Hitler: Learn by the Numbers

Title: Hitler: Learn by the Numbers
Genre: Historical Drama / Psychological Thriller / Biblical Allegory
Written by: Joseph C. Jukic
Directed by: Guy Ritchie
Logline:
A haunting, poetic journey through the life of Adolf Hitler, structured through key years and matching Psalms—charting his transformation from a beaten Catholic boy to a messianic nationalist figure, and finally to a groom of death—before his story is drowned by the Psalm of peace.


TREATMENT

Opening Frame:

“Learn by the numbers, children. There is a code to evil. And it begins in pain.”


1901 – Psalm 1: “Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked…”

Location: Braunau am Inn, Austria-Hungary.
Scene:
12-year-old Adolf Hitler stands trembling before the altar at his Catholic confirmation. His eyes look up to the crucifix—hopeful, searching. Later that evening, his alcoholic father, Alois, whips him for crying in church. This becomes a ritual: beatings on every birthday. The number 1 is branded in his memory. He learns pain by the numbers.

Voiceover: “He delights not in the law of the Lord… but dreams of greatness in a barren house.”


1914 – Psalm 14: “The fool says in his heart, ‘There is no God.’”

Scene:
Trenches of World War I. Young Hitler volunteers with zeal. He writes poetry to his mother and sketches grand temples in his notebook. But mustard gas and machine guns burn all illusions. He blames Jews, communists, and atheists for Germany’s decay. He finds comfort not in faith, but in fate—and hatred.


1933 – Psalm 33: “He delivers them from death and keeps them alive in famine.”

Scene:
Germany. Starving, broken by reparations. A charismatic Hitler rises like a false messiah, delivering speeches that invoke divine destiny. He seizes power and “saves” the nation through rearmament and propaganda. Bread returns to tables. Flags rise. Psalm 33 is quoted in Nazi churches.

Voiceover: “He believed he was the Psalm—the shepherd of wolves.”


1939 – Psalm 39: “Let me know how fleeting my life is…”

Scene:
On the eve of invasion, Hitler stares into the mirror in the Berghof. He’s gaunt, manic, haunted by voices. Poland is next. Time is short, and his enemies multiply.

He whispers, “I have become a ghost of a man. A fury of destiny.”


1945 – Psalm 45: “Gird your sword on your side, you mighty one; clothe yourself with splendor and majesty.”

Scene:
A surreal, grotesque wedding in the Führerbunker. Eva Braun and Hitler marry amid crumbling ceilings and flickering lights. He wears a black military uniform like royal robes. The walls drip with sweat and smoke. Outside, Berlin burns.

A Nazi priest reads from Psalm 45 over a backdrop of collapse.
“Your throne, O god, will last forever…”
The guests are corpses and ghosts.
Hours later, they are both dead.


1946 – Psalm 46: “He makes wars cease to the ends of the earth.”

Scene:
Nuremberg Trials. The ghosts of the dead watch from above the court. A young boy reads Psalm 46 aloud in church. The words echo over the rubble of Europe.

“Be still, and know that I am God… He breaks the bow and shatters the spear.”

In a montage, we see the ovens dismantled. Flags lowered. Children playing in the ruins. A new Germany being born.


Closing Frame:

The numbers fade onto screen:
1901
1914
1933
1945
1946

Then dissolve into a single Psalm:
“Be still.”

End.


Themes:

  • The perversion of faith and scripture
  • The pattern of trauma passed down through violence
  • The seductive power of messianic identity
  • The ultimate futility of tyranny before divine justice

Sherlock Holmes: Hounds of the Baskervilles

Film Treatment: Sherlock Holmes: Hounds of the Baskervilles (2025)
Starring: Joseph C. Jukic as Sherlock Holmes
Paul Joseph Watson as Dr. John Watson
Written by: Joseph C. Jukic
Directed by: Guy Ritchie
Runtime: 124 minutes
Genre: Gothic Neo-Noir / Psychological Thriller / Mystery


TAGLINE:

“The past is not dead. It prowls the moors… with blood in its teeth.”


TONE & STYLE:

A kinetic, sharply edited, and dialogue-heavy modern retelling of the classic Arthur Conan Doyle story — told with Guy Ritchie’s signature whip-pan cinematography, gritty realism, and rapid-fire deduction sequences. Think The Man from U.N.C.L.E. meets True Detective with a splash of Sinister.


SYNOPSIS:

London, 2025.
Sherlock Holmes (Joseph C. Jukic) is no longer the coked-up recluse of old. He’s a steely-eyed, war-weathered intellectual, haunted by visions of the supernatural, the occult, and things science cannot explain. Haunted by his own PTSD from Balkan peacekeeping missions and MI6 black ops, Holmes has turned his mind toward a chilling mystery rooted in his Celtic bloodline.

Dr. John Watson (Paul Joseph Watson), a disillusioned former military medic and podcasting pundit, is called back to service as Holmes’s field man. The two are reunited by the sudden and mysterious death of Sir Charles Baskerville—an aristocrat found dead on the fog-covered moors with an expression of pure terror on his face and paw prints—enormous, inhuman—surrounding the body.

A curse, they say.
A demonic hound summoned by the sins of the Baskerville line.
Holmes doesn’t believe in legends. But even he can’t explain what’s growling outside the cottage at night.


ACT I:

The case is brought to Holmes by the heir to the Baskerville estate, the young and slightly paranoid Sir Henry Baskerville, fresh from Toronto. Holmes suspects a plot involving inheritance, greed, and land development deals with deep implications in the intelligence world. He sends Watson ahead to Baskerville Hall while he “vanishes” into the streets of London to dig into old family archives, war records, and colonial secrets.


ACT II:

Watson uncovers a twisted web of rural folklore, pagan blood sacrifices, and MI5 coverups involving a black ops biological warfare program known as Project Fenrir — based on canine genetics and psionic fear-induction.

The “hound” is no ghost. It’s the product of weaponized myth—designed to drive enemies insane on sight.

Meanwhile, Holmes appears unexpectedly in a pub, drunk but precise, whispering clues about the devil’s footprint, Norse symbology, and a family buried with silver daggers.


ACT III:

Holmes and Watson descend into the caverns beneath Baskerville Hall. They discover an abandoned military lab, corrupted by black magic rituals and genetic testing. The villain is Stapleton, a man posing as a friendly naturalist—but actually the bastard son of a forgotten Baskerville, using ancient Nordic rites and science to claim his inheritance… through terror.

The climax:
A full moon.
A hallucinogenic mist floods the moors.
Watson fends off soldiers gone mad from exposure while Holmes confronts the genetically engineered “hound” — a monstrous hybrid laced with ancient runes and nanotech.
Holmes destroys it using an explosive silver crucifix left to him by a Vatican contact in Sarajevo.


EPILOGUE:

Back in London, Watson records the experience in a podcast episode titled:
“The Beast on the Moors: A Warning to Modern Man.”
Holmes says nothing. He lights a pipe and stares into a mirror… where something still howls, far off, in the distance.


DIRECTOR’S VISION (Guy Ritchie):

  • Flashback montages in split-screen.
  • Stylized fight scenes — Holmes vs. corrupted soldiers in slow motion with deductive overlays.
  • Brooding color palette: emerald greens and ash greys.
  • Surreal moments questioning Holmes’s sanity: Is the hound real, or a projection of collective fear?

CAMEOS & FEATURES:

  • Bono (as a ghostly bard singing “Moondog” in the pub)
  • Nelly Furtado as the barmaid with an eerie ancestral connection to the curse
  • Michael Caine as Lord Selden, the escaped convict and failed test subject
  • Mark Rylance as Stapleton

THEMES:

  • The weaponization of myth
  • The cost of imperial secrets
  • Fear as a tool of control
  • The death of rationalism in an age of madness