Filmstar
Penpusher · 6 points
- 22 loglines
- 132 reviews
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I'm hearing the word 'irony' bandied around this site a lot, and I'm not actually sure there's a concise definition of the word or in fact it is necessary for use in log lines. I know Blake Snyder says log…
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or: An embittered vigilante who wants to execute his son?s killer recruits his daughter?s new boyfriend - a security expert - to help crack the alarm of his high profile target. But when the new recruit turns out to be…
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An embittered Vigilante?s been out killing child-killers ever since his son?s murder 5 years ago; but when, on new information, he goes after the real killer and puts his wife and daughter in danger he?s faced with a choice: continue…
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I would suggest the flaw is something within the hero, planted from some wound in his past, some inner issue which he has to rectify within himself before he can achieve his goal. Think of Michael in The Godfather. Because…
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maybe exchange 'kidnappers' for 'terrorists' ? You know we love a terrorist flick !
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Ouch! Good work! Great premise ! BUT... out with the shears ! First, imply the genre, don't state it outright. Treat it like a movie, give the audience clues - we love a puzzle, let us work stuff out. "When…
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Yep, couldn't make head nor tail of this. Imagine you want the dumbest person in the world (me) to understand it, and try again :)
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Good. BUT...we don't know the policeman's flaw, the 'ghost from his past', or his 'wound' - the thing he must overcome within himself to achieve his outward goal. Success in achieving the outward goal - in a good story -…
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Well, with the help of all the feedback I finally realized something I'd suspected for a long time - it's TWO stories - or rather - the hero has TWO GOALS. So, the hero's new goal is: to find a…
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Here's another version with the main antagonist in the logline. The above logline has two other opponents in the logline (opponents in this story are threefold as per Truby). "When an embittered vigilante recruits a tough teenager for his next…