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Tycoon Actor in Hollywood

"Tycoon Actor in Hollywood" unfolds the story of a failed actor from Earth who finds himself transmigrated into the body of a struggling young man in New York, USA, in a parallel world. Join us as we follow Lucas Knight's journey, step by step, as he ascends to stardom in the heart of Hollywood. --- [This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. While certain renowned figures may appear in this narrative, their portrayal is fictionalized and does not intend to represent their actual lives or actions.] If you are interested, you can check the advance chapters in my P@treon.com/NewComer714

NewComer714 · 映画
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325 Chs

Final Scene

With "127 Hours" filming consuming his days, Lucas postponed renewing his ABC contract for now. He welcomed calls from IA agents and even hoped to meet some, but scheduling proved challenging for the next few days.

Lucas' cryptic mention of another project left the agents perplexed. Suspecting a potential rival gig, they opted for a strategic delay, hoping to secure Lucas' attention once his hands were free.

Meanwhile, the "127 Hours" set buzzed with anticipation as the final act drew near.

One scene stood out above the rest – a scene where Lucas, his body a living testament to Aron's ordeal, wrestled with a soul split between desperate hope and crushing despair.

Every frame pulsed with raw emotion, from the raw exhaustion painted on his face to the silent scream etched in his eyes, mirrored by the relentless sweat trailing down his parched skin. But even in this desolate abyss, a flicker of defiance refused to be extinguished.

The thought of his family, their faces a distant mirage shimmering in the unforgiving heat, served as a lifeline, anchored him to a world he clawed to return to. And even the sliver of sunlight that dared to intrude through the canyon's gaping maw, painting tantalizing shadows on the rock face, whispered hope in the face of despair.

Aron angled his leg, seeking the elusive sunbeam that trickled down the canyon's gaping maw. For a blessed moment, its warmth kissed his sun-starved skin, a fleeting echo of normalcy in this suffocating tomb. But the respite was cruel, leaving him even more acutely aware of his imprisonment. The rock, cold and unyielding, clamped down on his right arm, a silent tormentor.

Then, a new sensation prickled his skin, sending a shiver down his spine. On his forearm, beneath the crushing weight of the boulder, a bone rasped against another with a sickening crunch.

Hope, long a flickering ember, flared into a searing flame. His arm, trapped for days, might offer the key to his own escape.

The lens captured Lucas, his face sculpted by the brutal symphony of pain. Then, a subtle shift. An understanding, grim and cold, chased away the raw misery.

Fear?

No. Five days in this sunless pit had blunted its bite. Instead, a twisted joy flickered in his hollow eyes. The camera caught the subtle change – the weary slump straightening, the flicker of resolve battling exhaustion. In this abyss of despair, Aron had found not just resignation, but a morbid hope. In the agonizing fracture of his bone, he saw not defeat, but a grotesque key, twisted and macabre, that might just unlock the prison that held him captive.

Salvation. A macabre word for a desperate act. The fractured bone in his forearm, a gruesome symphony of crunching cartilage, only fueled Aron's resolve. With each rasping movement, hope twisted in his soul like a thorny vine.

His weary face, etched with days of ordeal, broke into a chilling yet jubilant grin. "Yes!" he rasped, a sound more primal than human. The cheap multi-tool, his only savior in this sun-starved prison, felt almost comforting in his calloused grip.

The broken bone, a gruesome gift, meant the blade wouldn't meet resistance. With a steely glint in his eye, Aron pressed the serrated edge to his flesh, the first act of a horrifying yet liberating dance.

His grip tightened, knuckles white with determination, as he pressed the serrated edge against his own skin, the first tremor of pain a morbid promise of freedom.

The silence screamed louder than any wound. Blood, expectedly hot and urgent, trickled like ice water down a numbed, alien limb. Aron's face, a roadmap of sun-baked exhaustion, twisted into a grotesque parody of relief, only to crack under the searing bite of returning pain. The camera, a voyeur in this descent into flesh and bone, lingered on the prosthetic arm, a chillingly perfect echo of Lucas's own. Veins, like macabre vines, snaked beneath skin that mirrored his own sickly pallor.

Every pore, every imperfection, rendered with unsettling hyperrealism. The crew, eyes hardened by years on set, flinched away. But Lucas, his gaze unflinching, consumed the scene.

Groans, raw and primal, clawed their way through his clenched teeth, a counterpoint to the rhythmic sawing of the blade. In his eyes, a storm of anguish and steely resolve battled for dominance – the terrifying price of freedom etched in blood and bone.

"Hngh!"

A sob, strangled in mid-cry, died on Lucas' parched lips. His eyes, like smoldering embers in a sun-scorched landscape, refused to tear away from the severed arm.

Each rasping groan, each flinch against the blade, was a battle cry against his own flesh.

Director Danny, experience of cinematic brutality, felt a flicker of nausea creep up his throat. The prosthetic carnage, shockingly real, spattered and oozed, painting Lucas' face, his clothes, the very rocks beneath him in crimson horror.

It was too much, almost, yet he couldn't look away. Lucas, his gaze unwavering, his body a canvas of agony, absorbed every tremor, every sickening detail. The sawing of the blade, the hiss of fake blood, the symphony of pain – he drank it in, a twisted sacrament in the name of survival.

A collective breath escaped the crew as Lucas, his face a mask of steely resolve, severed the last tendon of the prosthetic arm.

His dedication to the scene, born from countless discussions with Danny and Aron Ralston himself, was palpable.

Every agonizing rasp of the blade, every flinch of his torso, echoed Ralston's ordeal with brutal authenticity. Lucas spent a grueling 42 minutes in that raw vulnerability, his every tremor captured by the unflinching camera.

Even with the inevitable cuts of 42 minutes, the exhaustion etched on Lucas' face, the tremor in his hands, whispered a truth no editing could erase.

The metallic tang of fake blood filled Lucas' nostrils, a macabre perfume of his triumph. With a groan that mirrored the groan of the canyon itself, he sank back against the cold stone, the shock of freedom battling the lingering fire of pain.

In front, the severed limb, chillingly real in its fabricated gore, lay hostage to the rock, a grim testament to the ordeal he had walked through. His gaze, haunted by the echoes of agony, traced the empty sleeve, a phantom limb still tingling with phantom nerves.

The camera clicked off, but the silence lingered, a heavy cloak draped over the canyon. The crew, faces pale and eyes wide, exchanged wordless glances. Lucas, his face drained of color, stared at the empty sleeve where his arm had been, a phantom limb still tingling with phantom pain. The scene was over, but the echoes of his agony would resonate long after the final edit. Was it Oscar-worthy? Only time would tell.

Danny, ever the strategist, leaned over the exhausted Lucas. "Cut," he called, concern etching his features.

"We can pick this up tomorrow. You need rest." Lucas, his face a mask of sweat and grit, shook his head. "No, director," he rasped, voice raw. "One take. The exhaustion, it has to be real." A wave of unease washed over the crew. Was Lucas pushing himself too far? They'd seen actors go method, but this felt different.

Director Danny and the crew stood stunned. Lucas' dedication reverberated like a shockwave, leaving them speechless. His final performance, etched in exhaustion and raw triumph, had pierced their hearts. With a nod to Lucas' suggestion, they resumed filming.

The camera rolled as Lucas as Aron, reborn from the canyon's prison, bathed in the sun's embrace. He savored the desert wind, guzzled the precious floodwater, and his laughter soared into the vastness.

Sunlight, a forgotten luxury, bathed Aron face as he emerged from the narrow canyon, his prison for days. He stumbled, weak but free, his eyes wide with a joy that bordered on delirium. The desert air, harsh yet liberating, filled his lungs. He knelt, cupping his hands in the shallow water that had pooled in the sand, the taste of life on his parched lips.

With a shaky hand, Lucas, as Aron waved towards distant figures, their shouts muffled by the ringing in his ears. He had done it. He was free. The director and crew, initially worried about the authenticity of his acting as he swayed, rushed forward, but it was too late. Lucas, his body drained from the ordeal, crumpled to the sand.

But even in his faint, a smile flickered on his lips. He had faced the abyss and emerged, forever changed, forever free.

"Bottle of water, stat!" Danny boomed, his voice cracking with a mix of panic and relief. His gaze darted between Lucas, fainted against the sun-baked sand, and the crew scrambling for supplies. Two medics, faces grim, rushed forward, their movements mirroring the director's urgency.