The long kiss goodnight

When a small-town schoolteacher with amnesia discovers she was once a lethal government assassin, she must reunite with a cynical private detective to rescue her kidnapped daughter and unravel a government conspiracy — before a terrorist plot destroys an American town.

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Overview

Poster
Unique Selling Point

The script's unique selling proposition is its brilliant fusion of the amnesia thriller with the female action hero archetype, creating a compelling exploration of identity versus conditioning. Unlike typical action films, it presents a protagonist who literally contains two distinct personalities - the suburban mother Samantha and the lethal assassin Charly - allowing for sophisticated themes about nature versus nurture, the construction of identity, and what makes us who we are. This psychological depth, combined with Shane Black's signature witty dialogue and expertly staged action sequences, creates a genre hybrid that appeals to both action fans and those seeking character-driven drama.

AI Verdict & Suggestions

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

Hover over verdict cards for Executive Summaries

GPT5
 Recommend
Grok
 Highly Recommend
Gemini
 Highly Recommend
Claude
 Recommend
DeepSeek
 Recommend
Average Score: 8.8
Key Takeaways
For the Writer:
To elevate the script's craft, focus on refining the antagonist motivations to make them more nuanced and personally driven, reducing reliance on plot conveniences like improbable escapes and coincidences. Additionally, ensure emotional digestion after major action sequences by adding brief, reflective moments for characters to process events, enhancing audience connection and thematic depth. This will strengthen the narrative's coherence and make the story more resonant beyond its high-octane spectacle.
For Executives:
The script has strong commercial potential as a high-concept action-thriller with witty dialogue and emotional stakes, likely attracting talent and audiences familiar with Shane Black's style, but risks include tonal whiplash from humor to violence and underdeveloped villain arcs that could alienate viewers or feel clichéd in a saturated genre. Market perception may view it as derivative if not polished, potentially limiting box office appeal without addressing these issues.
Story Facts
Genres:
Action 40% Crime 10% Drama 30% Thriller 35% Comedy 20%

Setting: Contemporary, present day, Various locations including Upper Sandusky, Ohio; Akron, Ohio; Atlantic City, New Jersey; and a fictional town named Santa Claus.

Themes: Duality of Identity and Amnesia, Maternal Protection and Sacrifice, Violence and its Consequences, Conspiracy and Hidden Agendas, Redemption and Second Chances, Loss of Innocence, Fate vs. Free Will

Conflict & Stakes: Charly's struggle to protect her daughter Caitlin from Timothy's terrorist plot while confronting her violent past and identity crisis.

Mood: Intense and suspenseful with moments of dark humor.

Standout Features:

  • Unique Hook: A mother with a violent past must confront her identity while trying to save her daughter from a terrorist plot.
  • Plot Twist: The revelation that Timothy is Caitlin's father adds a personal stake to the conflict.
  • Distinctive Setting: The juxtaposition of idyllic suburban life with intense action and violence creates a striking contrast.
  • Genre Blend: Combines elements of action, thriller, and dark comedy, appealing to diverse audience tastes.

Comparable Scripts: The Bourne Identity, Kill Bill, The Long Kiss Goodnight, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Nikita, The Americans, Salt, The Equalizer

Data Says…
Feature in Alpha - Could have inaccuracies

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.

1. Theme (Script Level)
Big Impact Script Level
Your current Theme (Script Level) score: 8.0
Typical rewrite gain: +0.45 in Theme (Script Level)
Gets you ~3% closer to an "all Highly Recommends" score
Confidence: High (based on ~3,490 similar revisions)
  • This is currently your highest-impact lever. Improving Theme (Script Level) is most likely to move the overall rating next.
  • What writers at your level usually do: Writers at a similar level usually raise Theme (Script Level) by about +0.45 in one rewrite.
  • Why it matters: At your level, improving this one area alone can cover a meaningful slice of the climb toward an "all Highly Recommends" script.
2. Conflict (Script Level)
Big Impact Script Level
Your current Conflict (Script Level) score: 7.6
Typical rewrite gain: +0.65 in Conflict (Script Level)
Gets you ~2% closer to an "all Highly Recommends" score
Confidence: High (based on ~2,057 similar revisions)
  • This is another meaningful lever. After you work on the higher-impact areas, this can still create a noticeable lift.
  • What writers at your level usually do: Writers at a similar level usually raise Conflict (Script Level) by about +0.65 in one rewrite.
  • Why it matters: After you address the top item, gains here are still one of the levers that move you toward that "all Highly Recommends" zone.
3. Originality (Script Level)
Light Impact Script Level
Your current Originality (Script Level) score: 7.9
Typical rewrite gain: +0.57 in Originality (Script Level)
Gets you ~1% closer to an "all Highly Recommends" score
Confidence: High (based on ~2,553 similar revisions)
  • This is another meaningful lever. After you work on the higher-impact areas, this can still create a noticeable lift.
  • What writers at your level usually do: Writers at a similar level usually raise Originality (Script Level) by about +0.57 in one rewrite.
  • Why it matters: After you address the top item, gains here are still one of the levers that move you toward that "all Highly Recommends" zone.

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: 7.90
Key Suggestions:
To improve the script, focus on deepening the development of supporting characters like Hal and Timothy by adding more backstory and emotional layers, which will enhance audience investment and make conflicts more impactful. Streamline expository scenes to improve pacing and clarity, ensuring that character motivations and plot twists are clearly conveyed without overwhelming the narrative, drawing on the script's strong core arcs for Samantha/Charly to build a more cohesive and emotionally resonant story.
Story Critique

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

Key Suggestions:
To enhance 'The Long Kiss Goodnight,' concentrate on refining the pacing for a more consistent flow, simplifying the amnesia plot to avoid confusion, and deepening character backstories to strengthen emotional connections. Incorporating foreshadowing and balancing action with reflective moments will create a more cohesive narrative, amplifying the script's tension and character-driven drama, ultimately making it more engaging and resonant.
Characters

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

Key Suggestions:
The character analysis reveals strong potential in the script's emotional depth and thematic exploration of identity and redemption, but inconsistencies in character behavior, particularly in scenes like the bike riding incident, undermine believability and audience empathy. To enhance the script, focus on refining character arcs to ensure actions align with core motivations, such as deepening Samantha/Charly's maternal instincts and addressing Henessey's emotional vulnerabilities, to create more cohesive and relatable portrayals that strengthen the overall narrative tension and emotional resonance.
Emotional Analysis

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

Key Suggestions:
To elevate the script's emotional depth and engagement, focus on achieving a more balanced emotional variety by integrating moments of dark humor, reflection, and nuanced character interactions throughout the high-tension sequences. This will prevent audience fatigue, enhance empathy for characters like Charly and Henessey, and create a more rhythmic flow, making the story more compelling and resonant from a craft perspective.
Goals and Philosophical Conflict

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

Key Suggestions:
The analysis reveals that Charly's internal and external goals are well-integrated, driving a strong character arc, but to elevate the script's craft, focus on distributing the resolution of philosophical conflicts more evenly across the narrative. With resolutions occurring late (80-90%), earlier scenes could benefit from subtler explorations of themes like survival versus morality to build emotional depth and avoid a rushed climax, making Charly's transformation from victim to empowered protector more nuanced and engaging for audiences.
Themes

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

Key Suggestions:
The script's thematic focus on identity duality and amnesia is compelling, but to elevate the craft, emphasize more nuanced emotional arcs for Charly, such as introspective moments that explore her internal conflict beyond action scenes. This would deepen character development, make the maternal protection theme more resonant, and avoid over-reliance on violence, leading to a richer narrative that balances thriller elements with psychological depth for greater audience engagement.
Logic & Inconsistencies

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

Key Suggestions:
The script's core issues lie in underdeveloped character arcs and plot coherence, particularly with Samantha/Charly's abrupt transformation, which undermines emotional depth and audience investment. To improve, focus on gradual character development through layered flashbacks and subtle hints, while clarifying timelines and plot mechanics to create a more immersive and believable narrative. Streamlining redundant backstory elements and ensuring dialogue feels authentic will enhance pacing and overall craft, making the story more compelling and true to genre conventions.

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 effectively blends dark humor with intense action and emotional depth, but to elevate it, focus on refining the pacing of tonal shifts to avoid jarring transitions, ensuring that introspective moments are given equal weight to high-stakes sequences. This will enhance character relatability and deepen audience investment, making the moral ambiguities more impactful and the narrative more cohesive from a craft perspective.
Writer's Craft

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

Key Suggestions:
The screenplay's strengths lie in its sharp dialogue and tense action sequences, but to enhance its craft, focus on adding deeper subtext to conversations, fleshing out character backstories for more nuanced arcs, tightening pacing to avoid drag in slower scenes, and integrating themes like moral dilemmas more thoroughly to amplify emotional resonance and create a more compelling narrative overall.
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 contrasts everyday suburban life with high-stakes espionage, creating tension and depth, but to enhance creative craft, focus on integrating cultural and societal elements more seamlessly into character arcs. This would make transitions between normalcy and chaos feel less abrupt, allowing for richer emotional resonance and avoiding potential clichés in the amnesia-driven plot, ultimately strengthening the narrative's pacing and audience engagement.
Correlations

Identifies patterns in scene scores.

Key Suggestions:
The script excels in building tension and suspense, particularly through intense and suspenseful tones, but this strength may come at the cost of underdeveloped character arcs and repetitive pacing. To enhance the narrative, focus on incorporating a wider variety of tones, such as more reflective or lighter moments, to allow characters to evolve deeply and avoid predictability, ultimately making the story more emotionally engaging and balanced from a craft perspective.
Loglines
Presents logline variations based on theme, genre, and hook.