Ditch the ads, upload images and much more - upgrade today from 5.95/month!
Read Contests Groups Learn Forums Store Help
 

a brace of shakes

i.   2 noble dudes

 

So I bust my ass with a script, and the guy writes back “Don’t send me no more films where the guy writes with a feather!” So I figure – what the hell – I’ll do him a Western instead, ‘coz it’s been sixteen years since Unforgiven. I had this idea where two gunslingers get in a fist-fight over who’s gonna marry the big cheese rancher’s daughter, and the sheriff breaks up the fight, tells one to get outta town, and throws the other one’s ass in jail. Then he busts out and the other guy comes back, and they shoot it out, and one guy beats the other to the draw but falls off his horse, then they’re gonna lynch the first guy but the rancher’s daughter begs for his life… and… and… But anyhow, the studio sends me this co-writer (some bald limey with a beard), and he says like bring it up to date. So okay, I say, how about we do “Two Bloods in the Hood”, ghetto-style, y’know, urban stuff with gangsta rap, and he says “Blacksploitation’s so seventies, Fletch!” (only with this English accent) “We need the final duel to be a car chase… explosions… kung fu on the top of a burning building… and the girl needs to kick arse too.” (Yeah, he actually said “arse”!) And he goes on, “Willis and Schwarzenegger are too old, so write for the guy out of 24 and someone out of Stargate Atlantis.” But the studio calls and says they’re going with something by Dryden and Davenant, and I say to the limey, “Take it from me, it’s gonna be another piece of crap like Prospero’s Books.” I mean, gimme a break!

 

 

 

 ii.   Love’s Labour Won, or Rosencrantz and the Stapler

 

 

O thou, the very stuff of draftsmen’s dreams,

 

Whose sheaves by naughty Zephyr scatterëd

 

Abroad in autumn, are unruly reams,

 

Come hither to my bare and virgin bed.

 

What ghosts of lovers past come fluttering

 

(As I thy bends of wire do contemplate

 

By midnight candle, pale and guttering)

 

And, moth-like, beat their wings against my pate?

 

I love thee! Ah, thy handle firm and true

 

That nestles in my eager, cuppëd hand!

 

Thy spring, that all my force cannot subdue,

 

Which, when I bid ‘Contract!’ doth then expand!

 

Ah, Rosencrantz! Thy stapler is the sun,

 

Love’s labour's now secured by staple-gun!

 

 

In a list

A contest entry

    : , Your review:

    Comment Suggestion: What is your your first impression?
    Line numbers  • Invite them to read
    : no Cost: 0 free left 0 points, You have (?)

Comments

1 - 26 of 26

  • Dark Otter
    March 19
    Edit | Reply

    Yep!

    Definitely funny, definitely Mairi and definitely gold.


  • aeolia
    March 7

    Edit | Reply
    ...oh. my. friggin'. god. pardon me while i try to comment through the intense fit of laughter your stapler sonnet inspires. i mean, seriously, it's in perfect metre and archaic english and it's good beyond belief. and about rosencrantz and the stapler! i'm so glad you picked that option as well. amazing job.

    liked the noble kinsmen bit too.

    thanks for the entry and sorry about the wait in judging. hope you enjoyed the contest!

    -endymion

    • Mairi bheag gold member
      March 8

      Edit | Reply
      I am glad this one gave you a laugh.

      I have been worried, on your behalf, that the site owner might cancel your contest because of the time taken to judge it; but it seems like you have that in hand now.

      I enjoyed entering.

      • aeolia
        March 8
        Edit | Reply
        yeah, i was worried about that too, but i didn't want to judge when some people had reserved and said they were reading the plays. i gave them too much time and they didn't post anyway, which was unfair to you guys who wrote stuff. =/


  • yukitosumi
    February 8
    Edit | Reply
    pale and guttering?

    pppffffffffffffffffffffffffffAHHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    This might just be the best poem ever. I was considering taking the Rosencrantz and Stapler prompt but...I could never out write this one. This is hilarious. AND IT WAS GOOD! THat was the best part! It was like...a beautiful love poem....about a STAPLER.

    ASHFAISFHASjfnAKSJNf.

    Best,
    El

  • chordphrute
    January 10
    Edit | Reply

    Indeed


    • Mairi bheag gold member
      January 11
      Edit | Reply
      You liked it?

      (or you thought it was crap, like I said in my IM? )


  • redbird
    January 10
    Edit | Reply
    ahahahah!! so awesome


  • IronMaiden1236
    January 10
    Edit | Reply
    Well wrought, well met, well well well!!


  • Amera gold member
    January 10

    Edit | Reply
    "arse" is not a bad word here, we say that when we want to clean up the word "ass". Your bed must be "bare and virgin" because you sleep in mine.
    I really do love the poem, the rhyme and meter is perfect.

    Love,
    Amera♥


  • cricketjeff gold member
    January 10

    Edit | Reply
    Der Bard Iz BAK!!!

    Bill reborn in brilliance, I have a grin big enough to threatent the top of my head, A thrice worthy entry to the contest!

    Superb stuff and only you could do it

  • Bad Bill
    January 10
    Edit | Reply
    This amused me no end - clever you!

    Still chortling,
    Bill


    • Mairi bheag gold member
      January 10
      Edit | Reply
      I'm glad you liked it, Bill. Not one of my great works, but a bit of inconsequential fun.

  • chordphrute
    January 9
    Edit | Reply
    I am waiting for greatness here!


  • redbird
    January 9
    Edit | Reply
    yay, rabby!


    • Mairi bheag gold member
      January 10
      Edit | Reply
      Save the clappies! Save the clappies! Sheesh, 'bird, you'd clap if I yawned!

  • aeolia
    January 9
    Edit | Reply
    even two noble kinsmen? that's the only one i haven't read. if you don't want to do the stapler option, there's always the dryden and davenant adaption of "the tempest" (called "the enchanted isle," i believe) that isn't shakespeare, but it would be an interesting thing to read nonetheless. your pick. i really look forward to your entry!

    • Mairi bheag gold member
      January 10
      Edit | Reply
      Damn, forgot about "kinsmen"! I haven't read all of it, but on the other hand I have read all of Chaucer's "Knight's Tale" (lo these many years). I think doing "The Enchanted Isle" would be rather like doing "West Side Story", or Kurosawa's "Ran".

      OK, I shall mull on "Two Noble Kinsmen" and give you Rosencrantz in my notes field at the very least.

  • cricketjeff gold member
    January 9
    Edit | Reply
    I have the same dilemma but didn't see the poetic possibilities in the stapler, actually (thanks to the BBC) I have read AND seen them all.

    • Mairi bheag gold member
      January 9
      Edit | Reply
      Bro, would you mind waiting for the entry before handing out the clappies! (I'm already half-way through the sonnet to the stapler; if I'm given LLW I shall put the sonnet in the ANs.)

1 - 26 of 26