chair, which rises with him.
17 35
INT BEST WESTERN DINING ROOM. NOON.
INT. BEST WESTERN DINING ROOM. NOON.
INT. BEST WESTERN DINING ROOM. NOON. Willie Mitchell follows Assistant D.A. Walton into the buffet line at the weekly Rotary lunch meeting. Willie Mitchell knows everyone there. He shakes hands and laughs. Eighty per cent of the club is white. Black businessmen and women, and
18 37
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S BEDROOM. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S BEDROOM. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S BEDROOM. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell puts down the book he’s trying to read and picks up the vodka and tonic from the bedside table. He sips it and points the remote to his television. WEATHER CHANNEL
19 38
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT. He pushes open the screen door in his boxers and tee shirt. Mary Margaret is already on the porch, soaking wet. They stand there in the darkness a moment. She moves close. MARY MARGARET
20 41
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING. Reverend Bobby Sanders sits across the desk from the D.A. REV. SANDERS Thank you for seeing me without an appointment.
21 42
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON. Walton hustles into the courtroom adjusting his tie. Judge Williams is on the bench. Takisha Berry sits at the defense table in her orange jump suit.
22 45
INT WALTON’S TRUCK. DAY.
INT. WALTON’S TRUCK. DAY.
INT. WALTON’S TRUCK. DAY. Walton drives on the four lane with Willie Mitchell. WALTON Where are we going? WILLIE MITCHELL
23 46
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S DRIVEWAY. LATE AFTERNOON. Willie Mitchell gets out of the rocking chair on his porch when Big Al pulls into the circular gravel drive. Big Al lets his engine idle and lowers his window. Willie Mitchell walks down the steps and shakes Big Al’s hand
24 47
EXT OUTSIDE WALTON’S LAW OFFICE. DAY.
EXT. OUTSIDE WALTON’S LAW OFFICE. DAY.
EXT. OUTSIDE WALTON’S LAW OFFICE. DAY. Walton is leaving his office when Mary Margaret’s black Lexus sedan stops in front. She gets out and hands a large envelope to Walton. She looks beautiful; dressed nicely. MARY MARGARET
25 48
INT LITTLE AL’S HOME. LATE AFTERNOON.
INT. LITTLE AL’S HOME. LATE AFTERNOON.
INT. LITTLE AL’S HOME. LATE AFTERNOON. Mary Margaret places Little Al’s dinner on the dining room table. She fills a sturdy drink glass with Beefeater’s gin and places it near his plate. Little Al tries to wheel himself to the table but is so drunk
26 48
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING. Walton comes in and places a stack of files on Willie Mitchell’s desk. WILLIE MITCHELL What do you have today?
27 50
EXT JITNEY MART PARKING LOT. NIGHT.
EXT. JITNEY MART PARKING LOT. NIGHT.
EXT. JITNEY MART PARKING LOT. NIGHT. Walton sits in his truck a fifty yards from the crowd of over a hundred black people of all ages. Reverend Sanders climbs into the bed of a pickup truck in front of the crowd and gets their attention.
28 52
EXT WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT.
EXT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S PORCH. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell and Mary Margaret sit in rockers in the darkness on his porch. He answers his phone. WILLIE MITCHELL Did you tell Lee all this?
29 53
EXT WALTON’S TRUCK. NIGHT.
EXT. WALTON’S TRUCK. NIGHT.
EXT. WALTON’S TRUCK. NIGHT. Walton leaves the parking lot to get ahead of the marchers. He motors down the street that parallels the marchers’ route, turns on a side street and parks on the corner near the Anderson mansion, thirty feet from the marchers.
30 57
EXT ANDERSON HOME. GROVER STREET. NIGHT.
EXT. ANDERSON HOME. GROVER STREET. NIGHT.
EXT. ANDERSON HOME. GROVER STREET. NIGHT. Walton stops his truck on the street next to the Anderson mansion. He rolls his window down and sees Bobby Sanders leading the marchers toward him, now a half a block away. Walton hears the beginning of a chant. He can’t make out what
31 58
EXT ANDERSON HOME. MORNING.
EXT. ANDERSON HOME. MORNING.
EXT. ANDERSON HOME. MORNING. Willie Mitchell stands in the driveway of what’s left of the Anderson mansion. It’s raining. He wears a plastic poncho. Rain pelts the brim of his Ole Miss baseball cap. Firemen probe at the edges of the smoldering rubble. Two
32 60
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING. Willie Mitchell sits behind his desk in a shirt and tie. He takes a sip of coffee. Walton walks in and sits down. He’s muddy and disheveled.
33 62
INT SHERIFF’S TAHOE. MORNING.
INT. SHERIFF’S TAHOE. MORNING.
INT. SHERIFF’S TAHOE. MORNING. It’s late morning and still drizzling. They’re driving on the state highway between rain soaked cotton fields. WILLIE MITCHELL You talk to Bobby Sanders yet?
34 63
EXT HOUSE ON THE BAYOU. DAY.
EXT. HOUSE ON THE BAYOU. DAY.
EXT. HOUSE ON THE BAYOU. DAY. Willie Mitchell and Lee get out of the truck. Lee glances at the bayou behind the house. There’s an old school bus half submerged in the black water. WILLIE MITCHELL
35 66
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON. Walton hurries into the courtroom struggling to put on his coat. He pushes through the rail gate, stands at the prosecution table and straightens his tie. JUDGE WILLIAMS
36 69
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON. Walton walks in to Willie Mitchell’s office. Sheriff Jones is leaning against the wall. WALTON You’re not going to believe what
37 69
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. LATE AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. LATE AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. LATE AFTERNOON. Mayor Everett Johnson and Reverend Bobby Sanders sit across the desk from the D.A. at six p.m. Everyone else is gone. MAYOR Thank you for seeing us so late,
38 71
EXT COURTHOUSE STEPS. DAY.
EXT. COURTHOUSE STEPS. DAY.
EXT. COURTHOUSE STEPS. DAY. Several reporters hold microphones and ask Willie Mitchell questions about his father. REPORTER
39 72
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE. AFTERNOON. Jimmy Gray walks in unannounced. JIMMY GRAY Hey, podnuh. Can I borrow your Klan sheet for a ride tonight? Mine’s at
40 73
INT JIMMY GRAY’S CADILLAC. LATE AFTERNOON.
INT. JIMMY GRAY’S CADILLAC. LATE AFTERNOON.
INT. JIMMY GRAY’S CADILLAC. LATE AFTERNOON. Jimmy and Willie Mitchell drive slowly past the Anderson mansion. Smoke still rises from the pile of burned wood inside the two remaining brick walls. JIMMY GRAY
41 74
INT JITNEY MART. NIGHT.
INT. JITNEY MART. NIGHT.
INT. JITNEY MART. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell taps on the half-door leading up a few steps to Big Al’s office, an elevated space in the center of the store with glass walls enabling him to see the entire store. BIG AL
42 76
EXT SUNSHINE STREETS. NIGHT.
EXT. SUNSHINE STREETS. NIGHT.
EXT. SUNSHINE STREETS. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell drives his truck to the Best Western. He spots Mary Margaret’s Lexus and parks next to it. There are only a few cars in the motel parking lot. Willie Mitchell looks up at the rooms on the second floor.
43 77
INT BEST WESTERN ROOM 27. NIGHT.
INT. BEST WESTERN ROOM 27. NIGHT.
INT. BEST WESTERN ROOM 27. NIGHT. He picks up a glass off the dresser and fills it with ice, opens a bottled water from the Jitney Mart bag and pours it. Mary Margaret takes a sip of the ice water. MARY MARGARET
44 78
EXT BEST WESTERN PARKING LOT. NIGHT.
EXT. BEST WESTERN PARKING LOT. NIGHT.
EXT. BEST WESTERN PARKING LOT. NIGHT. He gets in his truck and drives out of the parking lot. EXT. SUNSHINE STREETS. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell pulls out onto the four lane in front of the Best Western, drives a bit then makes several turns on
45 80
EXT DIRT ROAD. MORNING.
EXT. DIRT ROAD. MORNING.
EXT. DIRT ROAD. MORNING. Thirty minutes later there’s much more light. Willie Mitchell makes a call on his cell. WILLIE MITCHELL I found McKinley. He’s out at my
46 83
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. MORNING. Willie Mitchell talks to Walton. WILLIE MITCHELL I’m going to be out of pocket a few days. I want you to run the office,
47 83
EXT JOE’S JUNKYARD. MORNING.
EXT. JOE’S JUNKYARD. MORNING.
EXT. JOE’S JUNKYARD. MORNING. Willie Mitchell parks his truck and walks through a gate into the wrecking yard. A sign on the fence says JOE’S JUNKYARD, SUNSHINE, MISSISSIPPI. There are wrecked cars all around. A man in coveralls finishes crushing a vehicle in his huge
48 85
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY. Willie Mitchell drives on I-55. He takes a sip from his coffee cup and makes a hands-free call on his cell. MARY MARGARET Hello.
49 88
EXT OXFORD SQUARE. AFTERNOON.
EXT. OXFORD SQUARE. AFTERNOON.
EXT. OXFORD SQUARE. AFTERNOON. Willie Mitchell parks his truck in front of a red brick building and walks in. A plaque reads Webster, Woodward & Langer. Attorneys At Law. INT. LAW FIRM WAITING ROOM. AFTERNOON.
50 91
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S TRUCK. DAY. Willie Mitchell is driving south on I-55. He’s got a legal pad next to him on the console, making notes, glancing up at the highway. He makes a hands-free call.
51 92
INT COURTROOM. MORNING.
INT. COURTROOM. MORNING.
INT. COURTROOM. MORNING. Judge Zelda Williams is on the bench. She’s looking at fifteen people seated in the jury box and in chairs in front. Eleven are black, three white, and one Asian. A tall, confident black woman in her fifties, stands in the
52 94
INT GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
INT. GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
INT. GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING. Big Al is in the witness chair. WILLIE MITCHELL Just a few more questions, Mr. Anderson. Did you ever hear Little
53 95
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT. Willie Mitchell removes a frosted half-gallon of Smirnoff’s from the freezer and places it on the counter. He gets out a glass, fills it with ice, and unscrews the cap. He stares at it for a while and decides not to pour any.
54 97
INT GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
INT. GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
INT. GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING. Mary Margaret stands at the witness chair with her right hand raised taking the oath. She’s dressed conservatively. Walton sits taking notes in the corner. MARY MARGARET
55 108
INT COURTHOUSE HALLWAY. MORNING.
INT. COURTHOUSE HALLWAY. MORNING.
INT. COURTHOUSE HALLWAY. MORNING. He catches up to her in the hallway and grabs her arm. MARY MARGARET Get your hands off me. WILLIE MITCHELL
56 109
INT GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
INT. GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING.
INT. GRAND JURY ROOM. MORNING. Walton is in the middle of questioning a white man with mottled skin and a bad dye job. Jules Gannon is about sixty. WALTON And you recall the details about
57 112
INT COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON.
INT. COURTROOM. AFTERNOON. Judge Williams is on the bench. McKinley Owens and his lawyer Eleanor Bernstein sit at the defense table. Walton and Willie Mitchell sit at the prosecution table. The Grand Jurors file in and take their seats.
58 115
INT DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON.
INT. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S PRIVATE OFFICE. AFTERNOON. Willie Mitchell puts the files on his desk. Walton stands at the door. WILLIE MITCHELL What a mess.
59 115
EXT COURTHOUSE PARKING LOT. AFTERNOON.
EXT. COURTHOUSE PARKING LOT. AFTERNOON.
EXT. COURTHOUSE PARKING LOT. AFTERNOON. Willie Mitchell and Walton stop running when they reach the crowd in the parking lot. Sheriff Jones sees Willie Mitchell. SHERIFF
60 116
INT WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT.
INT. WILLIE MITCHELL’S KITCHEN. NIGHT. Jimmy Gray sits with Willie Mitchell at the kitchen table, an old scarred pine table with tiny black wormholes. Willie Mitchell drinks ice water. Jimmy Gray has a Diet Coke. JIMMY GRAY

THREE BAD YEARS

In the wake of a Black girl's death by a drunk white driver, a Mississippi DA's secret affair with the driver's wife becomes the catalyst for protests, murder, and a grand jury reckoning that threatens to destroy everything he holds dear.

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Overview

Poster
Unique Selling Point

THREE BAD YEARS distinguishes itself by embedding a noir-style femme fatale murder mystery within an authentically rendered Mississippi Delta community grappling with racial inequality, institutional corruption, and the long shadow of the Civil Rights era. Unlike courtroom procedurals that treat race as backdrop, this script makes the intersection of race, class, and justice its central dramatic engine. The protagonist is not a hero but a compromised, drinking, morally adrift DA who is simultaneously the investigator and a suspect—a genuinely unusual narrative position. The script's willingness to implicate its own lead character in the crime he is prosecuting, and to let a Black grand jury refuse to indict based on their own moral calculus, gives it a rare authenticity and unpredictability.

Model Upgrade — March 31, 2026
Our AI readers were upgraded — the verdicts and written analysis on this page are from our newer, significantly stronger models.
The scoring scale changed with the upgrade, so scores may not be directly comparable to earlier analyses.
AI Verdict & Suggestions

Ratings are subjective. So you get different engines' ratings to compare.

GPT5
 Consider
Score 7.8
Grok
 Consider
Score 6.5
Gemini
 Consider
Score 7.5
DeepSeek
 Consider
Score 7.3
Claude
 Consider
Score 6.8
Average Score: 7.2
Key Takeaways
For the Writer:
To elevate 'Three Bad Years' from a solid draft to a compelling screenplay, focus on tightening the pacing by consolidating repetitive scenes (like multiple porch and bar conversations) and ensuring key twists, such as Mary Margaret's true nature, are foreshadowed earlier with subtle breadcrumbs. Address legal procedural inaccuracies, like the DA questioning his lover in the grand jury, by researching and refining these elements for greater realism. Additionally, deepen character arcs, particularly Willie Mitchell's internal conflict and supporting characters like Sonya Johnson, to make emotional payoffs more resonant and avoid underdeveloped subplots, ultimately creating a more cohesive and impactful narrative.
For Executives:
This script has strong potential as a prestige Southern crime drama, appealing to audiences who enjoy morally ambiguous tales like 'True Detective' or 'Just Mercy', with its authentic Delta setting and racial themes adding market value. However, risks include stereotypical portrayals of women and Black characters, legal implausibilities that could alienate savvy viewers, and a rushed ending that undermines emotional investment, potentially limiting commercial appeal unless addressed through revisions to avoid common indie pitfalls and ensure broad resonance.
Story Facts
Genres:
Drama 55% Crime 35% Romance 25% Thriller 20%

Setting: Contemporary, Sunshine, Mississippi, primarily in rural areas, a courthouse, and a local community.

Themes: The Corrupting Influence of Power and Ambition, Racial Injustice and Systemic Inequality, Personal Flaws and Their Destructive Consequences, The Struggle for Survival in Rural Life, Moral Ambiguity and Compromise, The Nature of Justice and Its Failures, Grief and Loss, The Search for Forgiveness and Redemption

Conflict & Stakes: The central conflict revolves around the legal and moral implications of a murder case involving McKinley Owens and the fallout from Little Al's abusive behavior, with personal stakes for Willie and Mary Margaret as their relationship complicates the legal proceedings.

Mood: Somber and tense, with moments of intimacy and emotional conflict.

Standout Features:

  • Unique Hook: The intertwining of personal relationships with legal proceedings, creating a complex narrative that explores moral dilemmas.
  • Plot Twist: The revelation of Mary Margaret's past and her connection to the events surrounding Little Al's death, which complicates the legal case.
  • Distinctive Setting: The rural Southern backdrop of Mississippi, which adds authenticity and depth to the story's themes of race and justice.
  • Innovative Ideas: The screenplay tackles contemporary social issues such as domestic violence and racial tensions within a legal framework.
  • Unique Characters: A diverse cast that includes complex characters with rich backstories, each contributing to the central conflict.

Comparable Scripts: To Kill a Mockingbird, The Help, A Time to Kill, Mudbound, The Night Of, Just Mercy, The Color Purple, 12 Angry Men, The Wire

🎯 Your Top Priorities

Our stats model looked at how your scores work together and ranked the changes most likely to move your overall rating next draft. Ordered by the most reliable gains first.

You have more than one meaningful lever.

Improving Conflict (Script Level) and Structure (Script Level) will have the biggest impact on your overall score next draft.

1. Conflict (Script Level)
Big Impact Script Level
Your current Conflict (Script Level) score: 7.6
Moves easily Writers at your level typically gain +0.58 per rewrite — a realistic improvement.
Confidence: High (based on ~581 similar revisions)
  • This is your top opportunity right now. Focusing your rewrite energy here gives you the best realistic shot at raising the overall rating.
  • What writers at your level usually do: Writers at a similar level usually raise Conflict (Script Level) by about +0.58 in one rewrite.
2. Structure (Script Level)
Big Impact Script Level
Your current Structure (Script Level) score: 7.6
Moves easily Writers at your level typically gain +0.4 per rewrite — a realistic improvement.
Confidence: High (based on ~1,515 similar revisions)
  • This is another strong option. If the top item doesn't fit your rewrite plan, this is a solid alternative.
  • What writers at your level usually do: Writers at a similar level usually raise Structure (Script Level) by about +0.4 in one rewrite.
3. Originality (Script Level)
Moderate Impact Script Level
Your current Originality (Script Level) score: 7.9
Moves easily Writers at your level typically gain +0.5 per rewrite — a realistic improvement.
Confidence: High (based on ~1,065 similar revisions)
  • This is another strong option. If the top item doesn't fit your rewrite plan, this is a solid alternative.
  • What writers at your level usually do: Writers at a similar level usually raise Originality (Script Level) by about +0.5 in one rewrite.
🎓
Skills Worth Developing

These have high model impact but rarely improve through rewrites alone — they're craft investments. Studying these areas through courses, mentorship, or focused reading could unlock gains that a normal rewrite won't.

Pacing Scene Level 1.3× leverage

Strong model leverage, but writers at your level typically only gain +0.11 per rewrite. (Your score: 8.3)

View Pacing analysis
Emotional Impact (Script Level) Script Level

Strong model leverage, but writers at your level typically only gain +0.3 per rewrite. (Your score: 7.8)

View Emotional Impact (Script Level) analysis
Scene Structure Scene Level

Strong model leverage, but writers at your level typically only gain +0.12 per rewrite. (Your score: 8.2)

View Scene Structure analysis

Script Level Analysis

Writer Exec

This section delivers a top-level assessment of the screenplay’s strengths and weaknesses — covering overall quality (P/C/R/HR), character development, emotional impact, thematic depth, narrative inconsistencies, and the story’s core philosophical conflict. It helps identify what’s resonating, what needs refinement, and how the script aligns with professional standards.

Screenplay Insights

Breaks down your script along various categories.

Overall Score: 7.61
Key Suggestions:
To improve the script creatively, focus on deepening character arcs for supporting characters like Walton and Mary Margaret by adding personal backstories and clearer motivations, which will enhance emotional depth and audience engagement. Additionally, refine pacing in exposition-heavy scenes by tightening dialogue and structure, ensuring that conflicts and emotional beats build more effectively, drawing viewers deeper into the story's moral and social complexities.
Story Critique

Big-picture feedback on the story’s clarity, stakes, cohesion, and engagement.

Key Suggestions:
To enhance 'Three Bad Years,' focus on refining the script's pacing for a more consistent flow, deepen character backstories to strengthen emotional arcs, and incorporate foreshadowing to build tension and deliver a more satisfying climax. These craft improvements will make the narrative more engaging and cohesive, amplifying the story's exploration of race, justice, and personal morality without overwhelming the existing strengths in character development and dialogue.
Characters

Explores the depth, clarity, and arc of the main and supporting characters.

Key Suggestions:
The character analysis highlights opportunities to strengthen the script by deepening character arcs and exploring internal conflicts more thoroughly. For instance, characters like Willie and Walton could benefit from clearer transformation triggers and emotional depth, while Mary Margaret's impulsive decisions and the Sheriff's static nature need more nuanced development to enhance emotional resonance and thematic integration. Focusing on these elements will create more compelling, relatable characters and heighten the drama in scenes involving moral dilemmas and racial tensions, ultimately making the narrative more engaging and impactful.
Emotional Analysis

Breaks down the emotional journey of the audience across the script.

Key Suggestions:
The script's emotional core is strong in tension and drama but suffers from a lack of variety and recovery, leading to audience fatigue. To improve, focus on adding positive emotional contrasts, deepening character empathy through nuanced internal conflicts, and refining pacing with 'breather' scenes that allow reflection. This will create a more balanced emotional arc, enhancing engagement and making the story more relatable and impactful from a craft perspective.
Goals and Philosophical Conflict

Evaluates character motivations, obstacles, and sources of tension throughout the plot.

Key Suggestions:
The analysis highlights a well-developed character arc centered on internal and external conflicts, particularly the tension between justice and mercy. To improve the script creatively, focus on enhancing the emotional depth of key resolution moments, such as the 85-95% marks, by adding more nuanced dialogue or introspective scenes that better illustrate the protagonist's growth and moral dilemmas, ensuring a more satisfying and impactful narrative flow.
Themes

Analysis of the themes of the screenplay and how well they’re expressed.

Key Suggestions:
The script's exploration of power's corrupting influence is compelling, but to elevate its craft, focus on deepening character motivations and relationships to avoid melodramatic pitfalls, ensuring that themes like racial injustice are portrayed with nuanced, authentic voices from affected communities. This would enhance emotional depth and make the narrative more resonant, while tightening the pacing in subplots could prevent viewer disengagement and strengthen the overall arc.
Logic & Inconsistencies

Highlights any contradictions, plot holes, or logic gaps that may confuse viewers.

Key Suggestions:
The script's inconsistencies, particularly in character behavior and plot logic, weaken its emotional impact and believability. To enhance the narrative, focus on developing more consistent character motivations and resolving plot holes through better foreshadowing and logical progression, ensuring that key twists feel earned and authentic rather than contrived, which will strengthen audience immersion and thematic depth.

Scene Analysis

All of your scenes analyzed individually and compared, so you can zero in on what to improve.

Scene-Level Percentile Chart
Hover over the graph to see more details about each score.
Go to Scene Analysis

Other Analyses

Writer Exec

This section looks at the extra spark — your story’s voice, style, world, and the moments that really stick. These insights might not change the bones of the script, but they can make it more original, more immersive, and way more memorable. It’s where things get fun, weird, and wonderfully you.

Unique Voice

Assesses the distinctiveness and personality of the writer's voice.

Key Suggestions:
The script's voice excels in gritty realism and authentic dialogue, effectively capturing Southern vernacular and moral complexities, but to improve, focus on refining the pacing in transitional scenes to heighten tension and ensure character motivations are clearer, especially in emotionally charged moments, to deepen audience engagement and avoid potential melodrama in the exploration of themes like justice and personal integrity.
Writer's Craft

Analyzes the writing to help the writer be aware of their skill and improve.

Key Suggestions:
To elevate the script's creative craft, focus on refining dialogue to include more subtext and emotional depth, expanding character backstories for richer motivations and interactions, and tightening pacing to heighten tension and sustain engagement. These enhancements will strengthen the narrative's emotional resonance and moral complexities, making the story more compelling and immersive for audiences.
Memorable Lines
Spotlights standout dialogue lines with emotional or thematic power.
Tropes
Highlights common or genre-specific tropes found in the script.
World Building

Evaluates the depth, consistency, and immersion of the story's world.

Key Suggestions:
The script's world building masterfully captures the gritty, oppressive atmosphere of the rural South, enhancing themes of isolation and moral decay, but could be refined by more subtly weaving environmental elements into character motivations and plot progression. For instance, ensuring that recurring motifs like rain and racial tensions actively drive character decisions rather than serving as mere backdrop would heighten emotional stakes and add layers of authenticity, making the narrative more compelling and less reliant on expository dialogue.
Correlations

Identifies patterns in scene scores.

Key Suggestions:
The script demonstrates strong emotional depth and dialogue, but pacing issues arise in reflective and character-driven scenes where conflict is low, potentially causing audience disengagement. To improve, integrate subtle conflicts into quieter moments, vary tones for better contrast, and ensure character development actively advances the plot, enhancing overall flow and maintaining tension without relying solely on high-stakes confrontations.
Loglines
Presents logline variations based on theme, genre, and hook.