The true life misadventures of a couple who try to save their failing marriage and reignite their dull sex life and relationship by daringly moonlighting as an ?escort duo? and experiencing the fantasies of others.

Thanks to commenters below for the HELP – hope this is better…

Taboo: Couple

 

26 reviews

TabooCouple Penpusher · 26 pts

We LOVE this one dpg - THANK YOU!!!!!

dpg Singularity · 112,231 pts

How about something like:

The true life misadventures of a couple who, while trying save their failing marriage, accidentally rediscover the joy of sex in their relationship when they become an 'escort duo' fulfilling the sex fantasies of others. (35 words)

[Notes:
"True life" -- this really happened, folks. Part of the sizzle that sells the steak.

"Misadventures" rather than adventures to suggest the comedy in the premise. More sizzle.

This version attempts to put the spotlight as much on your relationship as the adventures because, for the long haul, it's the relationship chemistry -- more sizzle- between you two that has to carry the story, whether feature film or series.]

fwiw

TabooCouple Penpusher · 26 pts

Again GREAT advice! I edited the above just to share ONE anecdote...

dpg Singularity · 112,231 pts

Furtherless:

While I'm not yet sure as to what the logline should include for your story, I am fairly sure what it should not include. "Changing thousands of lives and saving many marriages along the way." probably ought to be dropped out.

Why? Because it's giving away the ending. A logline should make people wonder how it will all work out, but it should never tell them. Raise an implied question, yes, but don't answer it.

Again, consider, the logline for "Breaking Bad". It would never say how the saga of Walter White is going to play out, like "When a law-abiding chemistry teacher is diagnosed with a fatal cancer, he decides to cook meth to earn enough money to pay for treatment and provide for his family after his death which he succeeds in doing but in the process causes the death of innocent people, loses his soul and all the people he loves."

dpg Singularity · 112,231 pts

A treatment for a feature film beats out a story that concludes with a denouement: story lines conclude, conflicts are resolved. End of story. FADE OUT

A treatment for a series pilot beats out a story that concludes with a cliffhanger: story lines are developed but not concluded. Conflicts are set up but not resolved. The audience is left wondering and wanting to know what happens next. FADE OUT Tune in next week to find out.

A film treatment ends with a period. A series treatment ends with an exclamation point (surprising reveal, a suspenseful twist) and a question mark (what happens next?)

A treatment serves the purpose of providing producers with evidence that there is enough dramatic material to warrant going to the next step which is to invest time and serious money in development. (Like hiring a professional screenwriter to write a script.)

TabooCouple Penpusher · 26 pts

Tony Edward and dpg, you're both AMAZING and thank you both for your fantastic advice, suggestions, and the time you take to write them :)

So, here's what's happening...

We've received a lot of press lately for our Sex Coaching services, including interviews by salon.com, Marie Claire, Maxim Magazine, a piece on FOX5, an article in the NYPost, and we were featured on Jenny McCarthy's XM show, "Dirty, Sexy, Funny," all of which has gotten the attention of several production companies hoping to secure the Life Rights to our story. Some have proposed docu-series, others a cable series, and yet others have proposed a feature film.

Most interestingly, it has been our FaceBook page which has garnered even MORE attention - you'd think that when certain folks see "TabooCouple" that they'd shy away from it, however... We basically have a "Who's Who" list of "Friends" in the entertainment industry. We connected there with several award-winning producers, directors, etc., among them, Tony Award-winning producer, David Garfinkle (Spider Man: Turn Off The Dark, GHOST, A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder, and dozens of TV productions). David is now our manager and legal consultant (he started off by running his own entertainment law firm).

Anyway, the challenge for ME (Rob - my wife's name is Bianca) arose when I was asked repeatedly for a "Treatment" - which I had NO IDEA what it even meant. I went online and researched, found a few examples, and put one together. I think I did pretty well in breaking the story down into a 3 Act structure; but, as you guys have pointed out, the freaking LOGLINE is what's KILLING me!

Here's the thing: I was assuming that Sex Coaching itself is pretty boring - there are TENS of THOUSANDS of people working in this capacity (thanks in part to Pornification); however, there are ZERO Sex Coaches or even PHd therapists with the PRACTICAL knowledge we gained through our unorthodox erotic journey - in a list of all the practices whereupon PRACTICE trumps reading books or attending seminars, SEX would be #1 (at least in our opinion). So, that's why I figured the CORE of the story would be our JOURNEY to become what are perhaps the most knowledgable Sex Coaches in the world (pardon the hyperbole, but... even a few well known Sex Therapists with impressive resumes and schooling have admitted this to us).

And dpg, indeed our experiences have often been HILARIOUS. This was all due to the fact that English is my wife's 4th language - think "Gloria" in Modern Family - so she often misinterpreted potential client's desires. In one instance, she somehow interpreted a man's desire "to have rough sex with a woman while another man watches" to mean that "I want to be tied up, beaten, and tortured by a demon-possessed dominatrix while her slave watches.? She ended up tying me up to a giant lamp in the corner of a hotel room after having gagged me and stripped me of my clothes. She then turned her "rage"/attention towards the confused man cowering in the other corner of the hotel room, gags HIM, strips him of his clothes, places a collar around his neck announcing him as a "SUB," then walks him around the room on a leash like a dog, rides him like a pony, until finally strapping him spread-eagled to the hotel bed and beats him senselessly with a flogger. Mind you, at the time she was the one that monitored emails, etc., so when I saw her researching ways to be the PERFECT "Domme" and she explained that we were going to have our first BDSM session, I was a bit excited but also CLUELESS to what this man had actually requested. We didn't discover the mistake until we read the review the man posted about his experience on the Yelp for this type of "thing." He actually described it as the most erotic experience of his life despite never knowing he was ever into BDSM, but warned, "Be VERY careful of what you request of Bianca as she seems to misinterpret things, in this case in an EXTREME way." This was her first such error, but not the last... I eventually HAD to take over email monitoring duties. Anyway, sorry for the long prose, but I enjoy writing about our adventures :) So,...

Another thing now that you guys mentioned it: Is a Treatment for a feature film different for one for a cable series? Google SUCKS to find this out...

Humbly appreciative for your time and assistance, like, TRULY!

Rob (and Bianca)

dpg Singularity · 112,231 pts

What Tony Edward said.

And if you have as much material based on real life anecdotes and incidents as you suggest, you can't possibly cram them all into a feature film. The concept might work better as a long form TV series rather than a feature film. We are in a golden age of long form TV/streaming series now. And it might work better as a comedy of human relationships-- sex is the perfect vehicle for that.

Whatever, the logline ought to focus on the pilot episode that sets the series in mottion. A great example is the one for Breaking Bad: "When a law-abiding chemistry teacher is diagnosed with a fatal cancer, he determines to cook meth to earn enough money to pay for treatment and provide for his family after his death."

Five years of award-winning and highly-rated episodes flow from the story set in motion by that logline and pilot episode.

Tony Edward Samurai · 1,450 pts

... or, to put it another way: at the moment, they are always WINNING. An audience gets engaged with the plight of a main character(s) when there is something clearly at stake and when they are STRUGGLING towards a goal, as in "...Their experiences don't always go smoothly..." -- you have to tell us, very specifically, in what way they don't go smoothly...

And is this a doco, a drama based on a (your?) true story, or complete fiction?

Tony Edward Samurai · 1,450 pts

I think you're going in the wrong direction; the edit gives us way too much -- a 13 episode series would struggle to fit all this in. I think you have to choose what this movie is mainly about; is it about them keeping their marriage together, or, more about them becoming successful sex coaches/ therapists? Once you have chosen this, you then have to decide what the main stumbling block is to them achieving the goal.

Below are just a couple of my ideas:

'A bored married couple discover a new lease on their love life by becoming professional sex coaches, but face a public witch-hunt lead by a conservative church leader hell-bent on their demise.

After opening up to each other about their inner most sexual fantasies a married couple struggle against their own jealousy and insecurities on the road to becoming professional sex coaches.

Obviously just MY take on a couple of potential ways you could go, and it could go A LOT of different ways -- the point is to state only one goal and one clearly stated antagonist to them achieving that goal...

Again, best of luck with it.

TabooCouple Penpusher · 26 pts

Thank you Tony! Edited the logline to include EVERYTHING, but having a difficult time cutting it all down... :/

Tony Edward Samurai · 1,450 pts

Hi TabooCouple,

It's interesting subject matter, but I'd avoid stating 'dramatic and often hilarious' -- the specifics of the premise need to be dramatic and hilarious without you having to tell us that they are. It's an oversell that can look insecure/ amateur... just IMO.

I'm reminded of Masters of Sex, where the subject matter really cooked because it was set in the 50's and 60's when sex in society was still taboo. You have an interesting angle with the 'Pornification' of culture and society with yours, which could be worked into the logline/ story.

Has potential, but I'm not yet getting grabbed by the youknowwhats -- the logline just needs to focus on the dramatic goal and specifically what is stopping the couple from attaining it.

Best of luck.

typingfilms Penpusher · 11 pts

dpg - thanks for the stats, really interestings