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Sara Pensalfini
Posted: June 3, 20132013-06-03T01:27:26+10:00 2013-06-03T01:27:26+10:00In: Public

A forensic photographer on stress leave takes the pilgrimage home, only to become embroiled in a cold case from her youth. What she discovers is her worst nightmare. What she finds is redemption.

The Man in the Yellow Van

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    6 Reviews

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    1. kbfilmworks Samurai
      2013-06-03T03:00:56+10:00Added an answer on June 3, 2013 at 3:00 am

      Seriously cool idea. I think you need to forget the ‘stress leaves takes the pilgrimage home’ bit – your set-up. And detail the actual story – ‘the cold case from her youth’ – and also detail the complication ‘what she discovers is her worst nightmare’. Finally, I suggest you jettison the bit about redemption – I’m supposing that’s your ending – in which case it’s not required in your logline. Hope this helps.

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    2. Sara Pensalfini
      2013-06-03T10:04:20+10:00Added an answer on June 3, 2013 at 10:04 am

      Thankyou! Definitely helps. Will rework on this basis after lunch. 😉

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    3. Jean-Marie Mazaleyrat Penpusher
      2013-06-05T05:53:21+10:00Added an answer on June 5, 2013 at 5:53 am

      Hi Sarapensalfini,
      Hi kbfilmworks,

      My feeling is a little different (if I don’t mistake due to my broken english):

      I see a characterized hero (I assume her perception of forensic environment will influence her behavior)
      I see a flaw: her stress leave
      I see a quest: reconnect with her past,
      I see a hardship that suggest antagonism and conflict : an eembroiled cold case
      I see what’s at stake: overcome her worst nightmare

      And the resolution could be told like: what she will plead for (or seek) is redemption.

      “A forensic photographer on stress leave takes the pilgrimage home, only to become embroiled in a cold case from her youth. What she discovers is her worst nightmare. What she will plead for is redemption”
      (35words)

      I see a good story behind this.

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    4. 2013-06-05T07:12:12+10:00Added an answer on June 5, 2013 at 7:12 am

      Hi Jean & Sara,

      Jean, I take your point. But the details might make for a stronger hook in the logline. I think loglines for completed scripts are generally less vague than loglines written before. Personally, I tend to start with an idea which develops into a lengthy treatment after which I know what I’m writing about and then searching for the logline. I’m just saying – I’m sure every writer has a personal style.

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    5. Jean-Marie Mazaleyrat Penpusher
      2013-06-05T07:56:05+10:00Added an answer on June 5, 2013 at 7:56 am

      Hi kb,

      I agree with you.
      Personnaly, I start with a premise (it don’t need to be formal as a logline), then I make a project chart (something like a Gantt chart and a chart of characters, as we use in building or industry), the synopsis, treatment,… and I finish with the logline (what I didn’t now how to write up a few days ago).

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    6. 2013-06-05T11:08:59+10:00Added an answer on June 5, 2013 at 11:08 am

      This is all very useful. My thanks. Funnily, this script is far more developed than my other- logline below- which seems to have a tighter story. My challenge is fitting the immensity of the cold case and it’s outcome and the resulting change in the hero into a short but readily understandable sentence. I got lazy in the second half. Ha! Isn’t that always the challenge! 🙂

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