← all pitches
Flour Power
$FLOURPOW
$FLOURPOW

Flour Power

See everything by @awesome_visuals

A hyper-muscular housewife reaches for the flour jar only for her scheming pet to unleash a whiteout avalanche, turning the kitchen into a slapstick war zone of sneezes, slips and feline revenge. She ends up looking like a powdered doughnut while the cat claims victory from the countertop.

The pitch — full draft

A hyper-muscular housewife reaches for the flour jar only for her scheming pet to unleash a whiteout avalanche, turning the kitchen into a slapstick war zone of sneezes, slips and feline revenge. She ends up looking like a powdered doughnut while the cat claims victory from the countertop.

Writing your pitch…

Our development team is drafting the whole thing — logline, three-act story, dream cast, dream crew, and a written opening scene. About 20 seconds.

100% yours.

This whole film is yours to own and lead the raise on. bMovies just takes a 1% tokenising fee — that's our payment for minting it. No equity, no catch.

Sign in as @awesome_visuals to claim it

Claim with the X account that posted the tweet. Then the whole package above is yours to edit.

⛓️

Tokenise it — on your chain

Connect your own wallet and mint $FLOURPOW on the chain you want — no bMovies account needed. You keep 99%. bMovies takes a 1% listing fee in tokens to list it on the platform.

Screenplay draft

Brenda Kowalski flexed her forearms against the granite of her Levittown split-level kitchen, the same surface where she had laminated three hundred pie crusts for the county fair last autumn. Her deltoids strained the seams of a gingham apron printed with repeating sheaves of wheat. On the counter sat a dented KitchenAid that had once belonged to her mother-in-law, its dough hook still crusted with last week’s brioche. A single thirty-pound sack of King Arthur bread flour rested on the open shelf above the range, its paper stamped with the mill’s red logo and a tiny warning about dust ignition. Brenda reached for it on tiptoe, calves knotting like ship’s cables.

From the top of the refrigerator, Mr. Sourdough watched. The tabby’s left ear was notched from an old screen-door fight; his collar tag read “Property of the 4-H” in stamped aluminum. For three weeks he had studied the latch on the flour sack, batting at it each night after Brenda fell asleep to the drone of the Food Network. This morning he had already clawed through the paper just enough that the bag perched at a thirty-degree angle, held only by a single wire tie and the weight of its own contents.

Brenda’s fingers brushed the sack. The tie snapped. Forty cups of fine white powder erupted in a silent plume that filled the space between the range hood and the soffit before gravity remembered itself. The first wave coated the chrome toaster, the stand mixer, and Brenda’s outstretched arm in a single breath. She sneezed once, twice, the force rocking her backward into the open dishwasher. A cascade of plates clattered; one chipped against the tile. Mr. Sourdough yowled, not in fear but in punctuation, and launched from the fridge to the countertop, tail high.

Flour kept falling. It coated the gas burners, the cooling rack of madeleines, the open jar of vanilla. Brenda lunged for the cat, socks skating across the new layer of powder. She grabbed the edge of the sink; her hand closed on the spray nozzle instead. A jet of cold water met the airborne flour and turned it to paste. The paste hit the floor. Brenda’s feet left the ground. She landed on her coccyx with a thud that rattled the spice rack; cumin and smoked paprika rained down like colored snow.

Mr. Sourdough padded along the backsplash, avoiding every patch of wet flour. He paused at the open window above the sink, where the neighbor’s tabby watched from the fence. With one deliberate paw he knocked Brenda’s phone into the disposal. The disposal switch, already half-buried in powder, clicked on by accident. The phone’s ringtone emerged as a wet gargle. Brenda crawled toward the noise, eyes streaming, forearms now striped with paste and paprika like war paint. She reached the lower cabinet, yanked it open, and found the bag of powdered sugar she had planned to use for royal icing. It burst across her face in a second cloud, finer than the first.

The kitchen clock, shaped like a pie slice, read 9:17. Outside, the school bus passed; the children’s laughter sounded far away, filtered through flour dust and the ringing in Brenda’s ears. She sat against the oven door, chest heaving, every muscle in her back burning from the morning’s deadlift session. Mr. Sourdough leapt onto the counter’s highest point, the spot usually reserved for the finished cake. He sat, tail curled neatly around his paws, and began to lick the single clean patch of fur on his chest. Below him, Brenda’s outline remained printed in white on the linoleum, arms still raised as if offering the missing flour sack to an invisible judge. A single madeleine, half-coated, rested on her knee like a surrender flag. The cat’s eyes, half-lidded, reflected the morning light through the flour haze, two small green lamps above a battlefield already turning to paste.
poster + full draft, ready to share
Love it? It's 100% yours.

Claim this pitch with the X account that posted the tweet, edit anything, and lead the raise. bMovies just takes a 1% tokenising fee.

Claim as @awesome_visuals
bMovies · bmovies.online — mint your ticker, raise from your audience, own your film, get distributed. We take a 1% tokenising fee. Sign in as @awesome_visuals at bmovies.online/pitches to claim this pitch and lead the raise.
Flour Power ($FLOURPOW) · your movie pitch · bMovies