Sign Up Sign Up

Captcha Click on image to update the captcha.

Have an account? Sign In Now

Sign In Sign In

Forgot Password?

If you'd like access, Sign Up Here

Forgot Password Forgot Password

Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.

Captcha Click on image to update the captcha.

Have an account? Sign In Now

Sorry, you do not have permission to ask a question, You must login to ask a question.

Forgot Password?

To see everything, Sign Up Here

Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.

Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.

Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.

Logline It! Logo Logline It! Logo
Sign InSign Up

Logline It!

Logline It! Navigation

  • Sign Up
  • Logline Generator
  • Learn our simple Logline Formula
  • Search Loglines
Search
Post Your Logline

Mobile menu

Close
Post Your Logline
  • Signup
  • Sign Up
  • Logline Generator
  • Learn our simple Logline Formula
  • Search Loglines
Mike PedleySingularity
Posted: November 10, 20202020-11-10T06:30:52+10:00 2020-11-10T06:30:52+10:00In: Family

A screen-obsessed 11-year-old gets trapped inside the dusty book left to him by his Grandfather where he must learn to visualise the fairytale world around him, play through the story, and imagine his way to the very last page.

Hints of The Princess Bride and The Pagemaster in this one. Like an updated version of both for a new generation of unimaginative youths.

  • 2
  • 8 8 Reviews
  • 51 Views
  • 0 Followers
  • 0
Share
  • Facebook

    Post a review
    Cancel reply

    You must login to add an answer.

    Forgot Password?

    To see everything, Sign Up Here

    8 Reviews

    • Voted
    • Oldest
    • Recent
    1. dpg Singularity
      2020-11-10T07:19:34+10:00Added an answer on November 10, 2020 at 7:19 am

      Who/what is the primary antagonist/obstacle in the story world that must be overcome?

      Suggestion: Amp up the conflict with dual protagonists. A boy and girl must work together to get to the last page of the book — and freedom. But they have diametrically different visions of how to proceed at every plot point. They argue over everything.

      Working title : Write of Passage.

      fwiw

      • 2
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp
      • Mike Pedley Singularity
        2020-11-10T07:36:28+10:00Replied to answer on November 10, 2020 at 7:36 am

        Great idea!

        As for the primary antagonist, I was going to have it as like his deepest fear realised in an imaginative fairytale way – like a dragon or something but I feel like this is a bit cliché and I was running out of words so I wanted to suggest that his primary obstacle is actually his own inability to imagine the world as described by the words of the book. Visually, I imagine this actually being represented on screen by him existing in the white spaces of a book where an illustration would go and it’s only populated by things when he imagines they’re there. The words on the page exist until the final confrontation, when everything is blank. I guess up until that point, the thing at the end is “the most terrifying monster ever imagined” as that leaves it up to the protagonist to imagine.

        Still kinda working through this one, it’s an interesting one!

        Thanks for your comments, as always.

        • 0
        • Reply
        • Share
          Share
          • Share on Facebook
          • Share on Twitter
          • Share on LinkedIn
          • Share on WhatsApp
        • dpg Singularity
          2020-11-10T09:23:37+10:00Replied to answer on November 10, 2020 at 9:23 am

          My thinking is that having a female-male protagonist pairing automatically doubles the potential audience in the youth demographic. (Maybe they are grandchildren of the book’s owner.)

          It also enables the story to play off gender roles, behavior and archetypes for conflict (and comic relief). Like he imagines/envisions his worst fear in the form of a dragon; she sees it as wolf. Or zombie versus vampire. Or all of the above and more. IOW: the dreaded, shadow “other” is a shapeshifter. He over-analyzes, mansplains everything. She trusts her intuition and emotions. (Or flip the tropes: she hits the pause button in every situation to over-analyze; he impulsively goes with his guts.)

          Whatever. Best wishes with the project.

          • 1
          • Reply
          • Share
            Share
            • Share on Facebook
            • Share on Twitter
            • Share on LinkedIn
            • Share on WhatsApp
          • Mike Pedley Singularity
            2020-11-10T18:55:00+10:00Replied to answer on November 10, 2020 at 6:55 pm

            Yeah, I really like this idea. Thanks, dpg!

            • 0
            • Reply
            • Share
              Share
              • Share on Facebook
              • Share on Twitter
              • Share on LinkedIn
              • Share on WhatsApp
      • Odie Samurai
        2020-11-10T10:24:19+10:00Replied to answer on November 10, 2020 at 10:24 am

        This. Bastian from The NeverEnding Story wants a 2020 do-over!

        • 1
        • Reply
        • Share
          Share
          • Share on Facebook
          • Share on Twitter
          • Share on LinkedIn
          • Share on WhatsApp
        • Mike Pedley Singularity
          2020-11-10T18:54:11+10:00Replied to answer on November 10, 2020 at 6:54 pm

          I’m not sure kids today could handle Artax dying. Scarred me for life! hahaha

          • 0
          • Reply
          • Share
            Share
            • Share on Facebook
            • Share on Twitter
            • Share on LinkedIn
            • Share on WhatsApp
    2. Richiev Singularity
      2020-11-10T07:39:22+10:00Added an answer on November 10, 2020 at 7:39 am

      This is a great premise, a boy who hates reading becomes stuck inside a magical book, and must finish the book to escape.

      • 0
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp
      • Mike Pedley Singularity
        2020-11-10T07:43:15+10:00Replied to answer on November 10, 2020 at 7:43 am

        Thanks Richiev. It was actually something my 4 year old said to me. I was doing some colouring and he said that someone was naughty so we should “lock him up in a book”! I can’t take the credit haha.

        • 1
        • Reply
        • Share
          Share
          • Share on Facebook
          • Share on Twitter
          • Share on LinkedIn
          • Share on WhatsApp

    Sidebar

    Stats

    • Loglines 8,000
    • Reviews 32,189
    • Best Reviews 629
    • Users 3,715

    screenwriting courses

    Adv 120x600

    aalan

    Explore

    • Signup

    Footer

    © 2022 Karel Segers. All Rights Reserved
    With Love from Immersion Screenwriting.