@ Katsuun
I'm on page 7 now, and I must say - weird punctuation... or rather, wrong punctuation (colons and semi-colons mainly... in italics, whatever they are called... scene descriptions, maybe?).
page 22... What?... I've been caught in the action, but now... wasn't it supposed to be a theatre play? Impalement, cleaving through and vines entangling a character? I rarely go to the theatre, but aren't those pretty hard to pull off onstage. Also, in one scene, elves sit on a tree, and dwarves work further off in the valley. What size do you suppose the stage should be to not make them not noticing each other ridiculous?
Also, again, I rarely go to the theatre, but the gods' banter seems a bit too long and content-free for a movie, for example. e: Now, I understand they are supposed to convey the ridiculous spirit of DF, but on that point I'd like to make a comparison. Compare the madness of your gods to the talk in Alice in Wonderland. While the latter, while seemingly incoherent, brings forth images and allusions, the latter... well, they just banter and reference events the audience wasn't witness to.
page 23. I think lines should continue even after the focus has switched to the interrupting character. Don't you think that an actor stopping mid-sentence will have an unintended comical effect?
page 25. Why do you re-announce the speaker's name while Morun is scribbling? I'd understand if there was a section where he was "
not writing".
Overall impression: it becomes almost incredibly solid closer to the end. I became very involved in the Urist and Morun's dialogue. Frankly, feels like a delightful twist.
Uh,... You know what? I'm ready to take on a honorary position of a jury, as my bonus... Head hurts for some reason. Well, I hope people here benefit from it.
Edit: @Katsuun. You seem to mix some script format positions. I thought it looked conspicuous, now I've looked at Celtx theatre sample, and I think I've got it: if a character leaves or enters the stage, you write it in italics in stage direction; if he/she does something other worthy of attention, it's parenthetical. You may want to look into it more... or not, if you're sure, and I just don't know what I'm talking about, which is about right. However, it's my format nitpick for you.