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A decaying friendship becomes the hunting ground for an ancient force of entropy that feeds on the isolation, anxiety, and disconnection of modern life— turning seven close friends into strangers, then into nothing at all.

Intent

Beneath its supernatural horror, "The Green Miracle Method for Decay Management" is about how people drift apart, friendships dissolve, and how the modern world accelerates that decay without us even noticing. The story follows a group of longtime friends in their early thirties who reunite regularly in Chicago, trying to rekindle their college bond. But they soon begin to unravel even more, pulled apart by an unseen and ancient force of entropy that exploits their deepest, yet often uniquely modern fears. Each friend is consumed alone, most of them not realizing until it’s too late that their only hope of survival was each other. The structure of "The Green Miracle" mirrors the insidious nature of entropy itself: personal breakdowns begin in the periphery before creeping to center stage, early hauntings quietly persist in later meet-ups, and later horrors have been lurking all along, unseen. In between each of the friend group’s meet-ups, the narrative zooms in on an individual character’s personal haunting. These spotlights unfold almost like standalone short films, yet they are deeply interwoven (and meant to reward repeat viewings)—early spotlights continue in the background of later scenes, while later hauntings have been quietly creeping in from the very beginning. What starts as a series of seemingly disconnected supernatural experiences reveals itself to be something far more terrifying: a force of entropy methodically erasing them, feeding on their separation until there is nothing left. Its horror is supernatural, but also the most natural force in the universe. The script taps into the sense that everything is coming apart, yet no one seems able (or willing) to stop it. The hauntings feel personal, yet universal: the crushing weight of work, the emptiness of digital life, the fear of irrelevance, the pressure to succeed, the loneliness of parenthood, the slow decay of real human connection. By the time the friends start to notice the gaps—the missing faces, the altered memories—the rot has already set in. The horror here isn’t just the supernatural entity pressing down on them; it’s the slow realization that they were not as close as they thought before it arrived. Except… …Except two of them are closer than they first seem. And that *might* be enough to, if not half entropy completely, at least keep it at bay for a while-- with an assist from a trusty car they call “the green miracle” that’s seemingly impervious to decay.

Synopsis

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