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Scene Map 33
# PG SLUGLINE
1 1
PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE
2 1
EXT CEMETERY - FUNERAL
3 2
INT COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE
4 3
EXT CEMETERY
5 4
EXT OLD MAN'S HOUSE
6 5
EXT POLICE STATION
7 6
EXT TRENT HOUSE - PATIO
8 8
EXT GRAVEYARD
9 9
EXT HOLLYWOOD / WASHINGTON D.C. DAY
10 11
INT SPACESHIP
11 12
INT SPACESHIP - CORRIDOR
12 13
EXT TRENT HOUSE
13 14
INT COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE
14 17
EXT CEMETERY NIGHT
15 18
INT SMALLER SHIP
16 18
EXT CEMETERY
17 20
EXT CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE
18 22
EXT PENTAGON - AERIAL
19 27
INT MOTHER SHIP
20 30
EXT TRENT HOUSE
21 32
EXT CEMETERY
22 35
INT SPACESHIP
23 35
EXT CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE
24 36
INT SPACESHIP
25 36
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
26 37
INT SPACESHIP
27 42
EXT CEMETERY - CAR
28 44
INT SPACESHIP
29 44
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
30 45
INT SPACESHIP
31 46
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
32 46
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
33 47
INT CRISWELL SET
Scene Map
33
# PG SLUGLINE
1 1
PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE
PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE
PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE TITLE: "Criswell Predicts..." CRISWELL Greetings, my friend. We are all interested in the future, for that is
2 1
EXT CEMETERY - FUNERAL
EXT. CEMETERY - FUNERAL
EXT. CEMETERY - FUNERAL CRISWELL All of us on this earth, know that there is a time to live, and that there is a time to die, yet death is always a shock
3 2
INT COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE
INT. COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE
INT. COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE DANNY Fifteen to four. Yup, right on schedule. There's the ol' San Fernando Valley out there now.
4 3
EXT CEMETERY
EXT. CEMETERY
EXT. CEMETERY GRAVEDIGGER #1 D'you hear anything GRAVEDIGGER #2 I thought I did.
5 4
EXT OLD MAN'S HOUSE
EXT. OLD MAN'S HOUSE
EXT. OLD MAN'S HOUSE CRISWELL The grief of his wife's death became greater and greater agony. The home they had so long shared together, became a
6 5
EXT POLICE STATION
EXT. POLICE STATION
EXT. POLICE STATION EXT. CEMETERY CRISWELL Minutes later, the police, lead by Inspector Daniel Clay, arrived at the
7 6
EXT TRENT HOUSE - PATIO
EXT. TRENT HOUSE - PATIO
EXT. TRENT HOUSE - PATIO PAULA That's the fifth siren in the last hour. JEFF
8 8
EXT GRAVEYARD
EXT. GRAVEYARD
EXT. GRAVEYARD Clay is attacked by Ghoul Man and Vampira. He fires a few shots and is ultimately snuffed, as we say. EXT. CEMETERY - CRIME SCENE LT. HARPER
9 9
EXT HOLLYWOOD / WASHINGTON D.C. DAY
EXT. HOLLYWOOD / WASHINGTON D.C. - DAY
EXT. HOLLYWOOD / WASHINGTON D.C. - DAY UFOs fly over Hollywood and Washington, D.C. People panic. Colonel Edwards watches through binoculars as rockets are fired at the UFOs. CRISWELL People turning south from the freeway were
10 11
INT SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP MESSENGER Your space commander has returned from Earth. RULER
11 12
INT SPACESHIP - CORRIDOR
INT. SPACESHIP - CORRIDOR
INT. SPACESHIP - CORRIDOR TANNA I feared His Excellency wouldn't take our report this well. EROS
12 13
EXT TRENT HOUSE
EXT. TRENT HOUSE
EXT. TRENT HOUSE JEFF I still think you oughta go in town and stay with your mother until I get back. PAULA
13 14
INT COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE
INT. COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE
INT. COCKPIT OF AIRPLANE DANNY You're mighty silent this trip, Jeff. JEFF Huh?
14 17
EXT CEMETERY NIGHT
EXT. CEMETERY - NIGHT
EXT. CEMETERY - NIGHT Lightning. The dead old man walks out. CRISWELL Residents near the cemetery paid little attention to the blast of thunder and
15 18
INT SMALLER SHIP
INT. SMALLER SHIP
INT. SMALLER SHIP EROS They'll be at the hatch in a moment. You can open it now, Tanna. Turn off the electrodes quickly. They can't tell us
16 18
EXT CEMETERY
EXT. CEMETERY
EXT. CEMETERY LARRY What do you suppose that noise was? LT. HARPER Whatever it was it's no more strange than
17 20
EXT CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE
EXT. CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE
EXT. CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE KELTON Look, here it is Lieutenant. LT. HARPER
18 22
EXT PENTAGON - AERIAL
EXT. PENTAGON - AERIAL
EXT. PENTAGON - AERIAL CRISWELL But meanwhile, in the Pentagon, in Washington DC... INT. PENTAGON OFFICE
19 27
INT MOTHER SHIP
INT. MOTHER SHIP
INT. MOTHER SHIP EROS We are ready to report, Excellency. RULER You are many days late.
20 30
EXT TRENT HOUSE
EXT. TRENT HOUSE
EXT. TRENT HOUSE LT. HARPER Mr. and Mrs. Trent...this is Colonel Edwards from Washington DC. PAULA
21 32
EXT CEMETERY
EXT. CEMETERY
EXT. CEMETERY LT. HARPER Colonel I've been out here so often you'd think I'd taken a lease on this place. COL. EDWARDS
22 35
INT SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP EROS They'll discover our ship soon. TANNA You going to let them find us?
23 35
EXT CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE
EXT. CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE
EXT. CEMETERY - CLAY'S GRAVE JEFF You know, maybe we're barking up the wrong tree. LT. HARPER
24 36
INT SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP EROS (Looking out window) A moment or two more, and you will be the first live Earth people ever to enter a celestial ship.
25 36
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP LT. HARPER Look out! JEFF You goin' in that thing?
26 37
INT SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP TANNA They're in the outer chamber now. Eros, do we have to kill them? EROS
27 42
EXT CEMETERY - CAR
EXT. CEMETERY - CAR
EXT. CEMETERY - CAR Kelton is now inside the car. Larry pulls up beside him. LARRY What happened to you? KELTON
28 44
INT SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP Eros looks out the window, still going on... EROS Then one day it could all be gone, in one big puff of smoke and ball of fire.
29 44
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP Larry and Kelton approach the ship. LARRY Holy cow! Look there. It's Clay all right, there's no mistaking that.
30 45
INT SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP
INT. SPACESHIP EROS Your men have felled the big one. This could only happen because the electrode ray is off. He'll walk again when I turn
31 46
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP LARRY Open up in there, open up! COL. EDWARDS Get that door open.
32 46
EXT CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP
EXT. CEMETERY - SPACESHIP LT. HARPER Oh, I wonder if that's the last we'll see of them? COL. EDWARDS
33 47
INT CRISWELL SET
INT. CRISWELL SET
INT. CRISWELL SET CRISWELL My friend, you have seen this incident based on sworn testimony. Can you prove that it didn't happen? Perhaps on your way

Plan 9 from outer space

A military colonel and a civilian pilot must stop extraterrestrial invaders who resurrect the recently dead to build an army before the aliens deploy a solar bomb that would destroy the universe.

See other logline suggestions

Overview

Poster
Unique Selling Proposition

Episodic graveyard set pieces and spaceship confrontations accumulate dread through recurring portentous narration rather than a single linear plot arc.

AI Verdict

Model upgrade — March 31, 2026
Verdicts are often harsher under the new readers, but the analysis is significantly stronger. Under the previous models, this script would have scored:
The scoring scale changed with the upgrade — use these only to compare against earlier revisions of this script. Click any reader to open their full legacy review.

Synthesis Where readers agree and split
3.3

The ensemble lands on a qualified pass, contingent on a structural rewrite that forges a causal spine and protagonist anchor out of the current episodic fragments.

Readers read as Mainstream commercial3 Specialty1 Sci fi Horror majority

The script is a mainstream commercial pulp sci-fi/horror aiming to deliver sensational B-movie thrills and a thematic warning about human self-destruction through a tabloid narrator frame and audacious set pieces.

Readers split on the contract lane: three grade it as mainstream commercial requiring standard genre momentum, while one reads it as specialty, accepting the loose plotting and episodic structure as intentional features of a deliberate ominous register.

Would readers champion it?
Not yetNot yetReaders wouldn’t actively push for it.
WeaklyWeaklyMentioned, but no real push behind it.
ModeratelyModeratelyMentioned favorably to the right buyer.
StronglyStronglyActively championed across their network.
ClaudeWeaklyGPT5WeaklyGeminiNot yetGrokNot yet
How much rewrite does it need?
Start from scratchStart from scratchPremise or core engine isn’t working. Page-one rebuild.
Structural rewriteStructural rewriteSpecific acts or zones need rebuilding — not starting over, but significant revision work on those sections.
Targeted rewriteTargeted rewriteSpecific scenes or threads need rework. ~1 month.
Just polishJust polishLines and pacing tweaks. A few weeks.
ClaudeStructural rewriteGPT5Structural rewriteGrokStructural rewriteGeminiStart from scratch
How distinctive is the voice?
GenericGenericReads like other scripts in the genre.
EmergingEmergingHints of a distinctive voice, not yet locked in.
DistinctiveDistinctiveA clear, recognizable authorial voice.
One-of-a-kindOne-of-a-kindA voice that couldn’t be anyone else’s.
ClaudeEmergingGPT5EmergingGrokEmergingGeminiDistinctive
What's working 2 of 4 readers agree

The Criswell narration and tabloid pulp frame supply a distinctive tonal identity that separates the script from generic creature features and anchors the reader through structural gaps.

What's blocking 3 of 4 readers agree

The absence of a causal chain and central protagonist drive leaves the read without a spine, making escalation feel episodic and undermining set-piece impact.

Why not lower

The distinctive pulp frame, conceptual audacity, and consistent ominous register keep the draft above a dismissible read despite severe structural fractures.

Why not higher

The foundational absence of a protagonist spine, causal momentum, and engineered payoff prevents the script from delivering earned catharsis or sustaining genre momentum.

Fix-first · Protect-while-fixing · Reader splits · Quick credibility wins
Rewrite map

The ensemble converges on a structural rewrite to forge a causal spine and protagonist anchor out of currently episodic set pieces, while preserving the distinctive pulp narration that prevents the draft from collapsing into incoherence.

Readers read as Mainstream commercial3 Specialty1 majority

Protect while fixing 2
Criswell narration as tonal anchor

Restructuring for causal momentum risks cutting or compressing the narration bridges that currently hold the episodic fragments together.

Gonzo sci-fi horror imagery and conceptual hook

Forcing a tighter causal chain could flatten the standalone, audacious set pieces that currently provide the script's primary engagement engine.

Fix first 3
Absent causal chain between sequences

The read stalls in the middle as sequences reset rather than accumulate, leaving the reader without forward momentum or escalating stakes.

Root cause

The script relies on omniscient narration and parallel subplots to bridge scenes instead of engineering character decisions that force the next sequence.

No central protagonist anchor

Reader urgency dissipates because dramatic attention drifts among multiple reactive characters, making the climax feel observational rather than earned.

Root cause

The narrative distributes plot beats across an ensemble without clarifying who owns the story or what sustained objective drives them through the acts.

Expository dialogue and lectures stall momentum Less critical

Tension deflates at key moments because information is delivered as static monologues rather than emerging from active conflict.

Root cause

The script uses dialogue to deliver premise and theme directly to the audience instead of embedding exposition in character choices under pressure.

Your decisions 2
Primary lane classification Consequential
Side A

Three readers classify the script as mainstream commercial pulp, grading it against standard genre momentum and payoff expectations.

Side B

One reader classifies it as specialty, accepting the episodic structure and loose plotting as intentional features of a deliberate, ominous register.

Advocacy ceiling Consequential
Side A

Two readers assign weak advocacy, seeing the distinctive pulp frame and imagery as enough to tentatively champion if structural repairs are made.

Side B

Two readers assign no advocacy, finding the structural fractures too severe to support a championable call even with the conceptual hook intact.

Quick credibility wins 1
Bracketed production cues and casual action lines
Story Facts
Genres:
Science Fiction 80% Horror 60% Drama 25% Thriller 20%

Setting: 1950s-1960s, A fictional town in the United States, primarily in a cemetery, an airplane cockpit, and a spaceship.

Themes: Denial and Ignorance in the Face of the Unknown, The Unknown and Mysterious, Humanity's Self-Destructive Tendencies, The Consequences of Death and Resurrection, Governmental Secrecy and Cover-ups, Existential Threat and the Call to Action, Grief and Loss

Conflict & Stakes: The conflict revolves around the threat posed by extraterrestrial beings who resurrect the dead, endangering the lives of the living, particularly Jeff and Paula, with the stakes being their survival and the revelation of the truth about UFOs.

Mood: Ominous and suspenseful with elements of campy horror.

Standout Features:

  • Unique Hook: The resurrection of the dead by aliens using advanced technology, blending horror with science fiction.
  • Plot Twist: The revelation that the aliens are not here to conquer but to save humanity from its own destructive tendencies.
  • Distinctive Setting: The juxtaposition of a small-town cemetery with a high-tech alien spaceship creates a unique atmosphere.
  • Innovative Ideas: The use of humor and campiness to address serious themes of death and the unknown.

Comparable Scripts: Plan 9 from Outer Space, The Twilight Zone, Night of the Living Dead, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, The Outer Limits, The X-Files, Frankenstein, The Andromeda Strain, The Day the Earth Stood Still

How 5 AI Readers Scored The Script

Readers graded as Mainstream commercial3 Specialty1 majority
Claude GPT5 Gemini DeepSeek Grok Average spread Row tint: weak mid strong excellent
Premise i
5.8
Plot i
3.4
Structure i
4.0
Character i
2.8
Dialogue i
2.8
Tone / Voice i
4.8
Theme i
4.6
Marketability i
4.4

Script Level Analysis

Writer Exec

This section delivers a top-level assessment of the screenplay’s strengths and weaknesses — covering overall quality (P/C/R/HR), character development, emotional impact, thematic depth, narrative inconsistencies, and the story’s core philosophical conflict. It helps identify what’s resonating, what needs refinement, and how the script aligns with professional standards.

Screenplay Insights

Breaks down your script along various categories.

Overall Score: 6.34
Key Suggestions:
To strengthen the script, prioritize adding depth to the antagonist Eros through a clear backstory and motivations that justify his mission, while tightening pacing by condensing overly long scenes and clarifying convoluted plot transitions. Bolster emotional stakes between Jeff and Paula with more intimate, vulnerable moments to ground the supernatural elements and improve audience connection.
Story Critique

Big-picture feedback on the story’s clarity, stakes, cohesion, and engagement.

Key Suggestions:
Streamline the narrative to maintain coherence across acts, clarify the aliens' motivations and Plan 9 mechanics early on, deepen character arcs for emotional stakes, and rewrite dialogue for natural flow to sustain tension and avoid tonal whiplash into comedy.
Characters

Explores the depth, clarity, and arc of the main and supporting characters.

Key Suggestions:
To elevate the script, prioritize deepening protagonist arcs—particularly for Jeff, Paula, and Lt. Harper—by introducing internal conflicts, moments of doubt, and emotional vulnerability in key scenes like 12 and 20. Flesh out antagonists like Eros with moral dilemmas to avoid one-note villainy, and ensure supporting characters like Kelton and Larry evolve beyond skepticism to heighten tension and thematic resonance.
Emotional Analysis

Breaks down the emotional journey of the audience across the script.

Key Suggestions:
To improve the script, prioritize breaking the relentless horror with brief moments of relief, warmth, or character introspection—such as expanding Jeff and Paula's affection or humanizing supporting characters like the police and aliens—to create emotional rhythm and prevent the story from becoming monotonous.
Goals and Philosophical Conflict

Evaluates character motivations, obstacles, and sources of tension throughout the plot.

Key Suggestions:
The analysis highlights an opportunity to tighten the protagonist's arc by more explicitly linking internal grief and acceptance of mortality to the external alien threat, creating seamless transitions between personal turmoil and plot-driven action rather than treating them as parallel tracks.
Themes

Analysis of the themes of the screenplay and how well they’re expressed.

Key Suggestions:
To sharpen the script's craft, integrate the central denial theme more seamlessly into character arcs by showing personal grief (e.g., the old man's loss) directly fueling broader resistance to the alien warnings, rather than relying on narration and jumps between subplots; this would tighten pacing and make the unknown elements feel like natural extensions of human flaws instead of disconnected shocks.
Logic & Inconsistencies

Highlights any contradictions, plot holes, or logic gaps that may confuse viewers.

Key Suggestions:
To improve the script, prioritize aligning character actions with their stated motivations—especially the aliens' shift from seeking aid to violence—and streamline repetitive cemetery scenes into fewer, purposeful escalations. Resolving time jumps, dropped tactical objectives, and expository monologues will create tighter pacing and logical cause-effect that heightens tension without relying on contrivances.

Scene Analysis

All of your scenes analyzed individually and compared, so you can zero in on what to improve.

Scene-Level Percentile Chart
Hover over the graph to see more details about each score.
Go to Scene Analysis

Other Analyses

Writer Exec

This section looks at the extra spark — your story’s voice, style, world, and the moments that really stick. These insights might not change the bones of the script, but they can make it more original, more immersive, and way more memorable. It’s where things get fun, weird, and wonderfully you.

Unique Voice

Assesses the distinctiveness and personality of the writer's voice.

Key Suggestions:
Leverage the script's strength in building atmospheric tension through dialogue and sudden supernatural twists by replicating the gradual unease and shocking reveals from standout scenes across the narrative to maintain consistent immersion in the mystery and unknown.
Writer's Craft
Analyzes the writing to help the writer be aware of their skill and improve.
Memorable Lines
Spotlights standout dialogue lines with emotional or thematic power.
Tropes
Highlights common or genre-specific tropes found in the script.
World Building

Evaluates the depth, consistency, and immersion of the story's world.

Key Suggestions:
To strengthen the script, amplify the seamless blending of 1950s suburban normalcy with sudden supernatural intrusions by tying character grief and fear more directly to environmental shifts, such as using cemetery darkness to mirror personal loss and escalate into alien threats, which will improve pacing and emotional immersion without relying on narration.
Correlations

Identifies patterns in scene scores.

Key Suggestions:
To strengthen the script's craft, prioritize deepening character changes and conflict in the opening scenes to accelerate story progression and emotional engagement from the start. Use foreboding tones more consistently to elevate stakes early on, and ensure dialogue quality scales with character development to maintain momentum across the narrative.
Loglines
Presents logline variations based on theme, genre, and hook.