Crime
Cloned Murders
(14 votes)
 
License: by-nc-nd
Written by Jum Abago, on 28-08-2011 08:52
Views 64

Washington DC, Year 2049. A detective (could be from the military police, about to retire, one of the worst of his division, and also a drunk) is appointed lead investigator of a suspicious death of a child at a CIA building. He thinks it was murder, but he is told by his superiors that it was a freak accident. He is about to let it go, but soon after there’s another death, at another CIA building. This time the victim is a teen. Again he is told that it was an accident, but the dead teen reminds him of his son, that was the same age when he passed. He is now determined to find out what’s going on. He is removed from the case, but secretly continues to investigate. In the meantime, more kids and teens die in mysterious circumstances. Progressively, he learns that those buildings are used by the CIA as some sort of school for kids. He then finds out that the kids and teens are really clones. Finally, an anonymous source, on the phone, explains to him what the agency is up to. This is a 30 something-year-old program and it’s as Top Secret as it gets. Back in 2008, due to the political and economical crisis, the agency thought it would be a good idea to clone eminent people from the past (Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Franklin, Edison, etc), educate them, making emphasis on the respective areas that they excelled in, so that when they were older, they could govern the country. Later, the CIA started cloning renowned criminals as well (especially violent gangsters like Al Capone, Bugsy Siegel and so on) thinking they would make great military leaders, to conquer and make war to other countries. And it reaches every state in the country. As the clones get older (though they may not know about the program, or the fact that they are really clones), they are sent to different cities, where they start building their careers. He realizes that by then, the year 2049, the clones could have infiltrated all levels of government. State and Federal. He learns that the budget for the program has grown 20 times, since the last CIA director took charge. The detective suspects this director is a clone. He is obsessed about the program. He reviews photos and images of famous people from the past, especially mob guys, guessing who they might have cloned. He is convinced the clones are killing each other. He tries telling his superiors, but they all know about the program and want to keep it secret, so instead they send professional assassins to kill him. He manages to escape, and is determined to gather hard proof that he could send to a newspaper or tv station. This way, he thinks, when everything is out in the open, they won’t be able to kill him. He begins to roam around the CIA buildings trying to find a way to get in. One day, through one of the doors a man in his early thirties comes out. The detective follows him. The man goes into a library. The detective realizes that the man is no other than Abraham Lincoln. He decides to convince Lincoln to help him. And, at the same time, save Lincoln from the clone murderer. He approaches Lincoln and tells him what he knows. Lincoln doesn’t believe him, so the detective takes his gun out, and orders him to take a walk. As they come out of the library together they notice that a young man (short, heavy set, mean looking, wearing a trench coat) is following them. They run to catch a bus, the mean looking man hurries but is not able to get on. They get off a couple of minutes later. The detective quickly takes Lincoln to a movie theatre that was nearby hoping he could have a talk with Lincoln. The Untouchables is playing, more precisely, the scene where Al Capone is threatening a few people at a restaurant with a baseball bat. The theater is empty. As they sit at the front row the detective glimpses the door to make sure nobody came in after them. Suddenly, he hears something behind him, turns around, and sees the mean looking man, with a baseball bat in his hand rushing out from behind the screen (just like Al Capone on the screen, the man really is Al Capone’s clone). He tries to draw his gun, but he is hit on the head and faints. When he opens his eyes, he looks up and sees Al Capone struggling with Lincoln on one of the upper balconies. Capone is obviously trying to push Lincoln off the balcony. The detective rushes up the stairs, and punches Capone. The detective’s gun (Capone had it in his waistband) falls to the floor. Capone hits him again with the bat, but as he does that, Lincoln picks up the gun and shoots Capone in his head. Then Lincoln helps the detective and they escape together.
Last update: 28-08-2011 08:52
Published in : Crime


Without Lust
(2 votes)
 
License: by-nc-sa
Written by Ntertainment, on 27-08-2011 10:01
Views 33

Disturbing drama containing, drugs, sex & crime. Years after coming to terms with the mysterious disappearance of his younger sister, a troubled 19 year old lad, Jack, growing up on the streets selling drugs and mixing with the wrong people, soon becoming a victim of heroin, his life dramatically goes down hill, in an attempt to kick the habit, he becomes part of crime ring involving drug distribution & prostitution, where he makes big money, years down the line, sex-driven Jack, wants to set up his own prostitution business, where he must now buy vulnerable women on the black market, only to find his missing sister being auctioned right in front his eyes.
Last update: 27-08-2011 10:01
Published in : Crime


Solution to crime
(1 vote)
 
License: by-nc-sa
Written by Teemu Korhonen, on 06-08-2011 03:24
Views 87

In year 2020 a group of people move to planet Mars. They start to follow this law instead of penalty-based laws: http://tajkor.blogspot.com/2011/02/ratkaisu-rikollisuuteen.html I wrote that in Finnish, and I'm not very good in translation, but anyway it goes pretty much like this. 1. laws are made on whitelist-basis, so it is listed what can be done 2. lots of surveillance cameras are installed, all the citizens can view these on internet or TV (privacy is the last taboo) 3. all the penalties are removed and replaced by a positive karmapoint-system, you get a karmapoint of doing something on the whitelist, HP's Central nervous system for Earth(CENSE) or similar AI-system is used to give these karmapoints. Whitelist consist of things which give you bioenergy, for example: healthy food, sex, barefoot walking, massage, meditation "It is possible to imagine a society flushed with such a sense of power that it could afford to let its offenders go unpunished." -Nietzsche
Last update: 06-08-2011 03:24
Published in : Crime


Darkness of the Soul
(18 votes)
 
License: by-nc-nd
Written by Frank campbell, on 01-08-2011 09:50
Views 45

Darkness of the soul movie synopsis In a sleepy northern town in america, a small police station and its community is about to be plunged into a darkness of sheer terror, noone could have imagined.... Our story begins with an ordinary evening in the local station were everyone was goin along with their duties until suddenly one of the patrol units return with a girl found roaming a lonely forrest road her clothes all torn and filthy, her eyes red raw with fear, shes all hysterical and keeps mumbling the same phrase over and over " death will feed on us all " concerned and confused noone can seem to get an answer or find out who she is with no id or explanation of what has happened to her , the staff sergeant puts her in the care of our main character officer .....max raine. our character takes charge of taking care of her and try and get the girl to open up and try find out who and what has happened to her. but before we know it things start to go wrong police staff start to turn up dead in the most gruesome and demonic ways were symbols and sayings start to appear in every crime scene and people who seem to be in the station at the time of her arrival are also targeted our hero trys to keep the girl safe from this serial killer. but as things heat up and the body count rises, max slowly discovers theres something wrong with this girl and the connection with the serial killer slowly unfolds our hero finaly discovers that the whole nightmare has been one sick sedistic sexual game of cat and mouse where both the girl and the killer are an item and they play this sick game where she picks the location and the killer has the fun, killing all in his path to get to her and the end game is to kill the cop assignd to protect her the end scene will be the demise of our hero as he flash backs all the pieces together before he sees both the killer and girl reconcile their love then they both slay max as one last act before they run off into the night....... 5 years later........we see the same girl being brought in to another station in same distraught condition and as shes left in a chair she stairs up at the camera in black and white and gives a sadistic small smirk...the new game begins end credits ..... notes.... the serial killer never gets to be seen even in the end killing of the main character max raine its only shaddows and horrible shriek sound is all you will hear this to me keeps the horror of the character more natural and brings a bigger fear factor to the movie as well as the different crime scenes and suspense of the unfolding of the girl character
Last update: 01-08-2011 09:50
Published in : Crime


WHERE'S MERRILL?
(7 votes)
 
License: by-nc-nd
Written by Gerard Neary, on 18-07-2011 20:36
Views 54

A fact-based genealogical thriller. An Irish genealogist (Ged) is commissioned to research the maternal Family Tree of an American client (Tom) thought to have Irish ancestral roots. The most intriguing aspect of the project is that Tom’s maternal grandfather was said to have walked out on the family and “disappeared”, i.e. he disappears from public record databases during the 1930’s. Tom was born in 1943 so he never met his grandfather, and he doesn’t even know his name because his now-deceased mother would never speak of him after the abandonment as a child. The grandfather’s name is discovered to be Merrill, born in the Midwest of the USA. The film plot is made up of the interweaving of two true stories; the Irish researcher’s increasingly obsessive desire to find out what happened to Merrill, and longer flashback scenes which reveal the life of Merrill and his extended family members. The research story takes many twists and turns, and involves multiple alleged suicides, the existence of a family inheritance fund worth millions in today’s money, deliberate deceit as relatives try to access the family fortune …. and the unavoidable conclusion that criminal acts were carried out, culminating in more than one murder. Crimes which were never detected in the 1930’s, or more likely, never acknowledged by the authorities in receipt of hush money. The Irish researcher works from a home office in a sleepy rural village, using state-of-the-art computer databases linked to worldwide vital records, newspaper archives, court files, etc. New snippets of information about Merrill’s life, revealed in sequence, lead Ged along a complex journey of discovery. Confusing data suddenly starts to make sense as more facts are uncovered. Sometimes Ged’s revelations are followed by a cut to a flashback sequence to expand upon developments. At other times, the flashback drama precedes Ged’s discoveries as the researcher plays catch-up. The viewer is deliberately drawn into the intrigue and mystery of Merrill’s eventual disappearance, trying to second-guess how the saga ends. A secondary sub-plot revolves around the jovial interest in Merrill’s disappearance shown by Ged’s Irish village neighbors. As per most close-knit communities, word travels fast regarding Ged’s curious research project, and each offers ideas for possible “endings”. These amusing cameos counterbalance Ged’s growing and alarming obsession with Merrill, and the darkness of real life events unfolding and being acted out in Midwest America 75 years ago. The story of the creation of the family fortune is explained as we view the lives of Merrill’s relatives from the prior generation. The key character who inherits the fortune is discovered to be an illegitimate child, and as an adult this person is committed to a mental asylum. Other relatives become guardians of the legally “insane” heir and attempt to rob the estate. Suspicious deaths of benefactors occur. Tom is surprised to learn that his grandfather Merrill had two wives. By marrying his first wife, Merrill had a tangible claim to the insane heir’s family fortune - but so did other devious in-laws. Merrill was a once-successful businessman in the 1920’s, but he lost everything during the Great Depression. He was desperate for cash to fund a socially elite lifestyle he could no longer afford. The backdrop to the flashback scenes are Midwest cities where mobsters ruled the roost during the Prohibition. The police and newspaper editors were on the payroll of The Mob. Business protection rackets prevailed, and outwardly respectable businessmen frequented the speakeasies. Towards the end of the story, the tale takes an incredible twist when Ged, in desperation, researches the life of Merrill’s last known girlfriend. She graduated from small-town local government typist to end up as the highly-trusted PA to one of the most powerful Statesmen in the world, working in the White House. This secretary hid a big secret. Merrill had fathered her only child, and when she passed away (in very recent times), her obituary discloses that Merrill died in 1937, by reference to an alias name which Ged has already discovered was used by Merrill during the 1930‘s. She names the death location - yet the death was never registered as per civil law. Why? What happened? And who inherited the family millions? The film exposes the most likely outcome based upon thorough research …. as The Mob and Merrill’s enemies closed in. *This is a synopsis of a 20,000 word screenplay outline already drafted and available for review, along with factual research documents and photos of some of the main real-life characters. Names can be changed as necessary as per Privacy Law, but most characters are deceased and have no direct descendants.
Last update: 18-07-2011 20:36
Published in : Crime


Clandestine
(16 votes)
 
License: by-nc-sa
Written by Youssef Shaalan, on 07-07-2011 08:40
Views 58

For decades, many conspiracy theories concerning the Freemasons and their desire for New World Order (NOW) have spread across the globe. Many believe the Freemasons are taking over the world, using Hollywood and the music industry as a tool to brainwash thousands of people. In present day Los Angeles, legendary filmmaker, Trollope, is found hanged in his mansion. The LAPD proclaim it a suicide but many believe he was murdered. With the help of a smart friend and a conspiracy theorist, a writer/reporter sets out to uncover the truth about the death Trollope after discovering that he was a 33rd degree (the highest degree in Freemasonry) Freemason. He learns that the Freemasons got rid of Trollope when they found out that he hid their secrets in his movies. The writer tries to decipher the codes in Trollope’s movies, as well as his unfinished movie, but it won’t be easy. He learns the origins of the Freemasons that go all the way back to King Solomon and his temple and, centuries after that, the Knights Templar during the Crusades. He finds out the truth behind many incidents, including JFK’s assassination, the Jack the Ripper massacres, and how the Freemasons took part in the American Revolution and the establishment of the United States of America. (It doesn’t have to be the Freemasons. It could be a made up brotherhood or the Illuminati.)
Last update: 07-07-2011 08:40
Published in : Crime


Back 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next

25 - 30 219
Copyright (C) Make'n Movies 2007-2012. All rights reserved. Produced by the Make'n Movies Team
Developed by PB Web Development