OUR PITCH
Jesse (Georgie) is an outcast within her friendship group. The year before her twin sister died because of her stupid mistake of listening to Ashley (Elle). A year has passed and she begins to have flash backs of the car crash. She has now become very depressed which makes she feel like she has drifted from the group. But Jesse is soon reunited with her sister... sooner than she thought. She and her friends were invited over to her friends house, Hal (Joe), where she gets a big surprise. Ashley has planned to try and get hold of her dead twin by doing a séance. After everyone had all settled down into Hal's tree house, they link hands to help connect with the other side. They are successful in contacting the spirit world, only to release the evil spirit of Jesse's twin. Jesse lets go of everyone and breaks the circle as her twin possesses her, opening her eyes to show that she isn't herself as her eyes are now blood red. She screams, releasing all of her anger and hatred as she telekinetically throws everyone against the walls of the tree house which sends them all unconscious. Jesse proceeds to finish what she started and collects a chain from the wall to end the life of the still conscious yet shaken Hal, leaving only Ashley who is attempting to crawl to her safety. Jesse turns towards Ashley to return the favour she dealt out an entire year after her death (as Ashley is the one who told Jesse to swerve the car resulting in the twins death in the first place).
After everyone is dead, Jesse sits in the middle of the tree house looking down at her bloody hands. She then lets out a scream of pain that releases the spirit of her sister, leaving her there with all of her friends dead bodies surrounding her. She is alone, once again.
By Elle Morris Cope.
After everyone is dead, Jesse sits in the middle of the tree house looking down at her bloody hands. She then lets out a scream of pain that releases the spirit of her sister, leaving her there with all of her friends dead bodies surrounding her. She is alone, once again.
By Elle Morris Cope.