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  1. Posted: May 4, 2020In: Examples

    After accidentally landing in North Korea with a paraglider, a rich South Korean heiress with the help of a North Korean military officer has to find a way out of the country without getting arrested and killed. -Crash landing on you (2019) -37 words

    Best Answer
    Neer Shelter Singularity
    Added an answer on May 4, 2020 at 4:25 pm

    This sounds like an interesting film - I will try to find it. Thanks! About the logline I would change it so: After air currents crash a wealthy South Korean paraglider in North Korea,? she must collaborate with an army officer to avoid getting arrested and cross the border back home. Unfortunately,Read more

    This sounds like an interesting film – I will try to find it.

    Thanks!

    About the logline I would change it so:

    After air currents crash a wealthy South Korean paraglider in North Korea,? she must collaborate with an army officer to avoid getting arrested and cross the border back home.

    Unfortunately, the stakes are all too clear.

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  2. Posted: April 24, 2020In: Examples

    After losing the love of his life in the streets of India, a homeless teenager participates in the TV show? Who wants to be a millionaire to find her again. Film: Slumdog Millionaire (2008) (30 words)

    Best Answer
    Mike Pedley Singularity
    Added an answer on April 26, 2020 at 7:59 pm

    I think you need to make it clear why going on the tv show will help find her again. Your second version hints at how his experiences relate but there's a bit of disconnect in my opinion. A homeless teenager's life in the Mumbai slums help him through the rounds of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, butRead more

    I think you need to make it clear why going on the tv show will help find her again. Your second version hints at how his experiences relate but there’s a bit of disconnect in my opinion.

    A homeless teenager’s life in the Mumbai slums help him through the rounds of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, but all he wants is TV exposure to help him find the girl he loves. ?(35 words)

    It’s understanding why he wants to go on the show that’s crucial. It’s a tricky one though as it’s told through flashbacks and you don’t discover his goal until much later (I could be wrong on this, it’s been a while since I’ve watched it).

    Thoughts on mine are welcome.

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  3. Posted: April 21, 2020In: Comedy, Examples

    Hounded by debt collectors, a brassy small-time hustler solves her money woes by becoming a debt collector herself.

    dpg Singularity
    Added an answer on April 23, 2020 at 8:18 am

    As usual you make valid points. But... >>>"I?ll never understand why people insist on keeping their loglines weak by not starting with the protagonist and adding in commas for no reason." Well, not that anything I can say will make you "understand", but here goes: >>>Do you remembeRead more

    As usual you make valid points.

    But…

    >>>”I?ll never understand why people insist on keeping their loglines weak by not starting with the protagonist and adding in commas for no reason.”

    Well, not that anything I can say will make you “understand”, but here goes:

    >>>Do you remember what Dwayne Johnson?s ?Skyscraper? was about? I don?t! Most of the people who went to see it had no idea what it was about! They just saw ads with The Rock blowing up shit and said yeah, I wanna see that!

    That’s comparing apples to oranges. Loglines are targeted to a different market, to the people who makes movies, not to the people who watch them.

    From what I’ve been able to glean from reading the industry hype, what hooked Dwayne Johnson, got him to attach to “Skyscraper” was the SITUATION. Because the situation gave him the opportunity to showcase himself in the role of (another) action hero. The situation sold the script — not the character.

    What sold the movie at the box-office is another matter.

    Again, loglines are pitched to movie makers, not movie viewers.

    >>>though ideally the combination is what really sells the concept.

    That’s my point. I think character versus conflict (plot) is a false dichotomy in determining what ought to determine the lead for a logline. It’s not a binary choice. A good logline needs both (obviously) but as to which you might lead with depends on the story — and the target market.

    I don’t think that drawing in the character until the 5th word of an 18 word logline is a flaw that renders the logline DOA. If the character didn’t appear until, say, the 15th word of a 25 word logline– oh yes, that’s would be a fatal flaw.

    I assume we can agree that what constitutes the story hook is ultimately subjective, in the mind of the reader. Some people (like yourself apparently) are more attracted to the characters. Okay, that’s you.

    But I’m not you. As a matter of fact, what attracted me to this film was not the character — but the situation, the “if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em” aspect. And if I were a movie producer, that is what would attract me to the script.

    Some movie makers are more inclined to get hooked on strong characters, some on strong conflicts. Different strokes.

    >>>You say that sometimes the situation is more of a hook than the person dealing with it ? yes, sometimes. But rarely. We?re talking Jurassic Park level conflict here.

    Only rarely? I beg to differ.

    I say that not on the basis of my intuition nor because of my personal preference. I beg to differ based upon a systematic study of loglines for scripts that got sold (per the BlackList and other industry sources) and movies that got made. On an analysis of 965 loglines to date, to be precise.

    I would post some graphics to illustrate my claim; however, the ability to post graphics on this site has been disabled. I refer you to an earlier graphic I was able to post in October 2016 (you’ll have scroll down the thread).

    It is my study of loglines that led me long ago to conclude that the standard logline formulation featured on this site could use some, uh, rethinking.

    At least on that point we seem to agree.

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