A black ops agency that talks to dolphins and orcas teams up in an interspecies assault to free a captive orca, and to battle a Russian sub sent to intercept them.
Type:
Feature
Status:
For sale
Page Count:
125pp
Genre:
Action, Adventure, Family, Sci-Fi, Thriller
Budget:
Blockbuster
Age Rating:
13+
Synopsis/Details
Navy SEAL Commander Rip Tide is in charge of implementing a below-the-radar impossible mission force. He's an old school kinda John Wayne cowboy who gets things done but isn't very PC about it, especially with the ladies. After a botched up clandestine assignment that gets his foot blown off, he's reassigned to work with an old acquaintance: Professor Dylan Mare. They used to train dolphins for the Navy. It included teaching them how to be suicide bombers. Tide didn't like that part and got himself transferred. Now he's back and discovers three things:  1) Mare has seen the light too and no longer uses cetaceans of any form to kill themselves for Uncle Sam.  2) Mare's daughter Ariel is all grown up and is worthy of Tide making a fool of himself over and she's strong enough to put him in his place. 3) Professor Mare has learned to... talk to the cetaceans. He's invented an electronic AI device that allows them and us to communicate effortlessly (you can listen to an audio storyboard to get the tone of that interaction below). That device is key to getting an orca called Johnny to work with them and the Navy on any future operations because Johnny has told them flat out if they want his help or the cooperation of any other orca or dolphin unless an orca is freed first. Freeing the female orca involves the covert loan of a Navy heavy-lifting helicopter, a nighttime assault on the aquarium, and a state-of-the-art solar-powered e-catamaran to hide her and Johnny on their long journey to Puget Sound via the Panama Canal.  Not all goes well, of course. In fact, thanks to Russia's expertise at hacking, one of its nuclear submarines is waiting for them on the Pacific side of the Panama Canal to hijack the technology including the orcas. Luckily Tide and Ariel's courage, Johnny's fearless protect-the-pod-at-any-cost instincts, and the imprisoned orca's 50-years of pent-up hatred and need for revenge, prove to be too much even for the big bad Russian Navy as its sub sinks. Although the cat is demasted in the ensuing battle and nearly sunk, the orcas team up to tow the listing vessel and its battered crew up the Pacific coast into Puget Sound. The orca and her family find each other, welcoming her back by leaping out of the water, over and over again around the cat. Ariel unexpectedly reaches up and kisses Tide. He responds with a long, lusty kiss before both are drenched in cold saltwater. The two turn and see Lolita and Johnny treading water, looking at them and laughing. Tide and Ariel look at each other and start laughing too.
Video
Storyboard with audio of a pivotal scene from the feature film.

All content on ScriptRevolution.com is the intellectual property of the respective authors. Do not use or reproduce scripts without permission, even for educational purposes.
Want to read this script? You must join the revolution first. Don't worry, it's free, easy, and everyone's welcome.

This Script Is Loved By 2 Readers

Wilmer Villanueva's picture
Lyndsay Tibbetts's picture

The Writer: D.C. Copeland

Hello, thanks for taking a look at who I am. Hopefully you aren't here because you were “misdirected,” that you want to find out more about just who this D.C. Copeland is after reading one of my loglines. I'm an artist, a muralist, and a writer whose canvases and stories are for the most part writ large across time and space. While in college at the University of Miami , I co-founded Ecology Action of Florida . That sense of saving the environment can be found in many of my works. While creating works of art and fiction, I supported myself and my family as the Warner Bros Pictures Florida Field Rep for Publicity and Promotion for nearly 20-years. During that time I got to know many… Go to bio
D.C. Copeland's picture