The Brit List, a line-up of the best unproduced scripts from UK screenwriters has unveiled its 2024 list.

At the top this time is Faebian Averies’ crime drama The Rubber Faced Men from NBC Universal. The story is set in West Wales in the early 80s and centres on a man and his teenage stepson who attempt to take down an international drug smuggling ring.

The Brit List is a showcase for emerging UK screenwriters. UK Film & TV companies recommend the best unproduced scripts they have seen in the past year. Those with the most recommendations make the list.

Writers who appear on list are invited to take part in a yearlong programme of seminars where they meet and hear from commissioners, showrunners, directors and producers. Over the 16 years since it was started, 82 scripts from writers featured on The Brit List have been produced including multiple BAFTA, OSCAR and Emmy winners, such as The King’s SpeechThe Danish Girl, The Favourite and Responsible Child.

 

THE BRIT LIST 2024

TWENTY EIGHT RECOMMENDATIONS

The Rubber Faced Men by Faebian Averies (Curtis Brown)

Producers: NBC Universal

Form: TV Genre: Crime

 Summary: West Wales, 1983. One man and his teenage stepson go about taking down an international drug smuggling ring after uncovering a secret bunker on the beach.

 

TWENTY FOUR RECOMMENDATIONS

Chika by Jenny Takahashi Stark (Curtis Brown)

Producers: Fable Pictures

Form: TV Genre: Drama Comedy

Summary: CHIKA is a coming-of-age comedy drama about a working-class Oxbridge student who deals drugs to fund her Dad’s desperately needed heart surgery, and her adventures with her best friend as she discovers herself in an elitist, patriarchal establishment.

 

TWENTY TWO RECOMMENDATIONS

Conflicts by Christina Sweeney-Baird (Curtis Brown)

Producers: Euston Films

Form: TV Genre: Crime Drama

Summary: Millie, a criminal barrister, is assigned to the defence team of the man she thinks killed her sister, twelve years before. He’s killed again: but is he guilty? And if she ensures he’s convicted for this crime, will another killer go free?

 

TWENTY ONE RECOMMENDATIONS

Behave Yourselves by Richard Tahmasebi & Christopher Vernon (Independent Talent Group)

Producers: Big Talk

Form: Feature Genre: Comedy

Summary: Craig is desperate to impress Dallas, his charismatic work-Dad at a Brooklyn-based digital marketing / probably-something-to-do-with AI company. The lengths he is willing to go to are tested when their company ski-trip to a run-down New England resort goes off the rails after a member of the IT department dies in mysterious circumstances on the first night.

 

TWELVE RECOMMENDATIONS

Catch A Butcher by Cassiah Joski-Jethi (Independent Talent Group)

Producers: Tedium Entertainment

Form: Feature Genre: Psychological horror

Summary: In 19th Century India, a naive English nurse arrives at an isolated maternity hospital on a quest to continue her father’s legacy of “caring for” the mixed-race babies born from British soldiers and Indian women. But soon, the nurse discovers a sinister force lurking inside not just the hospital, but also herself…

 

Night Movers by Jakob Lancaster (Curtis Brown)

Producers: Available

Form: TV Genre: Thriller

Summary: Night Movers is a darkly comic, crime thriller centred around two siblings who run an undercover “night movers” business. It’s a 6 x 45’ returning series that draws influence from shows like GUILT and BAD SISTERS; as well as from classic film noirs like SUNSET BOULEVARD and DOUBLE INDEMNITY.

 

Counting Cards with My Father by Lydia Rui Huang (The Agency)

Producers: Arenamedia

Form: Feature Genre: Drama

Summary: Sick of bouncing around from home to home, troubled teen Lisa seeks out their estranged poker-playing father, Sammy. After hunting him down at the casino, Lisa manages to convince a reluctant Sammy to become a team for the upcoming tournament. However, Lisa must face whether or not gambling is really in their blood when they find themselves going all in.

 

ELEVEN RECOMMENDATIONS

Heart of the Earth by Jon Champion (Curtis Brown)

Producers: Available

Form: TV Genre: Drama

Summary: A grief-stricken college freshman is presented with an opportunity to bring his brother back from the dead but must find someone else to take his place in the afterlife.

 

The Grip by Ross Dunsmore (Casarotto)

Producers: New Regency / Morenike Williams

Form: TV Genre: Noir Thriller

Summary: A twisty, youthful noir thriller set in Glasgow, The Grip is a contemporary tale played out in a heightened world of razor sharp dialogue and grey morality. All the noir elements are here, obsession, desire, fate, all the classic characters, visual keys and thematic threads, but reimagined, remade to explore one central question – will the youth of today cave in to conformity, or turn the world on its head?

 

Troops by Rory Gibson (The Haworth Agency)

Producers: Silverprint Pictures

Form: TV Genre: Dark Comedy/Thriller

Summary: Rankin, a jewel thief on the lam from a vengeful employer, is drawn into running a dysfunctional rural scout troop. He propels the troop to new heights but in sticking his head above the parapet his past catches up with him. Only now he has

much more to save than himself.

 

TEN RECOMMENDATIONS

Hungry Joe by Paul Holbrook & Sam Dawe (United Agents / unrepresented)

Producers: Studio Pow

Form: Feature Genre: Thriller / horror

Summary: An impoverished single mother struggles to hold on to her sanity as she’s forced into extreme measures to satisfy her son’s insatiable, inhuman appetite.

 

Lovesong by Sarah Morgan (Casarotto)

Producers: The Imaginarium

Form: Feature Genre: Folk horror

Summary: Grieving for the loss of his husband, an elderly goth is struck by an overwhelming fear of death – til he meets a mysterious hag living in the woods, and an unlikely friendship blossoms with the spring. A love story about horror, and a horror story about love.

 

Lucy Negro by Azuka Oforka (Independent Talent Group)

Producers: Available

Form: TV Genre: Historical Drama

Summary: An ill-fated love story set in turbulent Elizabethan England, inspired by the controversial theory pertaining to Shakespeare’s Dark Lady of the Sonnets.

Jon Creamer

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