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Scene Map 60
# PG SLUGLINE
1 2
EXT BLACK SCREEN NIGHT
2 3
EXT HARTFORD ROAD DAY
3 5
INT COGSWELL PARLOR NIGHT
4 8
EXT COGSWELL HOUSE DAY
5 11
INT COGSWELL PARLOR EVENING
6 13
EXT MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL DAY
7 14
INT COGSWELL PARLOR EVENING
8 14
INT ALICE'S BEDROOM NIGHT
9 16
INT GALLAUDET FOYER CONTINUOUS
10 18
INT COGSWELL PARLOR AFTERNOON
11 21
EXT PORT OF NEW YORK DAY
12 23
INT BERTH NIGHT
13 24
INT BERTH MORNING
14 25
INT BERTH – NIGHT
15 26
EXT LIVERPOOL DOCKS DAY
16 27
EXT TALBOT INN COURTYARD DAY
17 28
INT BOOKING OFFICE DAY
18 30
EXT TALBOT INN COURTYARD MORNING
19 31
EXT ST. MARTIN'S-LE-GRAND (LONDON) DAY
20 33
INT HACKNEY CARRIAGE CONTINUOUS
21 35
INT WATSON'S OFFICE CONTINUOUS
22 39
EXT ASYLUM CONTINUOUS
23 39
EXT BLOOMSBURY LODGINGS EVENING
24 40
EXT BRAIDWOOD ACADEMY DAY
25 46
INT COGSWELL HOUSE – STUDY – HARTFORD – DAY
26 47
INT GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – DAY
27 48
A) EXT. BRIGHTON DEAF ACADEMY DAY
28 49
EXT LONDON STREET EVENING
29 51
INT LONDON TAVERN - GRAND BALLROOM NIGHT
30 53
INT LONDON TAVERN - BACKSTAGE LATER
31 56
INT GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – NIGHT
32 58
EXT BULL AND MOUTH INN COURTYARD DAY
33 59
INT BOOKING OFFICE CONTINUOUS
34 60
EXT INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS-MUETS - COURTYARD AFTERNOON
35 61
INT INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS - MUETS CONTINUOUS
36 63
INT SICARD STUDY DAY
37 64
INT CLASSROOM DAY
38 66
INT MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL – CLASSROOM – DAY
39 68
INT INSTITUTE LIBRARY NIGHT
40 69
INT SICARD'S STUDY DAY
41 71
EXT HAVRE PORT DAY
42 72
INT AFTER-CABIN DAY
43 74
INT AFTER-CABIN – DAY
44 77
INT COGSWELL HOUSE - KITCHEN EVENING
45 78
INT AFTER-CABIN DAY
46 79
EXT MAIN DECK – AFTERNOON
47 80
INT AFTER CABIN NIGHT
48 81
INT AFTER-CABIN DAY
49 83
EXT DECK - MARY AUGUSTA DAY
50 84
EXT HARTFORD ROAD AFTERNOON
51 86
INT COGSWELL PARLOR LATER
52 88
EXT CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) DAY
53 89
INT CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) DAY
54 92
INT CENTER CHURCH VESTIBULE LATER
55 93
EXT NEW ENGLAND ROADS - MONTAGE - DAY/NIGHT (FALL 1816)
56 94
INT ORPHANAGE – DAY
57 94
EXT COUNTRYSIDE DUSK
58 95
EXT CONNECTICUT ASYLUM DAY
59 96
INT CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY - DAY - MONTHS LATER
60 98
INT CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY CONTINUOUS
Scene Map
60
# PG SLUGLINE
1 2
EXT BLACK SCREEN NIGHT
EXT. BLACK SCREEN - NIGHT
EXT. BLACK SCREEN - NIGHT SUPER: Joy! I am mute no more, My sad and silent years With all their loveliness are o'er,
2 3
EXT HARTFORD ROAD DAY
EXT. HARTFORD ROAD - DAY
EXT. HARTFORD ROAD - DAY Alice is outside skipping rope. She maintains a constant rhythm skipping as the rope meets the ground. A group of children approach from down the road. Two BOYS, slightly older than Alice are wearing knee-length pants with
3 5
INT COGSWELL PARLOR NIGHT
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - NIGHT
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - NIGHT MASON COGSWELL (52) sits in an armchair. He wears a smoking jacket and cravat. A pipe smolders nearby. He reads a newspaper. MARY COGSWELL (38) sits on a nearby settee. She wears a high
4 8
EXT COGSWELL HOUSE DAY
EXT. COGSWELL HOUSE - DAY
EXT. COGSWELL HOUSE - DAY Alice sits on the front steps with her sisters, ELIZABETH (10), YOUNG MARY (13). They are cutting paper dolls from newspaper. Alice's rag doll sits nearby. Thomas approaches. He carries a slate board.
5 11
INT COGSWELL PARLOR EVENING
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - EVENING
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - EVENING Mason and Mary sit in chairs. Mary is sewing while Mason reads a medical journal. Mary looks up. MARY
6 13
EXT MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL DAY
EXT. MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL - DAY
EXT. MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL - DAY A large Hartford estate. A side door with a handmade SIGN above the door - "Miss Huntley's School". INT. CLASSROOM - DAY Young Mary, Elizabeth, and Alice sit at small desks. They are
7 14
INT COGSWELL PARLOR EVENING
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - EVENING
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - EVENING Mary is folding the girls' school clothes. Mason reads a newspaper, absently smoking a pipe. MARY Mary
8 14
INT ALICE'S BEDROOM NIGHT
INT. ALICE'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
INT. ALICE'S BEDROOM - NIGHT Moonlight spills through the small window. Alice sits on the edge of her bed. She wears a nightgown. She clutches her rag doll.
9 16
INT GALLAUDET FOYER CONTINUOUS
INT. GALLAUDET FOYER - CONTINUOUS
INT. GALLAUDET FOYER - CONTINUOUS Thomas opens the door. Mason stands. THOMAS Good morning, Mason. To what do I owe the pleasure?
10 18
INT COGSWELL PARLOR AFTERNOON
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - AFTERNOON
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - AFTERNOON Mason sits with eight other men in the parlor. Included are: DANIEL WADSWORTH (43) WARD WOODBRIDGE (44)
11 21
EXT PORT OF NEW YORK DAY
EXT. PORT OF NEW YORK - DAY
EXT. PORT OF NEW YORK - DAY A busy shipping port. Bells ring across the harbor. Sailors shouting over creaking rigging fill the air. Crew members and passengers bustle on the docks. In the water off a pier sits The Mexico, a medium-sized
12 23
INT BERTH NIGHT
INT. BERTH - NIGHT
INT. BERTH - NIGHT The ship is in turmoil, rocking and swaying in the waves. Thomas lies in bed, a leeboard limiting movement. He is pale, shivering. A small oil lantern casts a soft glow over the small room. A chamber pot is close at hand.
13 24
INT BERTH MORNING
INT. BERTH - MORNING
INT. BERTH - MORNING The weather has softened. Thomas sits up in his bed, blanket over shoulders. The lantern casts a dim light over him. He opens the book.
14 25
INT BERTH – NIGHT
INT. BERTH – NIGHT
INT. BERTH – NIGHT Thomas sits at the trunk near the bed, reading the book in French INSERT - BOOK A lesson. Words attached to objects.
15 26
EXT LIVERPOOL DOCKS DAY
EXT. LIVERPOOL DOCKS - DAY
EXT. LIVERPOOL DOCKS - DAY Overwhelming. SEAGULLS shriek overhead. Dockworkers bellow in a dozen accents. Heavy iron chains clank as cargo crates swing from rigging. The Mexico is moored at the stone wharf, swaying heavily
16 27
EXT TALBOT INN COURTYARD DAY
EXT. TALBOT INN COURTYARD - DAY
EXT. TALBOT INN COURTYARD - DAY An imposing brick structure with a massive stone archway. Thomas steps aside to allow a carriage to pass. As he passes through the archway, an Inn sits to the right with a small sign: "Rooms".
17 28
INT BOOKING OFFICE DAY
INT. BOOKING OFFICE - DAY
INT. BOOKING OFFICE - DAY Thomas steps through the narrow door. A high oak counter stands in front of him. A BOOKING CLERK (50s) sits behind it. Thomas approaches. CLERK
18 30
EXT TALBOT INN COURTYARD MORNING
EXT. TALBOT INN COURTYARD - MORNING
EXT. TALBOT INN COURTYARD - MORNING A carriage sits in the courtyard. Deep maroon with a black upper cabin. Coat of arms on the door. An armed GUARD sits on the back holding a shotgun. A young man holds a sign: "London".
19 31
EXT ST. MARTIN'S-LE-GRAND (LONDON) DAY
EXT. ST. MARTIN'S-LE-GRAND (LONDON) - DAY
EXT. ST. MARTIN'S-LE-GRAND (LONDON) - DAY The Royal Mail coach rolls to a halt in a dark, narrow street. Thomas steps down from the cabin into a sea of London mud. He looks up, his eyes widening.
20 33
INT HACKNEY CARRIAGE CONTINUOUS
INT. HACKNEY CARRIAGE - CONTINUOUS
INT. HACKNEY CARRIAGE - CONTINUOUS Thomas climbs inside. The carriage sways heavily on its leather braces. The door slams shut, cutting off the daylight. The interior is a dark and tight. Thomas sits on a tattered
21 35
INT WATSON'S OFFICE CONTINUOUS
INT. WATSON'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
INT. WATSON'S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS DR. JOSEPH WATSON (50) stands as Thomas enters. WATSON Mr. Gallaudet? A pleasure. THOMAS
22 39
EXT ASYLUM CONTINUOUS
EXT. ASYLUM - CONTINUOUS
EXT. ASYLUM - CONTINUOUS EXT. ASYLUM - CONTINUOUS (LONDON) Thomas moves through the door. He places his hat back on, pulls his coat tighter, and ventures into the London drizzle. He stops under a stone awning, looking out at the gray,
23 39
EXT BLOOMSBURY LODGINGS EVENING
EXT. BLOOMSBURY LODGINGS - EVENING
EXT. BLOOMSBURY LODGINGS - EVENING Thomas approaches. He carries a newspaper. A sign on the door reads 12 Great Russell Street. Thomas looks at the paper and back at the door. He approaches and raps solidly with the brass door knocker.
24 40
EXT BRAIDWOOD ACADEMY DAY
EXT. BRAIDWOOD ACADEMY - DAY
EXT. BRAIDWOOD ACADEMY - DAY A bright spring day in a blooming garden. A small pavilion stands center. Across the lawn, Thomas is being led by a PORTER. Gallaudet wears a vest over a muslin shirt with a Cravat at the neck.
25 46
INT COGSWELL HOUSE – STUDY – HARTFORD – DAY
INT. COGSWELL HOUSE – STUDY – HARTFORD – DAY
INT. COGSWELL HOUSE – STUDY – HARTFORD – DAY Bright afternoon sunlight. Elisabeth hands Mason a sealed letter bearing foreign postmarks. He recognizes the handwriting immediately.
26 47
INT GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – DAY
INT. GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – DAY
INT. GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – DAY Weeks later. A knock at the door. Thomas opens the door to find a courier holding a packet from America.
27 48
A) EXT. BRIGHTON DEAF ACADEMY DAY
A) EXT. BRIGHTON DEAF ACADEMY - DAY
A) EXT. BRIGHTON DEAF ACADEMY - DAY Thomas stands at a polished black door. Shivering under a damp umbrella. A BUTLER opens. Thomas offers a calling card.
28 49
EXT LONDON STREET EVENING
EXT. LONDON STREET - EVENING
EXT. LONDON STREET - EVENING Thomas walks down the busy street. Dejected. He stops in front of a coffee house. He pats the pocket holding his purse and enters. INT. COFFEEHOUSE - LATER
29 51
INT LONDON TAVERN - GRAND BALLROOM NIGHT
INT. LONDON TAVERN - GRAND BALLROOM - NIGHT
INT. LONDON TAVERN - GRAND BALLROOM - NIGHT An immense space. Crystal chandeliers hang from a vaulted ceiling, casting a brilliant, warm glow over an audience of hundreds. Gentlemen in fine tailored coats and ladies in silk dresses—fill rows of velvet seats. The air hums with
30 53
INT LONDON TAVERN - BACKSTAGE LATER
INT. LONDON TAVERN - BACKSTAGE - LATER
INT. LONDON TAVERN - BACKSTAGE - LATER The grand lecture hall's applause is a muffled roar through the heavy velvet curtains. Backstage is a chaotic corridor of theater crates, stacks of chairs, and upper-class Londoners trying to push their way
31 56
INT GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – NIGHT
INT. GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – NIGHT
INT. GALLAUDET'S LODGING – LONDON – NIGHT Sicard's book lies open on the desk beside pages of hastily scribbled notes. Sketches of handshapes fill the margins. Thomas paces, unrestrained excitement. He stops. Sits.
32 58
EXT BULL AND MOUTH INN COURTYARD DAY
EXT. BULL AND MOUTH INN COURTYARD - DAY
EXT. BULL AND MOUTH INN COURTYARD - DAY A hackney carriage slows along St. Martin's-Le-Grand and pulls to a jarring halt at the entrance to the Bull and Mouth Inn. Thomas steps down with his suitcase. As the carriage pulls
33 59
INT BOOKING OFFICE CONTINUOUS
INT. BOOKING OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
INT. BOOKING OFFICE - CONTINUOUS A heavyset BURALISTE stands behind a massive oak counter in a small low-ceilinged room. He reads a newspaper. A group of men sit to one side, drinking small cups of coffee and smoking long clay pipes. Smoke infuses the room.
34 60
EXT INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS-MUETS - COURTYARD AFTERNOON
EXT. INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS-MUETS - COURTYARD - AFTERNOON
EXT. INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS-MUETS - COURTYARD - AFTERNOON A pair of towering, ancient iron gates stand open off the cobblestones of the Rue Saint-Jacques. Thomas steps through the threshold. He is covered in a fine layer of white road dust from the long journey on the
35 61
INT INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS - MUETS CONTINUOUS
INT. INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS - MUETS - CONTINUOUS
INT. INSTITUT ROYAL DES SOURDS - MUETS - CONTINUOUS They walk down the stone corridor, footsteps echoing down the hall. They come to a stop in front of a large oak door. A brass plaque on the door. INSERT - PLAQUE
36 63
INT SICARD STUDY DAY
INT. SICARD STUDY - DAY
INT. SICARD STUDY - DAY Sicard sits behind a modest desk. Laurent sits in a comfortably upholstered chair across from him. Thomas enters as Sicard and Laurent are carrying on a silent conversation with their hands. Sicard looks up at him, and Laurent's gaze
37 64
INT CLASSROOM DAY
INT. CLASSROOM - DAY
INT. CLASSROOM - DAY A large classroom with desks arranged in a horseshoe shape in the center of the room. Ten STUDENTS 5-7 years old sit at the desks, hands moving slowly in conversation with their neighbors. Massive slate boards line multiple walls. They are
38 66
INT MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL – CLASSROOM – DAY
INT. MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL – CLASSROOM – DAY
INT. MISS HUNTLEY'S SCHOOL – CLASSROOM – DAY The classroom is quiet. Miss Huntley moves among the students as they work. At her desk, Alice carefully prints each word, stopping often to think. She smiles to herself as she remembers a story.
39 68
INT INSTITUTE LIBRARY NIGHT
INT. INSTITUTE LIBRARY - NIGHT
INT. INSTITUTE LIBRARY - NIGHT A massive room of towering bookshelves. Thomas and Laurent sit at a long oak table cluttered with open dictionaries and Thomas's frantic, messy notebook sketches. Thomas sits, rubbing his aching forearms. He looks utterly
40 69
INT SICARD'S STUDY DAY
INT. SICARD'S STUDY - DAY
INT. SICARD'S STUDY - DAY Abbé Sicard stands by the massive arched window, his back to the room. The afternoon sun silhouettes his frail, 73-year- old frame. The silence in the study is heavy, suffocating.
41 71
EXT HAVRE PORT DAY
EXT. HAVRE PORT - DAY
EXT. HAVRE PORT - DAY The Mary Augusta sits moored at a pier. A small fragile looking vessel, a mere 100 feet long and 25 feet wide. With sails furled, it sways in the modest waves. Thomas and Laurent stand in silence, watching as crates and barrels are
42 72
INT AFTER-CABIN DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN - DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN - DAY The Mary Augusta rolls rhythmically. A few passengers play cards nearby. Others read quietly. On the fixed oak table sits an open notebook. On the left page, Thomas has written a neat column of English
43 74
INT AFTER-CABIN – DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN – DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN – DAY The sea is calm once more. Charts, notebooks and slates cover the table. Thomas sketches the floor plan of a modest schoolhouse. A classroom.
44 77
INT COGSWELL HOUSE - KITCHEN EVENING
INT. COGSWELL HOUSE - KITCHEN - EVENING
INT. COGSWELL HOUSE - KITCHEN - EVENING Alice sits at the rough hewn kitchen table practicing her vocabulary words. She has a picture book open next to her. She looks at a picture and writes on a paper in front of her. INSERT - BOOK/PAPER
45 78
INT AFTER-CABIN DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN - DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN - DAY The storm has passed, replaced by a steady, calm swell. Thomas sits at the table, tapping the notebook page at the word FRIEND / AMI. He looks across at Laurent. Slowly, deliberately, Thomas raises his hands. He forms the
46 79
EXT MAIN DECK – AFTERNOON
EXT. MAIN DECK – AFTERNOON
EXT. MAIN DECK – AFTERNOON Bright sunlight cuts across the wooden deck. Thomas and Laurent stand near the mainmast, practicing full communication. Thomas speaks as he signs, his hands trailing slightly behind
47 80
INT AFTER CABIN NIGHT
INT. AFTER CABIN - NIGHT
INT. AFTER CABIN - NIGHT Laurent sits at the table with his diary in front of him. The cabin is illuminated softly by a single oil lamp at the table. Laurent dips his quill in ink and sets it to the page. INSERT - DIARY
48 81
INT AFTER-CABIN DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN - DAY
INT. AFTER-CABIN - DAY Thomas and Laurent sit at a small table under the dim light of an oil lamp. Pencils and notebooks are spread out between them, busy with a mixture of French and English words and sentences.
49 83
EXT DECK - MARY AUGUSTA DAY
EXT. DECK - MARY AUGUSTA - DAY
EXT. DECK - MARY AUGUSTA - DAY A bright summer morning. In the distance, the coastline of New York Harbor rises out of the morning mist. A forest of masts of hundreds of ships clutter the port.
50 84
EXT HARTFORD ROAD AFTERNOON
EXT. HARTFORD ROAD - AFTERNOON
EXT. HARTFORD ROAD - AFTERNOON Thomas and Laurent make their way down the cobbled road. They are clean and freshly shaved. The pass by Thomas's family home. Thomas looks briefly, but does not break stride. He stops in from of the Mason home. Laurent comes to stand
51 86
INT COGSWELL PARLOR LATER
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - LATER
INT. COGSWELL PARLOR - LATER The Mason adults sit across a low table from Thomas. Laurent sits at an angle, positioned to be able to see Thomas's hands. Introductions have been made. A tea tray rests on the table. Each holds a cup.
52 88
EXT CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) DAY
EXT. CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) - DAY
EXT. CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) - DAY Late autumn chill crisps the air. Carriages and wagons clog the packed dirt road. Well-dressed Hartford citizens, politicians, and merchants stream through the massive wooden double doors.
53 89
INT CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) DAY
INT. CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) - DAY
INT. CENTER CHURCH (HARTFORD) - DAY Mason stands confidently at the altar pulpit, looking out over a sea of packed pews. To his left, Laurent sits poised in a simple wooden chair, his gaze fixed forward. Thomas stands just behind Laurent's
54 92
INT CENTER CHURCH VESTIBULE LATER
INT. CENTER CHURCH VESTIBULE - LATER
INT. CENTER CHURCH VESTIBULE - LATER The thunderous roar of the sanctuary is muffled here, replaced by the heavy, energetic clatter of inkwells, ledger books, and low, hurried murmurs of wealth changing hands. Daniel Wadsworth and Ward Woodbridge sit at a long oak table,
55 93
EXT NEW ENGLAND ROADS - MONTAGE - DAY/NIGHT (FALL 1816)
EXT. NEW ENGLAND ROADS - MONTAGE - DAY/NIGHT (FALL 1816)
EXT. NEW ENGLAND ROADS - MONTAGE - DAY/NIGHT (FALL 1816) A mud-splattered carriage battles a blinding rainstorm along a rocky Massachusetts road. Inside, Thomas holds a lantern steady while Laurent studies a map, his fingers tracing their route.
56 94
INT ORPHANAGE – DAY
INT. ORPHANAGE – DAY
INT. ORPHANAGE – DAY A modest study lined with theological books. Outside a large window, children chase one another beneath the autumn maples. A MINISTER (60s), head of the orphanage, listens politely as Gallaudet finishes.
57 94
EXT COUNTRYSIDE DUSK
EXT. COUNTRYSIDE - DUSK
EXT. COUNTRYSIDE - DUSK The carriage stands frozen against a biting wind. Thomas and Laurent walk up a windswept hill toward a modest, isolated farmhouse.
58 95
EXT CONNECTICUT ASYLUM DAY
EXT. CONNECTICUT ASYLUM - DAY
EXT. CONNECTICUT ASYLUM - DAY A modest, three-story brick building on Main Street. A handmade wooden sign reads: "The Connecticut Asylum for the Education and Instruction of Deaf and Dumb Persons." A carriage pulls up.
59 96
INT CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY - DAY - MONTHS LATER
INT. CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY - DAY - MONTHS LATER
INT. CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY - DAY - MONTHS LATER Hallway at lunchtime. Students of all ages walk quietly, signing to one another and carrying lunches. A door to the side. Brass plaques:
60 98
INT CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY CONTINUOUS
INT. CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS
INT. CONNECTICUT ASYLUM HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS Alice and Nancy walk rapidly through the hallway, hand in hand. They stop in front of a large oak door. ALICE (signing)

The Voice of the Heart

With his health failing, funds nearly gone, and every British school refusing to share its methods, a minister's mission to save a generation of isolated deaf children from silence hangs on one last gamble: a public demonstration by a French abbé that could either doom his cause or bring him the teacher who will transform America.

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Overview

Poster
Unique Selling Proposition

Revelatory, wordless set-pieces make communication itself the drama—hands, slate, and gaze carry plot and emotion—while the transatlantic mentor–mentee bond unfolds as a mutual education rather than a one-way savior narrative.

AI Verdict


Synthesis Where readers agree and split
7.3

A qualified prestige historical drama that earns its Recommend through distinctive visual storytelling and emotional sincerity, but requires structural tightening in the midsection to sustain cumulative dramatic pressure.

Read as Prestige Historical Drama Biopic

A prestige historical drama asking the reader to experience the founding of American Deaf education through restrained visual storytelling, cumulative emotional pressure, and the embodiment of language as identity.

Would readers champion it?
Not yetNot yetReaders wouldn’t actively push for it.
WeaklyWeaklyMentioned, but no real push behind it.
ModeratelyModeratelyMentioned favorably to the right buyer.
StronglyStronglyActively championed across their network.
ClaudeModeratelyDeepSeekModeratelyGeminiModeratelyGrokModeratelyGPT5Strongly
How much rewrite does it need?
Start from scratchStart from scratchPremise or core engine isn’t working. Page-one rebuild.
Structural rewriteStructural rewriteSpecific acts or zones need rebuilding — not starting over, but significant revision work on those sections.
Targeted rewriteTargeted rewriteSpecific scenes or threads need rework. ~1 month.
Just polishJust polishLines and pacing tweaks. A few weeks.
ClaudeTargeted rewriteDeepSeekTargeted rewriteGeminiTargeted rewriteGrokTargeted rewriteGPT5Structural rewrite
How distinctive is the voice?
GenericGenericReads like other scripts in the genre.
EmergingEmergingHints of a distinctive voice, not yet locked in.
DistinctiveDistinctiveA clear, recognizable authorial voice.
One-of-a-kindOne-of-a-kindA voice that couldn’t be anyone else’s.
DeepSeekEmergingGeminiEmergingClaudeDistinctiveGPT5DistinctiveGrokDistinctive

On the score: The score sits at the high edge of its band — a focused revision could push it to the next verdict.

What's working All 5 readers agree

The script's consistent visual grammar for rendering silence and signing provides a distinctive formal identity that anchors the reader's emotional investment across the full runtime.

What's blocking All 5 readers agree

The repetitive European rejection sequence drains forward momentum and severs the emotional tether to the mission's origin, leaving the protagonist's drive feeling stated rather than felt.

Why not lower

The script's distinctive visual grammar for silence and signing, combined with its clean historical structure and emotional sincerity, provides a firm floor that prevents a lower verdict.

Why not higher

The repetitive European journey and the absence of a concrete dramatic question in the final demonstration prevent the script from sustaining the cumulative pressure required for a stronger advocacy call.

Fix-first · Protect-while-fixing · Reader splits · Quick credibility wins
Rewrite map

A script with a distinctive visual grammar for silence and signing that needs structural tightening in the midsection to restore causal momentum and a concrete dramatic question for the final demonstration.

Read as Prestige

Start here

Condensing the European rejection sequence into a tighter, escalating chain while anchoring each beat to a visual callback to Alice addresses both the midsection momentum drag and the emotional tether gap simultaneously.

Protect while fixing 2
Silent visual grammar for Deaf experience

Adding interiority or dialogue to fix the emotional tether risks replacing the script's established wordless, gestural language with conventional exposition.

Keep any new intercuts or interiority beats strictly visual and behavioral, using the established silence POV grammar rather than adding voiceover or explanatory dialogue.

Laurent's diary and reciprocal mentorship dynamic

Compressing the European section to fix pacing risks cutting the shipboard sequences where Laurent's diary and mutual teaching establish his distinct sensibility and partnership with Thomas.

When trimming transit beats, preserve at least two diary entries and one reciprocal teaching moment so the crossing retains its documentary texture and character foundation.

Fix first 3
Midsection repetition and low causal pressure

Forward momentum stalls as the European journey registers as a series of identical institutional refusals rather than an escalating chain of consequences.

Root cause

The script treats the European section as a historical checklist of rejections without differentiating the emotional cost or strategic shift for Thomas between each encounter.

One direction

Differentiate each refusal by assigning a distinct personal or strategic cost to Thomas, or compress the sequence into a tighter montage anchored by a single character beat that preserves historical texture while restoring forward pressure.

Emotional tether to Alice thins during the European journey

The emotional stakes that motivate the mission recede, making the middle act feel like a procedural travelogue rather than a character-driven pursuit.

Root cause

The script structurally isolates Thomas in Europe without intercutting Alice's evolving experience or giving Thomas internal scenes that actively reference her absence.

One direction

Thread brief, wordless intercuts of Alice's world during the European section, or anchor Thomas's moments of doubt directly to her absence, so the mission's urgency accumulates in parallel with his journey.

Back-half demonstration lacks concrete dramatic tension Medium confidence

The fundraising demonstration resolves too cleanly, leaving the reader without a final moment of genuine doubt before the institutional triumph.

Root cause

The script establishes the need for funding but does not introduce a specific skeptic or concrete threshold that the demonstration must overcome, making the outcome feel foregone.

One direction

Introduce a named skeptic or specific financial threshold in the vestibule scene so the demonstration carries a concrete dramatic question rather than functioning as a showcase.

Your decisions 1
Interiority focus: Thomas's internal doubt vs. Alice's parallel journey Consequential
Side A

Committing to Thomas's internal arc means adding scenes of personal cost or crisis of faith, keeping the narrative tightly centered on his protagonist journey.

Side B

Committing to Alice's parallel journey means threading her active experiences in Hartford during the European section, making the mission's urgency a shared emotional engine.

Quick credibility wins 1
Strip editorialized action lines and on-the-nose thematic dialogue

Remove phrases that name emotional states in action lines and replace declarative thematic statements with subtextual behavior, trusting the visual grammar to carry the weight.

Ask AI about this read
Story Facts
Genres:
Drama 95% Romance 5%

Setting: Early 19th century, primarily between 1814 and 1816, Hartford, Connecticut, and various locations in New England and Paris, France

Themes: Communication and Language as Liberation, Perseverance and Dedication, Education and Empowerment, Love and Connection, Overcoming Isolation, Cultural Exchange and Collaboration, Faith and Hope, Sacrifice and Commitment

Conflict & Stakes: The struggle to establish a school for Deaf children amidst societal skepticism and personal challenges, with the future of Deaf education at stake.

Mood: Inspirational and hopeful, with moments of tension and emotional depth.

Standout Features:

  • Unique Hook: The story of the establishment of the first school for the Deaf in America.
  • Innovative Ideas: The use of sign language as a central theme, showcasing its beauty and importance.
  • Distinctive Settings: The contrast between early 19th-century America and modern educational settings.
  • Character Development: The growth of Thomas and Alice as they navigate their challenges.

Comparable Scripts: The Miracle Worker, Children of a Lesser God, CODA (2021), The King's Speech, Hidden Figures, A Beautiful Mind, The Theory of Everything, Sound of Metal, The Professor and the Madman, The Story of My Life (Helen Keller memoir)

How 5 AI Readers Scored The Script

Graded as Prestige
Claude GPT5 Gemini DeepSeek Grok Average spread Row tint: weak mid strong excellent
Premise i
7.6
Plot i
6.2
Structure i
7.0
Character i
7.2
Dialogue i
6.4
Tone / Voice i
8.0
Theme i
8.0
Marketability i
6.8

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: 8.14
Key Suggestions:
The screenplay has a powerful emotional spine in the arcs of Alice, Thomas, and Laurent, but the middle act (London rejections) drags due to repetitive beats and a lack of rising internal stakes. To elevate craft, deepen Mason and Mary Cogswell with personal conflicts and agency, condense the rejection montage into a more varied visual sequence, and introduce a recurring antagonist to sharpen dramatic tension. Dialogue could also benefit from more subtext and distinct character voices, especially in committee scenes.
Story Critique

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

Key Suggestions:
The script has a strong emotional and historical foundation, but the middle section suffers from repetitive rejection scenes that drag pacing, and Alice's voice nearly disappears during Thomas's European journey, weakening the emotional anchor. To strengthen craft, streamline the British rejection sequence into fewer but more distinct confrontations, intercut Alice's growth in Hartford with Thomas's struggles, and deepen Laurent's character with a specific backstory or internal conflict. The ending is satisfying but compressed; consider adding a concrete post-opening challenge to show ongoing stakes and replace the modern classroom cut with a resonant thematic image.
Characters

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

Key Suggestions:
The character analysis reveals a deeply empathetic and well-researched script, but several opportunities exist to deepen emotional complexity and narrative tension. For Laurent, consider adding a moment of vulnerability or a small conflict with Gallaudet to humanize him further. For Alice, her agency during the middle portion of the story could be strengthened by showing her independently practicing communication or making a difficult choice. For Thomas, his internal struggle with imposter syndrome and physical frailty could be more explicitly connected to his fear of being unheard. The most rewarding improvements will come from giving each character a moment of doubt or failure that they must overcome, making their triumphs more earned and the themes of community and interdependence more resonant.
Emotional Analysis

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

Key Suggestions:
The script's emotional arc is too monotone in the first half, relying heavily on sadness and empathy without relief. To improve engagement, introduce moments of surprise, humor, or suspense earlier—like a subplot with a secondary character conflict or a playful interaction between Alice and her sisters. Also layer contrasting emotions within scenes (e.g., hope beneath sadness) to add depth and avoid one-dimensional beats.
Goals and Philosophical Conflict

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

Key Suggestions:
The analysis reveals that Thomas Gallaudet's internal and external goals evolve in tandem, driving his transformation from a hesitant communicator to a confident advocate. The script's strength lies in how the philosophical conflict between speech and sign language is gradually resolved through emotional and demonstrative moments, especially Laurent's public performances. To improve, ensure that each milestone in Thomas's goal progression (e.g., learning the first sign, accepting Laurent's offer) is paired with a clear emotional beat or obstacle that deepens character and stakes.
Themes

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

Key Suggestions:
The script's thematic core is the liberating power of communication, which is effectively embodied through Alice's journey and Thomas's quest. However, several supporting themes (perseverance, love, cultural exchange) are so strongly developed that they risk overshadowing the central narrative drive. To strengthen the script, ensure that every scene explicitly advances the primary theme—for example, by tightening the connection between Thomas's personal sacrifices and the tangible impact on deaf children. Consider using visual motifs (like the paper dolls or hand-over-heart gesture) more consistently to anchor the emotional arc. Additionally, the montage sequences in scenes 27 and 55 could be more selectively used to prevent the story from becoming episodic; each location should reveal a new layer of the communication challenge or a breakthrough in understanding.
Logic & Inconsistencies

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

Key Suggestions:
The script has a strong emotional arc and historical foundation, but it suffers from pacing issues caused by redundant travel sequences, letter-writing cycles, and repeated motif beats (e.g., paper dolls, pocket-watch checks). To sharpen dramatic momentum, compress multiple logistical scenes (Liverpool-to-London coach, door-shut montages, sea-sickness) into fewer, more focused moments. Additionally, character decisions—especially Laurent’s sudden offer to go to America—need clearer temporal markers or a brief beat of internal hesitation to feel dramatically earned rather than impulsive. Dialogue should be periodically reviewed for modern cadence (e.g., Braidwood’s adversarial line, the carriage woman’s caution) and adjusted to period-appropriate phrasing without losing clarity. Finally, the convenient handbill and immediate backstage access to Sicard could be softened with a prior hint or a small logistical detail to reduce the deus-ex-machina feel.

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:
Your voice is strongest when you trust the audience to read emotion in silence, objects, and gestures. Scene 8 is the blueprint: a hand over the heart says more than any dialogue. To deepen the script, strip away explanatory moments and let the visual language carry the weight—especially in scenes where characters connect without words. The paper dolls, the hat, the slate are not props but emotional anchors; use them consistently to build a sensory lexicon that speaks louder than spoken lines.
Writer's Craft

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

Key Suggestions:
Your script has strong visual storytelling and period detail, but it suffers from a consistent lack of dramatic tension. Scenes often function as transitions or information delivery rather than dramatic units with conflict, stakes, and change. To elevate your craft, focus on making every scene an active struggle: define what each character wants in opposition, build subtext through what's left unsaid, and ensure each scene changes the emotional or narrative stakes. The emotional sincerity is there—now you need to make it hard-won.
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 world-building analysis shows how setting and cultural attitudes directly drive character conflict and thematic resonance. The script effectively uses contrasts—quiet Hartford vs. chaotic London, closed British institutions vs. open French sharing—to underscore the journey from isolation to connection. For craft improvement, ensure each environment (parlor, ship, schoolroom) functions as a deliberate stage for a specific breakthrough or setback, and leverage sensory details (sounds of silence, textures of slate and paper dolls) to deepen the emotional realism of the Deaf experience.
Correlations

Identifies patterns in scene scores.

Key Suggestions:
The script has not yet been evaluated with scene-level scores, so no creative or craft insights can be drawn. To receive actionable feedback on tone, character development, pacing, and emotional impact, you need to assign non-zero scores to each scene. Once that data is available, I can help you identify strengths and areas for revision, such as how conflict or dialogue evolves across the story.
Loglines
Presents logline variations based on theme, genre, and hook.