The Tyranny of Tyndall Stone
Walking through Winnipeg's Exchange District, Jay contemplates the heavy permanence of the city's architecture and the unsettling impermanence of his own future, all while trying to keep up with Leaf's relentless quest for hidden art.
EXT. ALLEY - DAY
A wall of heat radiates from old brick. The air shimmers. Winnipeg's Exchange District bakes under a white-hot summer sun.
LEO (22), intelligent but with the weary posture of someone already tired of the future, sweats through his t-shirt.
LEAF (22), vibrant and alive in beat-up Blundstones, seems immune to the heat. She practically skips over the cracked pavement.
LEO (V.O.)
It’s not the heat that gets you, it’s the history. Every brick feels like it’s been baking since 1912, soaking up a century of summer afternoons and radiating it back. It’s a physical weight.
Leaf stops, points three storeys up the side of a warehouse.
SOUND: Her voice echoes slightly between the brick walls.
LEAF
See? I told you there’d be one here. Peerless Products. What do you think they made?
ANGLE ON THE GHOST SIGN
A faint white spectre on weathered red brick. The typography is ambitious, full of serifs and flourishes from a forgotten era. The words "PEERLESS PRODUCTS" are barely legible.
Leo squints, shielding his eyes.
LEO
Peerless? Probably something deeply mediocre. Socks. Tinned beans. Something you'd never brag about.
LEAF
(laughs)
Cynic. I bet they made dreams. Or, like, industrial-strength soap that could clean anything. The kind of soap that could scrub the regret out of a Tuesday morning.
LEO
That's a big promise for soap.
LEAF
It was a different time.
She frames the sign with her hands, a director composing a shot.
LEAF (CONT'D)
Think about the guy who painted that. Up on a scaffold, sun in his eyes, probably getting paid a nickel a letter. He paints 'Peerless Products' and for a hundred years, it stays. He’s gone, the company is gone, the soap is definitely gone. But the letters are still here. Isn't that wild?
Leo looks from the sign to the oppressive, permanent buildings around them. He says nothing.
LEO (V.O.)
It is wild. It’s also suffocating. All this permanence. Built to last forever. I’m twenty-two and I’m not even sure what I’m doing next Tuesday. My own future feels like a ghost sign that hasn't even been painted yet.
EXT. MCDERMOT AVENUE - CONTINUOUS
They emerge from the alley onto a street lined with stern, century-old stone buildings. The air is thick with the smell of hot asphalt and a faint, sweet bakery scent.
SOUND: A Winnipeg Transit bus HISSES past, its air brakes letting out a long, weary SIGH.
Leaf bumps her shoulder against Leo’s.
LEAF
The problem with you is that you see the end of things. I see the fact that they happened at all.
LEO
The problem with you is that you think a half-empty glass is a great start on a new art installation.
LEAF
Exactly! It's all about perspective. You see a faded sign, I see a story. You see a crumbling warehouse, I see a thousand windows, each with its own little square of sky.
She flashes a genuine, un-ironic grin. She grabs his arm.
LEAF (CONT'D)
Come on.
She pulls him abruptly into another alley.
EXT. NARROW ALLEY - MOMENTS LATER
The shift is immediate. The traffic noise dies. The air cools.
And the wall explodes with color.
It’s a mural, a universe painted on brick. A giant BISON made of constellations gallops across the wall. Its horns are crescent moons, its eyes are swirling nebulae. Every dot of spray paint is a deliberate star.
It is so vibrant, so alive, it makes the ancient buildings around it feel like fossils.
Leo just stares.
LEO
Whoa.
LEAF
(breathing it in)
Right?
She steps closer, running her fingers just above the painted surface, not quite touching, as if feeling its energy.
LEAF (CONT'D)
This wasn't here last month. Someone just… did this. For everyone. For no reason other than to make a dark alley beautiful.
Leo’s eyes trace the spray-painted stars. The cynical armor cracks for a beat, then re-forms.
LEO
It won't last a hundred years.
Leaf looks back at him, her smile not faltering.
LEAF
Doesn't have to. It's here now.
Her words hang in the gloom. Deeper in the alley, a steel door is set into the brick. It’s painted black, plastered with peeling posters for long-dead bands.
A heavy-duty padlock holds it shut. But the hasp is pulling away from the rotting wood of the doorframe.
Leaf walks to it, tugs gently on the lock.
SOUND: The groan of stressed wood.
LEAF (CONT'D)
This is part of that old theatre, I think. The one that’s been empty since the nineties.
Leo watches her, his historian brain buzzing.
LEAF (CONT'D)
Peerless Products lasted a century. The space bison might last a year.
She looks from the door back to Leo. A dare in her eyes.
LEAF (CONT'D)
How long do we last?
She gives the lock another, harder PULL.
SOUND: A sharp CRACK of splintering wood.
The hasp rips further from the frame. The door is no longer secure.
Leaf steps back, leaving the choice hanging in the air. She looks at Leo. An invitation. Stay outside and analyze, or break through and live.
A wall of heat radiates from old brick. The air shimmers. Winnipeg's Exchange District bakes under a white-hot summer sun.
LEO (22), intelligent but with the weary posture of someone already tired of the future, sweats through his t-shirt.
LEAF (22), vibrant and alive in beat-up Blundstones, seems immune to the heat. She practically skips over the cracked pavement.
LEO (V.O.)
It’s not the heat that gets you, it’s the history. Every brick feels like it’s been baking since 1912, soaking up a century of summer afternoons and radiating it back. It’s a physical weight.
Leaf stops, points three storeys up the side of a warehouse.
SOUND: Her voice echoes slightly between the brick walls.
LEAF
See? I told you there’d be one here. Peerless Products. What do you think they made?
ANGLE ON THE GHOST SIGN
A faint white spectre on weathered red brick. The typography is ambitious, full of serifs and flourishes from a forgotten era. The words "PEERLESS PRODUCTS" are barely legible.
Leo squints, shielding his eyes.
LEO
Peerless? Probably something deeply mediocre. Socks. Tinned beans. Something you'd never brag about.
LEAF
(laughs)
Cynic. I bet they made dreams. Or, like, industrial-strength soap that could clean anything. The kind of soap that could scrub the regret out of a Tuesday morning.
LEO
That's a big promise for soap.
LEAF
It was a different time.
She frames the sign with her hands, a director composing a shot.
LEAF (CONT'D)
Think about the guy who painted that. Up on a scaffold, sun in his eyes, probably getting paid a nickel a letter. He paints 'Peerless Products' and for a hundred years, it stays. He’s gone, the company is gone, the soap is definitely gone. But the letters are still here. Isn't that wild?
Leo looks from the sign to the oppressive, permanent buildings around them. He says nothing.
LEO (V.O.)
It is wild. It’s also suffocating. All this permanence. Built to last forever. I’m twenty-two and I’m not even sure what I’m doing next Tuesday. My own future feels like a ghost sign that hasn't even been painted yet.
EXT. MCDERMOT AVENUE - CONTINUOUS
They emerge from the alley onto a street lined with stern, century-old stone buildings. The air is thick with the smell of hot asphalt and a faint, sweet bakery scent.
SOUND: A Winnipeg Transit bus HISSES past, its air brakes letting out a long, weary SIGH.
Leaf bumps her shoulder against Leo’s.
LEAF
The problem with you is that you see the end of things. I see the fact that they happened at all.
LEO
The problem with you is that you think a half-empty glass is a great start on a new art installation.
LEAF
Exactly! It's all about perspective. You see a faded sign, I see a story. You see a crumbling warehouse, I see a thousand windows, each with its own little square of sky.
She flashes a genuine, un-ironic grin. She grabs his arm.
LEAF (CONT'D)
Come on.
She pulls him abruptly into another alley.
EXT. NARROW ALLEY - MOMENTS LATER
The shift is immediate. The traffic noise dies. The air cools.
And the wall explodes with color.
It’s a mural, a universe painted on brick. A giant BISON made of constellations gallops across the wall. Its horns are crescent moons, its eyes are swirling nebulae. Every dot of spray paint is a deliberate star.
It is so vibrant, so alive, it makes the ancient buildings around it feel like fossils.
Leo just stares.
LEO
Whoa.
LEAF
(breathing it in)
Right?
She steps closer, running her fingers just above the painted surface, not quite touching, as if feeling its energy.
LEAF (CONT'D)
This wasn't here last month. Someone just… did this. For everyone. For no reason other than to make a dark alley beautiful.
Leo’s eyes trace the spray-painted stars. The cynical armor cracks for a beat, then re-forms.
LEO
It won't last a hundred years.
Leaf looks back at him, her smile not faltering.
LEAF
Doesn't have to. It's here now.
Her words hang in the gloom. Deeper in the alley, a steel door is set into the brick. It’s painted black, plastered with peeling posters for long-dead bands.
A heavy-duty padlock holds it shut. But the hasp is pulling away from the rotting wood of the doorframe.
Leaf walks to it, tugs gently on the lock.
SOUND: The groan of stressed wood.
LEAF (CONT'D)
This is part of that old theatre, I think. The one that’s been empty since the nineties.
Leo watches her, his historian brain buzzing.
LEAF (CONT'D)
Peerless Products lasted a century. The space bison might last a year.
She looks from the door back to Leo. A dare in her eyes.
LEAF (CONT'D)
How long do we last?
She gives the lock another, harder PULL.
SOUND: A sharp CRACK of splintering wood.
The hasp rips further from the frame. The door is no longer secure.
Leaf steps back, leaving the choice hanging in the air. She looks at Leo. An invitation. Stay outside and analyze, or break through and live.