The Current's Bearing
Owen walks a swollen riverbank in early spring, reflecting on the escalating digital disconnect of society. An unexpected encounter with Terrence, a man from his past, intertwines his societal anxieties with deeply personal and unspoken longings.
EXT. RIVERBANK - LATE AFTERNOON
SOUND of a river's constant, low-frequency roar, a vibration you feel more than hear.
Worn leather boots sink into spring mud, a mix of gravel and flattened, skeletal reeds. This is OWEN (30s), introspective, weary. Each step is a deliberate act, a conscious rebellion.
The air is damp, sharp with the scent of thawing soil and an approaching storm. He breathes it in deep, a man starved of oxygen.
The RIVER is a leviathan, a churning grey-brown current gorged on mountain melt. Along its banks, the new leaves on willow branches are a tender, almost violent green against the still-bare forest. Patches of dirty snow cling to shaded crevices.
Owen runs a hand over the rough bark of a fallen tree, its surface slick with rain-dampened moss. A tiny, IRIDESCENT BLUE BEETLE scuttles from under his touch. He watches it go, a flicker of genuine feeling on his face.
He stops at a bend where the current tears at the bank, exposing a web of dark, twisted roots clinging to the earth.
CLOSE ON OWEN'S FACE
His expression is one of profound, melancholic thought. He sees more than just roots.
SOUND of a sharp TWIG SNAP nearby.
Owen’s head snaps up. His body goes rigid. He squints through the shifting, overcast light, past skeletal birches.
HIS POV
A FIGURE stands unmoving in a small, rocky cove, gazing out across the water. The posture is achingly familiar.
BACK TO OWEN
Recognition dawns. A gasp is caught in his throat.
OWEN
(a whisper to himself)
Terrence.
The figure, TERRENCE (30s), turns slowly, as if sensing the disruption in the air. He is lean, grounded, wearing a worn canvas jacket and carrying a gnarled walking stick. His dark eyes, like river stones, find Owen’s and hold them.
A beat. Owen could turn back, vanish into the trees. He doesn’t. He takes a breath and begins to walk, each step heavy.
As he draws closer, we see the details on Terrence: fine lines etched around his eyes, a faint, white scar above his left brow. He looks carved from the landscape itself.
The roar of the river fills the space between them.
TERRENCE
(a low rumble)
Owen. A rather unexpected pleasure, to find you amidst this nascent vigour.
His gaze sweeps from Owen to the turbulent water, linking the two.
OWEN
Terrence. The same, I assure you. This season compels one to witness such elemental power.
The words feel formal, theatrical. A shield.
Terrence nods, his eyes returning to the river’s frenetic dance.
TERRENCE
Indeed. A spectacle of change, yet the river persists in its ancient course. Unlike man, perhaps.
(a beat)
The world, it seems, has become a thing of fleeting images. Do you not find it so?
He doesn’t look at Owen. His words are for the panorama.
OWEN
The currents of existence do indeed appear to accelerate. And the images, as you describe them, often lack true substance. A paradox, is it not? We are more connected, yet perhaps more profoundly solitary.
Terrence finally turns to face him fully. His gaze is piercing, direct.
TERRENCE
Solitude, Owen, is not isolation. It is merely the absence of the superfluous. This river, it is solitary, yet it is not alone. It carves the earth, feeds the forest.
(he takes one step closer)
What, pray tell, does the constant stream of human utterance truly nourish?
The question hangs in the air, a direct challenge. Owen’s throat tightens. He grips his hands behind his back.
OWEN
(voice strained)
A question of considerable weight, Terrence. Perhaps the hope is that, amidst the superficiality, some genuine connections might still forge. Or perhaps… we merely cling to a fading ideal.
He meets Terrence’s gaze, searching. A flicker of something unreadable in Terrence’s eyes, then it’s gone, replaced by a careful neutrality.
Terrence shifts his weight. The encounter is over.
TERRENCE
Hope is a fragile bloom in this climate, Owen. But the river… the river continues. It remembers its source, its purpose. Unlike so many.
(he turns)
It was… a moment of reflection, then. My path calls me further upstream.
Without another word, he moves away, his boots making little sound on the soft earth. He recedes into the blossoming undergrowth, swallowed by the rugged terrain.
Owen watches the spot where he vanished. He stands alone.
The sky darkens. The wind picks up, rustling the new leaves.
SOUND of the river’s roar becomes deafening, overwhelming.
The camera pulls back, back, back, leaving Owen a small, solitary figure dwarfed by an indifferent, powerful nature. The storm is coming.
SOUND of a river's constant, low-frequency roar, a vibration you feel more than hear.
Worn leather boots sink into spring mud, a mix of gravel and flattened, skeletal reeds. This is OWEN (30s), introspective, weary. Each step is a deliberate act, a conscious rebellion.
The air is damp, sharp with the scent of thawing soil and an approaching storm. He breathes it in deep, a man starved of oxygen.
The RIVER is a leviathan, a churning grey-brown current gorged on mountain melt. Along its banks, the new leaves on willow branches are a tender, almost violent green against the still-bare forest. Patches of dirty snow cling to shaded crevices.
Owen runs a hand over the rough bark of a fallen tree, its surface slick with rain-dampened moss. A tiny, IRIDESCENT BLUE BEETLE scuttles from under his touch. He watches it go, a flicker of genuine feeling on his face.
He stops at a bend where the current tears at the bank, exposing a web of dark, twisted roots clinging to the earth.
CLOSE ON OWEN'S FACE
His expression is one of profound, melancholic thought. He sees more than just roots.
SOUND of a sharp TWIG SNAP nearby.
Owen’s head snaps up. His body goes rigid. He squints through the shifting, overcast light, past skeletal birches.
HIS POV
A FIGURE stands unmoving in a small, rocky cove, gazing out across the water. The posture is achingly familiar.
BACK TO OWEN
Recognition dawns. A gasp is caught in his throat.
OWEN
(a whisper to himself)
Terrence.
The figure, TERRENCE (30s), turns slowly, as if sensing the disruption in the air. He is lean, grounded, wearing a worn canvas jacket and carrying a gnarled walking stick. His dark eyes, like river stones, find Owen’s and hold them.
A beat. Owen could turn back, vanish into the trees. He doesn’t. He takes a breath and begins to walk, each step heavy.
As he draws closer, we see the details on Terrence: fine lines etched around his eyes, a faint, white scar above his left brow. He looks carved from the landscape itself.
The roar of the river fills the space between them.
TERRENCE
(a low rumble)
Owen. A rather unexpected pleasure, to find you amidst this nascent vigour.
His gaze sweeps from Owen to the turbulent water, linking the two.
OWEN
Terrence. The same, I assure you. This season compels one to witness such elemental power.
The words feel formal, theatrical. A shield.
Terrence nods, his eyes returning to the river’s frenetic dance.
TERRENCE
Indeed. A spectacle of change, yet the river persists in its ancient course. Unlike man, perhaps.
(a beat)
The world, it seems, has become a thing of fleeting images. Do you not find it so?
He doesn’t look at Owen. His words are for the panorama.
OWEN
The currents of existence do indeed appear to accelerate. And the images, as you describe them, often lack true substance. A paradox, is it not? We are more connected, yet perhaps more profoundly solitary.
Terrence finally turns to face him fully. His gaze is piercing, direct.
TERRENCE
Solitude, Owen, is not isolation. It is merely the absence of the superfluous. This river, it is solitary, yet it is not alone. It carves the earth, feeds the forest.
(he takes one step closer)
What, pray tell, does the constant stream of human utterance truly nourish?
The question hangs in the air, a direct challenge. Owen’s throat tightens. He grips his hands behind his back.
OWEN
(voice strained)
A question of considerable weight, Terrence. Perhaps the hope is that, amidst the superficiality, some genuine connections might still forge. Or perhaps… we merely cling to a fading ideal.
He meets Terrence’s gaze, searching. A flicker of something unreadable in Terrence’s eyes, then it’s gone, replaced by a careful neutrality.
Terrence shifts his weight. The encounter is over.
TERRENCE
Hope is a fragile bloom in this climate, Owen. But the river… the river continues. It remembers its source, its purpose. Unlike so many.
(he turns)
It was… a moment of reflection, then. My path calls me further upstream.
Without another word, he moves away, his boots making little sound on the soft earth. He recedes into the blossoming undergrowth, swallowed by the rugged terrain.
Owen watches the spot where he vanished. He stands alone.
The sky darkens. The wind picks up, rustling the new leaves.
SOUND of the river’s roar becomes deafening, overwhelming.
The camera pulls back, back, back, leaving Owen a small, solitary figure dwarfed by an indifferent, powerful nature. The storm is coming.