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When a lonely IRS agent starts hearing the voice of an unknown author plotting his murder in her next crime novel, he must find and stop her before she literally writes him off.
Sounds like the making of a noir feature from that era.
Sounds like the making of a noir feature from that era.
See lessAn uptight corporate couple, despondent their once spontaneous relationship has become joyless in the single-minded pursuit of starting a family, attempt to save their marriage by impulsively buying a run-down ski resort in rural Tasmania.
Very cool, gives me a “We Bought a Zoo” vibe – here are my thoughts. “despondent their once spontaneous relationship has become joyless in the single-minded pursuit of starting a family” I had to re-read this a couple of times to get it. From an American standpoint, you do not need to add “rural” whRead more
Very cool, gives me a “We Bought a Zoo” vibe – here are my thoughts.
Questions:
1. Are they newlyweds?
2. What are their professions?
3. What are the reasons why they cannot start a family?
4. Where were they located when purchasing the resort?
My current take:
See lessAn XXX power-couple XXX impulse buys a run-down Tasmanian ski resort in hopes of rebuilding their joyless marriage XXX.
After being dumped by his girlfriend for the bad boy, a nice guy wishes everyone was nice and wakes up in a world where everyone is, but discovers a nice world isn?t so nice
There's two commas in here and no period at the end. The word "nice" is used four times and I have no idea what's going on the story because of the structure of the logline. Is this how the script is structured? It starts AFTER an inciting incident? Think about the manner and order in which you're pRead more
There’s two commas in here and no period at the end. The word “nice” is used four times and I have no idea what’s going on the story because of the structure of the logline. Is this how the script is structured? It starts AFTER an inciting incident? Think about the manner and order in which you’re presenting information to your readers. You want it clear, simple, straightforward. If I have to read your logline two or more times just to figure out what the story is, the logline doesn’t work. It should be one single sentence that moves everything forward without slowing down. Pronoun clarity goes a long way toward making this work, and when you keep going back and forth between various characters without a more straightforward structure, it’s hard to know who’s who and who’s doing what or why.
So what’s the issue with the nice world? This is the hook of your story and you’ve left it blank. It’s an intriguing concept you’ve failed to mention. What WOULD happen if everyone in the world was nice? We need some idea of the second act or we don’t get enough of your story.
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