two-paths-structure-blow-out Blow Out

Quadrant

Better tools, insufficient (tragic virtue variant). Jack's post-midpoint approach — engagement, public exposure, refusal of the cover-up — is morally sounder than the professional detachment he started in. It fails because the world is structured to absorb and defeat it, and because the engagement is what kills Sally. If Jack had stayed behind the recorder, she would be alive.

Initial Approach and Post-Midpoint Approach

Initial approach (pre-midpoint): Document the assassination from behind the equipment. Capture the bridge audio, sync it to Karp's photographs, build a clean reconstruction, take it to the police. Trust the institutions to act on accurate evidence.

Post-midpoint approach (post-erasure): Engage personally. Go public through a trusted media outlet. Recover the original film from Karp through Sally. Wire Sally as a witness, run her into the rendezvous, and force the conspiracy into a confrontation it cannot erase.

The 10 Rivets

1. Equilibrium

Jack reviews Co-ed Frenzy rushes with Sam at Independence Pictures. Sam articulates the two assignments — a new scream, new wind — and Jack accepts. He's a competent technician working on B-movies; the smallness is the point. The Freddie Corso pattern (revealed later) explains the retreat behind the equipment.

2. Inciting Incident

Jack records wind under the Henry Avenue Bridge and his Nagra captures a bang followed by a blowout. A car breaks through the guardrail. He dives in and pulls Sally Bedina from the submerged sedan. McRyan is dead in the driver's seat. The professional tool that kept Jack safely behind the story has captured one.

3. Resistance / Debate

The next morning at his studio, Jack plays the recording for Sally. She hears the bang and the blowout, allows the bang sounds like a gunshot, and refuses to engage further. She heads for the door. The first person to hear the evidence walks away from it.

4. Point of No Return

Jack abandons Sam's scream auditions and locks himself in the studio. He cuts Karp's published photographs frame by frame and threads them alongside his bridge audio, building a synchronized reconstruction. The professional assignment is set aside; the investigation is now Jack's work.

5. Rising Action / Initial Path

Jack tells Sally the Freddie Corso story and asks her to stay in Philadelphia. He screens his reconstruction for Detective Mackey, who dismisses it. Sally confronts Karp and is stonewalled. Lawrence Henry pressures Jack to keep Sally's name out of the record. The documentary path runs into institutional refusal at every contact point.

6. Midpoint

Jack returns to his studio and finds every reel magnetically erased. Sam relays Mackey's verdict — the tape "had nothing on it." Reel after reel: blank. The physical evidence is gone. The documentary path has collapsed; what remains is active engagement.

7. Falling Action / New Path

Jack accepts Frank Donahue's offer to appear on television. He forces Sally's confession about the honey-trap blackmail scheme and sends her to Karp to retrieve the 8mm film. The new path is assembled: audio (rebuilt), film (recovered), witness (Sally), outlet (Donahue).

8. Escalation

Burke impersonates Donahue and arranges to meet Sally. At 30th Street Station, Jack straps a transmitter to Sally's torso — the same model that shorted out and killed Freddie Corso. The trap is set, and the audience can see Jack arming it with the exact instrument of his prior catastrophe.

9. Climax

Burke leads Sally to the Port of History rooftop during the Liberty Day fireworks and attacks her with a garrote. Jack hears Sally calling through the wire — "Jack, please" — races through the city in his Jeep, crashes through the parade, and reaches the rooftop. He kills Burke with Burke's own knife. Sally is already dead. He cradles her body as the fireworks finish overhead.

10. Wind-Down

The news rewrites Sally's death as the heroic intervention of an unidentified stranger against the Liberty Bell Strangler. Days later, Sam plays the new scream — Sally's death scream — into the Co-ed Frenzy mix. Jack delivers the line "It's a good scream" three times, each flatter than the last. Both opening assignments are filled, both at Sally's cost. Professional detachment is restored, hollow.