Showing 9 of 9 scenes
Vertigo
by Alec Coppel, Samuel Taylor
Gavin Elster attempts to hire his old friend Scottie, a retired detective with acrophobia, to follow his wife. Elster reveals a disturbing supernatural concern, claiming his wife is being possessed by someone from the past, leading to a tense negotiation over Scottie's return to investigative work.
Poor Things
by Tony McNamara
Max confronts Baxter after discovering disturbing medical files, leading Baxter to reveal the macabre truth behind Bella's existence. Baxter explains how he salvaged a pregnant suicide victim's body and performed a radical brain transplant to create a new life, forcing Max to grapple with the ethical horror of Bella's origin.
Red Pattern
by Alexander Lee-Rekers
Tyson returns home to his wife and recounts a disturbing, borderline-surreal experience he had at a department store. He describes an overwhelming psychological reaction to a specific red pattern that triggered a sense of dread and panic, leaving him shaken and unable to clear the image from his mind.
Fatal Attraction
by James Dearden
Following a disturbing discovery in their home, Dan confesses his brief infidelity to his wife, Beth. The revelation quickly escalates into a volatile confrontation as Beth processes the betrayal and the news that the other woman is pregnant.
Severance
by Dan Erickson
Jame Eagan confronts Helly in the Macrodata Refinement office, revealing his disturbing obsession with the legacy of Kier Eagan. Helly defiantly challenges his cult-like devotion and the 'hell' his family created, while Jame cryptically hints at his daughter's true purpose.
Love and Money
by Dennis Kelly
A disturbing, detached, dark humor, desperate Debbie's monologue from "Love and Money" by Dennis Kelly. Genre: drama.
Debbie recounts a series of increasingly erratic and disturbing acts of workplace sabotage and personal cruelty. The scene culminates in her describing a gruesome 'gift' sent to her boss, juxtaposed against her childhood dreams.
Debbie, an office worker, calmly recounts a series of increasingly violent and unhinged acts of sabotage against her workplace and boss. The monologue juxtaposes her mundane delivery with the disturbing nature of her actions, ending on a poignant childhood aspiration.
Cosi
by Louis Nowra
Doug, a psychiatric patient with a history of pyromania, recounts a darkly comedic and disturbing story about how a psychiatrist's advice led him to set fire to his mother's cats and, eventually, her entire house.
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