So I wrote a single-camera sitcom, when all around are looking for studiobound stuff.
The gist: Barry Gifford is a driving instructor brought out of retirement to teach his nephew to drive. The main relationship is between Barry and Tom, but we meet other instructors along the way (hence the Sophia insert).
Barry is mental. And a bit horrible. Maybe too horrible, I dunno.
This is from halfway through the first part (it was written with a commercial channel in mind, hence the "end of part one"). Apologies for the length.
EXT. DVLA TEST CENTRE CAR PARK - DAY
There are four cars in the car park. One is pink and full of cuddly toys and nodding dogs, bearing the sign "Miss Sophia’s Simply Scrumptious School of Driving". One is all black, with black tinted windows carrying the sign "Van Cleef: Pale Driver". One is burgundy with tartan seat covers and bears the sign "Mr. Mortimer’s Driving School. I Will Teach You How To Drive."
And one is white with a DORSAL FIN on its roof.
Also in the car park is TOM, late teens, quite studious-looking, wearing glasses. He surveys the vehicles.
TOM
Please God it’s the black one.
Enter Barry Gifford.
BARRY
Tim?
TOM
It’s Tom.
BARRY
Yeah. Look at you, you’ve grown.
TOM
Yeah, well.
BARRY
You’ve grown an extra pair of eyes, anyway, eh? Four eyes.
TOM
Um, yeah, Uncle Barry?
BARRY
Please, just call me Barry. Or Mr. Gifford. Or Sensei.
TOM
So which is your car? It’s not the black one, is it?
BARRY
Or Yoda. Yeah, the L-plate Yoda, that’s me.
He tosses Tom the car keys.
BARRY (cont’d)
Here you go, hotshot, the keys to the beast.
TOM
The beast?
BARRY
(indicating the white car)
Orca! Isn’t she a beauty? Carcaradon carcharias.
TOM
What?
BARRY
It’s Latin. Big-us f**king fish-us. Great White. In you get.
Tom gets in the car, as does Barry.
INT. BARRY’S CAR - CONTINUOUS
The men start putting their seatbelts on.
BARRY
Welcome to my humble abode. Strap yourself in, sunshine. Let’s motor.
INT. BARRY’S CAR - LATER
They are driving through a built-up area.
BARRY
So, did you bring your twenty-five quid?
TOM
Twenty-five? Mum said it was twenty.
BARRY
Nah, I’m sure I told her on the phone it was twenty-five.
TOM
But I only have twenty on me. Family discount?
CUT TO:
EXT. A CASH POINT - DAY
Tom inputs his PIN while Barry waits in the parked car.
Barry pips the horn and shouts from his window.
BARRY
Timmy! Get another twenty out and buy me a hundred Lambert and Butler there’s a good lad. I’ll pay you back later.
He gestures towards a nearby Off Licence. Tom nods and continues his transaction. Barry beeps again.
BARRY (cont’d)
And a pack of fruit shorties!
CUT TO:
INT. BARRY’S CAR - LATER
The car is in motion once more. Barry, feet up on the dashboard, is devouring a biscuit and looking at his watch.
BARRY
Now, your lesson will be one hour long. That’s the union standard, there’s nothing we can do about that. We’ve had a bit of a f**k about, and we’re down to 50 minutes.
Tom opens his mouth to complain.
BARRY (cont’d)
It ain’t my fault he asked you for I.D. now is it? Be thankful I was there to vouch for you. Now as I explained to your mother, I do have a little errand to run this morning, so you’re going to have to drive me to pick some stuff up from the wife’s.
TOM
Auntie Portia? I heard you’d split up.
BARRY
It’s a trial separation, that’s all, everybody does it these days don’t they? Like a lovely little vacation from each other.
TOM
When did this happen?
BARRY
May 8th, 2003.
TOM
That’s quite a holiday.
BARRY
You know how it is, sometimes you book an extra couple of days in your hotel, maybe stop off in a couple of b and b’s on the way back cos it’s a great holiday and you don’t want it to finish, but you always come home in the end, Timmy, you always come home in the end.
TOM
It’s Tom.
BARRY
Now she lives over in Hutton village...
TOM
I’ll struggle to get there in 50 minutes!
BARRY
There and back mate, we don’t do things by halves at Gifford’s School of Motoring, know what I mean? You’d best step on it, hadn’t you?
INT. SOPHIA’S CAR - DAY
The car is stationary. It has pink, fluffy seat covers. The stereo plays smooth lounge music. Her PUPIL is an eighteen year old boy, who is having some difficulty keeping his mind on the task at hand.
He turns the ignition. It turns over but doesn’t ignite.
Sophia is a yummy mummy. Her voice is almost a purr.
SOPHIA
Try again, honey.
He turns it again: nothing.
SOPHIA (cont’d)
Oh honey, don’t be nervous.
He turns it again: still nothing.
SOPHIA (cont’d)
There’s no shame. It can happen to anyone.
Flustered, he turns it again. The car revs into life, jerks forward two feet, and stalls. They sit for moment. Her pupil hangs his head.
SOPHIA (cont’d)
Oh sweetheart, we’ll wait five minutes and try again.
INT. BARRY’S CAR - DAY
Barry and Tom are still driving, but the scenery outside has changed. They are in the countryside.
BARRY
Now, I’m not your normal, everyday driving instructor. You can go to any driving instructor and they’ll tell you how to reverse around a corner, they’ll show you how to execute a perfect three point turn, but they won’t teach you anything about the rich history of ideas behind each of these manoeuvres. Driving, it’s not a science, there isn’t a right and a wrong way to do it.
TOM
Really?
BARRY
Well, yeah, there is, but it’s more of an art is what I'm saying. See, you go to Mr. Mortimer, or, God help you, Van Cleef, you do the painting by numbers don’t you, get a nice picture of a kitten in a welly at the end of it, thank you very much. But you want something a bit more esoteric, the full cherubs-and-fat-birds-and-Jesus-Christ-Almighty-on-your-ceiling renaissance experience, you come to Barry Gifford. She’s having an orgasm.
Tom is confused.
TOM
Sorry, what?
Barry gestures out of the side window at a horse rider.
BARRY
Her on that horse. Yeah, it’s a well-known fact. It’s why you see so many birds bobbing up and down in the saddle, innit? You or me tried that, we’d just get ball-ache. Speaking of which, we’re nearly there.
The scenery outside the car has changed to a picturesque village.
BARRY (cont’d)
Now, when I tap the dashboard I want you to slowly and safely pull in to the kerb on the left.
TOM
I thought Auntie Portia lived on the other side of the road.
BARRY
Yeah, well, your Auntie Portia and her crack team of attack dogs at Clampett, Straddle and Sodomy or whatever the f**k her lawyers are called have imposed a U.N.-style no fly zone around her borders.
TOM
So...
BARRY
So I’m not allowed within 30 feet of her anymore. Don’t look like that, long distance relationships can work. So I’m going to tap the dashboard in five... Four... NOW!
The car pulls in, with a slight bump. They sit in silence for a moment.
TOM
Was that all right?
BARRY
(quietly)
You touched the kerb.
TOM
Did I? I didn’t notice.
BARRY
You touched the kerb.
TOM
Right. I’m sorry.
BARRY
Oh, you don’t apologise to me, sunshine. What good is apologising to me going to do? No, when we touch the kerb, we get out, and we apologise to the kerb.
Tom just looks blankly at Barry.
TOM
You... So do you want me to get out of the car?
BARRY
Well the kerb ain’t going to hear you from in here, is it?
TOM
No. No it isn’t.
Tom unbuckles his seatbelt.
EXT. OUTSIDE THE CAR - CONTINUOUS
Tom gets out of the car. He looks perplexed. His lips move almost imperceptibly as he mumbles an apology.
Barry shouts from inside the car.
BARRY
Louder!
TOM
I’m sorry Mr. Kerb for bumping into you, it won’t happen again.
Barry’s door opens and he starts to get out. He sounds really angry.
BARRY
You call that an apology? On your knees!
END OF PART ONE.