In any given year roughly 250,000 speculative screenplays circulate around Hollywood, written for free by someone with a dream and a keyboard. Perhaps 50 will be purchased. That means 249,950 untold stories will silently wither, never to stimulate our imagination. But that Darwinian process changes today. Every Friday
Write Enough! resurrects moribund scripts from the
Hollywood Slush Pile, drawing on a veritable Marianas Trench of passed over pictures for a peek at might have been.
Today's offering is the 1983 sci fi/historical thriller:
E.T. Panzer Ace.
Eager to piggyback on the success of Steven
Spielberg's 1982 mega-hit, screenwriters typed out their top
friendly alien offerings. But one canny scribe counter-punched. Aspiring wordsmith Moss Karling, a military history buff and bartender at Bob's
Frolic Room in Hollywood, poured his dark passions onto
the page. Eventually he convinced character actor (and regular
customer) Gill Hong to show the script to his agent.
Karling's story followed the Spielberg path of a lost alien. But Moss elected to have the creature marooned in 1943 Germany. The
frightened being is discovered hiding under a Panther tank by lonely gunner Manfred Knobble. Knobble lures it into the barracks by
leaving a trail of schnapps and cigarettes. Through an improbable series
of events, E.T. eventually becomes a top panzer commander on the
Eastern Front, personally decorated by Hitler who is told the odd-looking soldier hails from Tibet.
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In a rare production still, E.T. (Gill Hong) is awarded an Iron Cross by Hitler (Loaf Masters). |
But a suspicious Gestapo want the chain-smoking alien brought in for questioning. Knobble helps his friend construct a device to call for rescue, using an old concertina, barbed wire and a Volkswagen battery. The contraption works and a spacecraft arrives. Soldier and alien toast farewell with mugs of schnapps. As the groggy extraterrestrial staggers onto the ship, Manfred presents a parting gift—an antitank rocket. Thick with drink, the befuddled E.T. accidentally triggers the weapon inside the craft, setting off a thermonuclear explosion that vaporizes ship, alien, Knobble, and twenty-nine acres of the Black Forest.
"I'm just not seeing this," said Gill Hong's agent. A determined Karling set out to film the picture himself. He raised enough money to shoot fourteen minutes of footage, using borrowed equipment and actors like Cleveland Bevel who went out to become a featured extra in
Air Wolf.
In time, Karling's interest in the project waned and he began a successful career writing historical fiction. His copy may be found on many official U.S. government websites. Hong worked steadily, later becoming a fixture in Tucson dinner theater. His former agent was arrested for lewd conduct with office furniture.
But now a lost tale has finally been told.
Image: alienresearchalliance.com