Just One Inch

Screenplay Type
2024 Young Or Golden Writer
Equality Award
Logline or Premise
Inspired by a true story, an elderly woman recounts the tales of her ancestors from the glittering age of the Romanovs through today, and how their struggles, sacrifices, and perseverance has impacted her decision whether or not to have an operation to save her life.
First 10 Pages

A car misses teacher RACHEL STEIN by JUST ONE INCH. She falls backwards and hits her head. She awakens in the hospital and is told an MRI reveals a brain tumor. She asks the hospital RABBI, about the meaning of life. "My ancestors struggled and persevered to survive, and now it all ends with me. So, I ask you, why am I still alive?" The Rabbi asks her about her ancestors.

Russia 1897. Her great grandfather, peasant VLADIMIR is summoned in the night by TSAR NICOLAS II. The Tsar desperately needs a scribe who can read and write, and Vladimir fits the bill. Vladimir and his family are moved into the royal palace. His wife, SVETLANA, cooks alongside the Tsar's chef. Elizabeth grows up with the Romanov children and learns how to cook from her mother, and life is full of riches. But by 1907, Vladimir is concerned by the Tsar's indifference to the poverty of his people, and his brutal "justice." In 1917, the Revolution comes. The Tsar is forced to abdicate and he is later arrested.

Vladimir and his family flee the palace and make a daring escape through a forest. Only father and teen daughter ELIZABETH survive, dodging bullets by just one inch as they swim under a river. Vladimir tells his daughter to find her UNCLE MOYSHE's home and eventually go to America. Then he sacrifices himself and draws the pursuers' attention. He is shot dead.

Elizabeth, Rachel's grandmother, struggles through the forest surviving for days on her wits. She is hungry, and thirsty, and tired. Just as she is about to give up, she finally arrives at Moyshe's farm. She's warmly welcomed by her uncle, who also mourns the loss of his brother, Vladimir. Their time together is limited, though. In 1918, slaughter squads are coming for anyone associated with the Tsar. Elizabeth must again flee, this time to America. It takes a bribe, but soon she's on the boat, with a first-class case of seasickness!

Passenger NATHAN is just as bad off. They bond over their nausea. When the ferry docks, they meet again when his car literally (accidentally) knocks her off her feet. The lovebirds marry when they reach America.

They do well for themselves in a new clothing store—or at least they do at first. Then the Great Depression hits. When their second son dies, Nathan starts drinking himself to death. Elizabeth fends for herself and daughter RUTH, selling soup to make ends meet. They endure.

In 1934, teenaged nursing student Ruth doesn't have much money, but something about her makes enterprising butcher MAX an admirer. Their love is adorable, and lasting—even through the onset of war and Max being drafted. In combat, he's almost killed. He returns home to Ruth where they marry, and their daughter Rachel is born.

The world keeps spinning, and the cooking skills Elizabeth learned at the Tsar's palace soon bring her into the orbit of Hollywood celebrities like Lenny Bruce and Frank Sinatra.

By the 80s, her family is in Malibu and comfortably well off. Unfortunately, a mudslide kills Rachel's parents, but Elizabeth and Rachel survive. At the gravesite, Elizabeth's heart can endure no more, and she dies.

Now back to the present. DOCTOR KOPINSKI informs Rachel that she will have only 6 months to a year to live if she doesn't have the tumor removed. Rachel doesn't see the point in living anymore. The Rabbi convinces her to follow her grandmother Elizabeth's will to survive and have the surgery. Rachel has an epiphany and agrees to the surgery.

Rachel learns after the surgery that the tumor would have been inaccessible had it been JUST ONE INCH to the right or left. Out of love and respect, and in gratitude for her grandmother's will to live which saved Rachel's life, Rachel dedicates this script to her.

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