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  1. Posted: October 19, 2018In: Thriller

    When a nasty policeman tries to end the life of a journalist using all means of soft torture, the latter fights him back until the policeman dies with hard death.

    dpg Singularity
    Added an answer on October 20, 2018 at 10:56 pm

    >>>until the policeman dies with hard death.That seems to give away the ending.? Something a logline should never do.? A logline raises a dramatic question -- but it doesn't reveal the answer.And? what is "soft torture"?

    >>>until the policeman dies with hard death.

    That seems to give away the ending.? Something a logline should never do.? A logline raises a dramatic question — but it doesn’t reveal the answer.

    And? what is “soft torture”?

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  2. Posted: October 17, 2018In: Thriller

    A man tormented by the death of his wife and daughter, which he accuses himself of, will have to endure the apparitions of the ghosts of his family who also blame him for their deaths.

    dpg Singularity
    Added an answer on October 18, 2018 at 3:37 am

    Agree with mikepedley85 on every point.? ?This logline is all about a troubled past, a guilt present.? Not a clue as to where the story is going, what the action will be going forward.? And that's what a logline should be about, not where a character has been, or is now, but where he is struggling tRead more

    Agree with mikepedley85 on every point.? ?This logline is all about a troubled past, a guilt present.? Not a clue as to where the story is going, what the action will be going forward.? And that’s what a logline should be about, not where a character has been, or is now, but where he is struggling to go in the future.

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  3. Posted: September 24, 2018In: Thriller

    A guilt-ridden priest with a dark secret finds himself held hostage in a Catholic confessional by a sinister, unseen terrorist wearing a suicide vest strapped with explosives.

    mrliteral Samurai
    Added an answer on October 7, 2018 at 2:26 pm

    Simultaneously provides too much information and not enough. "Guilt-ridden priest" is enough to define your protagonist - don't tell us here he has a secret; reveal it in the story. Also if he's feeling that guilty, a dark secret is implied. No one "finds" themselves doing something. It's weak wordiRead more

    Simultaneously provides too much information and not enough.

    “Guilt-ridden priest” is enough to define your protagonist – don’t tell us here he has a secret; reveal it in the story. Also if he’s feeling that guilty, a dark secret is implied.

    No one “finds” themselves doing something. It’s weak wording, makes your character passive. If he’s held hostage, just say he’s held hostage, then give us an idea what he’s going to do about it. That makes him active.

    You already told us he’s a priest in a confessional; why specify Catholic? Isn’t that a given? If not, does it matter? Maybe in the story, but not here. Get rid of any extraneous words.

    Being a terrorist already defines the antagonist as such; no need to describe such a person as sinister. He’s a bad guy, we get it. Also no need to tell us the guy’s unseen, because it brings up too many questions: if he’s unseen, how do we know he’s a terrorist or what he’s wearing? Surely the script itself can answer these, but no need to raise them here. Just tell us who, what, and why. Leave the intricate details for later.

    More unnecessary words: suicide vest. “Strapped with explosives” pretty much tells us everything.

    Cutting all this down leaves you with “A guilt-ridden priest is held hostage in a confessional by a terrorist strapped with explosives.” Succinct, but this is what I mean by not enough information. You’ve told us who and what, now we need to know why. You’ve given us the protagonist, antagonist, and the stakes, but what’s the conflict? Sure, one guy’s threatening to blow up the other guy, who probably doesn’t want this to happen, but what’s the real reason for all this? What’s caused the confrontation? Why this priest, why here, why now? Is it related to his guilt, his secret? Surely it must be, but you have to give us a taste to make the story compelling.

    As an example, without knowing the actual story: “A guilt-ridden priest is held hostage in a confessional by a terrorist strapped with explosives who claims to be his long lost son.” You can’t just tell us who’s in the story and what it’s about; you have to tell us why it’s a story.

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