Deoxy

In a world where humanity is rapidly evolving due to environmental collapse, two jaded FBI agents must protect a mysterious young woman who might be the key to humanity's survival or its extinction.

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Overview

Poster
Unique Selling Point

Deoxy's unique selling proposition is its inversion of Darwinian evolution - presenting mutation not as random selection but as environmental enforcement where the weak are forced to evolve or perish. This creates a fresh take on the sci-fi thriller genre by blending biological horror with ecological consciousness and spiritual awakening, offering both high-concept action and philosophical depth.

AI Verdict & Suggestions

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

Hover over verdict cards for Executive Summaries

GPT5
 Recommend
Gemini
 Recommend
Grok
 Recommend
Claude
 Recommend
DeepSeek
 Consider
Average Score: 8.0
Key Takeaways
For the Writer:
You have a vivid, high‑concept pilot with cinematic set pieces and a strong emotional center in Taylor and Lucy. The next draft should tighten the speculative mechanics and the opposition: concretely define the mutagen (origin, transmission, triggers, measurable limits and costs) and show those rules in action rather than relying on big, apparently miraculous moments. At the same time, sharpen antagonist aims (Merrick, Bartot leadership, Calom) so their tactics and stakes feel strategic and personally motivated. Streamline a few mid‑act jungle/action beats to keep forward momentum and give Taylor a clearer decision point in the pilot (commit / walk away) to make her arc feel decisive and hookable for the season.
For Executives:
Deoxy is marketable as a prestige/genre hybrid—an FBI procedural braided with an ecological, mythic sci‑fi hook that will appeal to fans of Fringe, Annihilation and prestige streaming dramas. The pilot’s production value and action beats are strong, but two development risks are critical: (1) the mutagen’s loose ‘rules’ undercut audience trust and long‑term narrative stakes, and (2) underdeveloped antagonist motivations reduce serial urgency. Before greenlight or packaging, invest a focused rewrite to codify the science‑myth rules and to give Merrick/Bartot/Calom clear, provable objectives. That will protect viewer investment, clarify episodic engines, and make the show a safer, more saleable franchise.
Story Facts
Genres:
Action 30% Crime 15% Drama 40% Fantasy 20% Science Fiction 25% Thriller 25% War 10%

Setting: Present day, with elements of a near-future speculative setting, Primarily set in New York City, including urban environments, a school, a jungle, and various indoor locations.

Themes: Evolutionary Mutation and Adaptation, Personal Transformation and Sacrifice, Identity and Belonging, Humanity's Place in Nature, Ethical Dilemmas of Progress, Hope and Renewal, The Nature of Fear and Courage, Loss and Grief

Conflict & Stakes: The central conflict revolves around the struggle between the FBI's containment efforts and the need to understand and protect Lucy, whose abilities could either save or doom humanity, with personal stakes for Taylor and Forbes regarding their pasts and futures.

Mood: Intense, reflective, and hopeful, with moments of chaos and tranquility.

Standout Features:

  • Unique Hook: The concept of evolution driven by environmental changes and personal trauma, with characters experiencing physical and emotional transformations.
  • Plot Twist: The revelation of Lucy's true nature and her connection to the fate of humanity, which shifts the narrative's stakes.
  • Innovative Ideas: The integration of supernatural elements with real-world environmental issues, creating a thought-provoking narrative.
  • Distinctive Settings: The contrast between urban environments and lush jungles, highlighting the theme of nature reclaiming urban spaces.
  • Genre Blends: A mix of sci-fi, action, and emotional drama, appealing to a wide range of genre enthusiasts.

Comparable Scripts: The X-Men (Comic Series/Movies), The Umbrella Academy (TV Series), Annihilation (Novel/Film), Stranger Things (TV Series), The Hunger Games (Book Series/Movies), The Mortal Instruments (Book Series/Movie), The OA (TV Series), The Girl with All the Gifts (Novel/Film), The Giver (Book/Film)

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: 8.09
Key Suggestions:
You have a compelling, emotionally driven pilot with a strong hook and memorable protagonists. To lift it further, prioritize two rewrites: 1) deepen the antagonists (Bartot members and other secondary players) with concrete backstories, motives and occasional sympathetic choices so confrontations feel personal rather than plot-driven; and 2) tighten pacing in action sequences by inserting short, character-led pauses and clearer causal signposts (and clarify early how the mutagen works) so emotional beats land and the science-fiction premise reads as grounded. These changes will increase stakes, make choices feel earned, and improve audience investment in future episodes.
Story Critique

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

Key Suggestions:
You have a strong high-concept pilot with sympathetic leads, a unique eco-evolution hook, and a clear emotional throughline in Taylor and Forbes. The single biggest creative fix: define the mutagen’s ‘‘why’’ and concrete mechanics early and thread it through character motives and faction goals. Decide whether the mutagen is purely environmental, engineered, or semi-sentient—and use that choice to inform Bartot and Merrick’s agendas, Calom’s role, and Lucy’s abilities. Also add consistent limits/costs to powers (including for Taylor and Forbes) so stakes hold. Foreshadow Calom and the larger origin across Act One/Two to make Act Four–Five pay off emotionally and thematically.
Characters

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

Key Suggestions:
The character work is strong—three layered leads with clear symbolic roles—but the pilot needs crisper protagonist agency and clearer connective tissue between Taylor’s trauma and her on-screen choices. Tighten or reframe moments where Taylor’s hesitation undermines her competence (notably the warehouse raid) by anchoring them to a specific memory or internal beat so the audience immediately understands the cost of her wound. Simultaneously, seed mutation effects and Forbes’ emotional stakes earlier (small physical beats, a flashback image, or micro-mutations in routine moments) and give Lucy more everyday uses of her powers and deliberate choices so she feels proactive rather than reactive. These edits will preserve the epic scope while deepening audience empathy and momentum.
Emotional Analysis

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

Key Suggestions:
The script has powerful emotional highs and a deeply empathetic central trio, but it currently overloads the audience in long stretches of sustained high-intensity (action, terror, grief) and under-develops key emotional transitions (Forbes' breakdown, Lucy's mastery). Tighten pacing by inserting short emotional valleys and connective beats: a few brief, quieter character moments within high-adrenaline sequences, clearer foreshadowing of Forbes' trauma, and subjective, interior reactions for Lucy during her awakenings. These small, targeted rewrites will make the big payoffs feel earned and increase audience attachment to the protagonists.
Goals and Philosophical Conflict

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

Key Suggestions:
The analysis shows a strong, emotionally resonant protagonist arc and a clear philosophical spine (freedom vs. control), but the script will benefit from sharpening how Taylor's internal change is earned on the page. Make Taylor’s private stakes (guilt over her sister, fear about fertility/legacy) visibly force concrete choices that conflict with her external mission earlier and more frequently. Use a few catalytic beats—one moral choice with irreversible consequence mid-act and one public, ideological confrontation with Merrick late—to ensure the theme payoff feels earned rather than declared.
Themes

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

Key Suggestions:
You have a bold, high-concept spine: a world forced to 'evolve' and three characters who embody different responses to that pressure. The script succeeds in scope and visual imagination, but it needs a tighter emotional throughline so the spectacle always serves character. Focus the rewrite on clarifying Taylor’s active choice arc (what she must give up and what she learns about belonging), sharpening Lucy’s role as both literal catalyst and moral compass, and making Forbes’ wounds and loyalties payoff clearly. Also standardize the rules of the mutagen early (triggers, limits, costs) so audience trust holds during escalating set pieces. Trim or combine scenes that diffuse momentum and use quieter beats to sell sacrifices and ethical dilemmas between the big action moments.
Logic & Inconsistencies

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

Key Suggestions:
The script's biggest creative risk is a gap in the central mechanics: when, how and why characters gain their powers. Scenes imply a mutagenic event (teaser rain, scene 3) but later scenes (e.g., scene 10) treat the abilities as fully formed without clear progression or cause. This weakens character motivations and undermines the stakes. Fix by choosing one clear origin and showing a believable progression—small, concrete beats that demonstrate exposure, physiological change, and limitation—so emotional arcs (Taylor’s fear about fertility, Forbes’ internal burn) and plot actions (raid decisions, battlefield choices) feel earned rather than plot-driven conveniences.

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 — visceral action, crisp dialogue, and sensory-rich description — is a major asset. To heighten impact, lean into that strength while tightening the script’s throughline: clarify Taylor’s emotional arc and the personal stakes that connect her to the global threat, set firm rules for the mutagen/Lucy phenomena, and prune scenes that repeat information or dilute momentum. Keep the taut, cinematic language in action beats but allow quieter scenes to reveal character choices rather than exposition. Small structural edits (consolidate set pieces, remove redundant expository beats, and sharpen antagonist motives) will make the emotional core land harder and keep pacing taut without sacrificing spectacle.
Writer's Craft

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

Key Suggestions:
You have a strong gift for atmosphere, imagery, and emotionally charged set pieces. To raise this draft into a market-ready screenplay, focus first on tightening the story’s backbone: clarify Taylor’s throughline, sharpen the cause-and-effect of each act beat, and make character change measurable. Use a beat-sheet approach (e.g., Save the Cat!) to ensure each scene earns its place, and pair that with targeted character-work (deep biographies and a scene that forces a core desire/fear into conflict). Complement structural edits with dialogue-only and subtext exercises so conversations carry more unsaid weight and the emotional arc feels earned rather than implied.
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 is rich and cinematic—a modern Earth being forcibly rewired by a biological/mystical accelerant—but it currently threatens to feel diffuse because science, tribal mysticism, and character arcs compete for focus. Tighten the rules of the mutagen and Lucy’s abilities early, and thread those rules into Taylor’s emotional stakes (fertility, loss, duty). Make the mystery have clear boundaries (what can and cannot happen, what costs mutation carries) so the audience can root for choices rather than just watch spectacle. Use fewer large-scale set pieces that only showcase phenomena; instead, stage a couple of definitive, intimate demonstrations of the world’s logic that then scale up, and let character choices drive the escalation.
Correlations

Identifies patterns in scene scores.

Key Suggestions:
Your screenplay’s biggest strengths are its high-tension action beats, emotionally charged moments, and a successful use of mystery and surreal imagery — these are the scenes that land as the story’s powerhouses. To sharpen the script, tighten or repurpose slower, reflective scenes so each beat either advances the plot or forces a visible character choice. Where you linger on introspection, intercut or follow immediately with a stake-raising consequence so momentum never stalls. Lean into the potent combos identified (Tense+Emotional, Mysterious+Intense) for your act-closing and act-opening moments to keep audience engagement high and make character change feel earned.
Loglines
Presents logline variations based on theme, genre, and hook.