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
Nicholas Andrew HallsSamurai
Posted: July 20, 20122012-07-20T02:03:04+10:00 2012-07-20T02:03:04+10:00In: Public

Jacob has lost faith. When a woman who says she's from the future appears at his door with a grave warning, Jacob must decide whether to believe her or face the consequences.

This is the logline to an untitled feature screenplay I have just started developing.

  • 0
  • 6 6 Reviews
  • 965 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

    6 Reviews

    • Voted
    • Oldest
    • Recent
    1. mdavidson48
      2012-07-20T04:35:12+10:00Added an answer on July 20, 2012 at 4:35 am

      >Jacob must decide whether to believe her or face the consequences.
      The first part of the logline is specific enough, but this is too vague, IMHO, and doesn’t tell us what the stakes are or who the antagonist is.

      • 0
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp
    2. Andrew Bates Logliner
      2012-07-20T08:44:22+10:00Added an answer on July 20, 2012 at 8:44 am

      I agree with Mdavidson, it is very vague.

      fill out the elements below, maybe it will make your logline more clearer
      .
      Protag- Jacob
      Antag- ?
      Goal- heed warning, to survive, to change/learn?
      Inner – rediscover faith?
      Outer -?
      Irony- girl from future is daughter etc?
      Hook- ?
      Genre- ?

      Someone gave me this info, helps me a lot when doing my logline. Hope this helps you too, best of luck.

      • 0
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp
    3. Nicholas Andrew Halls Samurai
      2012-07-20T10:18:54+10:00Added an answer on July 20, 2012 at 10:18 am

      Thanks guys – super helpful. How about this?

      “Jacob has lost his faith. When a woman who says she’s from the future appears at his door with a warning, he’s faced with an impossible choice – to believe her at the cost of his reputation and sanity, or fail and be responsible for revisiting the evils of the past on the future.”

      The stakes are clear to me (and hopefully, with that new logline, clearer to you), but I’m struggling identifying my antagonist. The woman explains that the military applications of the work he is doing (developing more accurate weather prediction software) leads to the development of the first time machines, and that allows a malevolent military the ability to alter history in their favour. So the antagonist might be the ‘big bad military’ she describes. But the conflict of at least the first half of the story concerns itself mostly with Jacob’s incredulity. So he’s kind of his own antagonist? (is that possible?). In the final act, it is revealed that the woman is actually an employee (from the present) of a rival software company who were direct competitors for the military contract Jacob’s team has been working under. Her objective was to make him believe his work was dangerous to the future of humanity, so that he would sabotage it from within, and force the brass to pull their funding from his company and give it to hers. So ultimately she is the antagonist, but as this is a third act reveal I didn’t think it right to include in the logline?

      Genre wise I guess it’s science fiction, because it deals with time travel. But in the same way that Primer or Another Earth are science fiction films, or Monsters is a monster movie – low key sci fi, perhaps?

      Also – Andrew, I’ve never had to identify the irony in a story I’ve written. Is this really necessary, and if so how do I identify it?

      • 0
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp
    4. Andrew Bates Logliner
      2012-07-20T11:57:39+10:00Added an answer on July 20, 2012 at 11:57 am

      hey nicholasandrewhalls
      Irony catches the readers attention. Not all loglines have irony, but most of the good ones do, for example .

      A lawyer that can not lie (liar liar) a king that can’t speak to his people (The kings speach) That is irony.

      “a future where criminals are arrested before the crime occurs, a drug addicted cop struggles on the lam to prove his innocence for a murder he has not yet committed. (Minority Report) Irony.

      Jacobs own work turns out to be his down fall? Irony?

      Your logline should be in between 25-30 words.

      Names and age are irrelevant unless they are relevant to the story.
      The protag is a developer. How would you describe him, character-wise? Lonely? obsessive-compulsive? Drug addict? (like Minority Report) Something that he needs to overcome at the end of the story.

      “After being warned from a woman claiming to be from the future. A obsessive developer must make the choice to heed her warning or continue his work that may bring the downfall of man”

      something like that but better… Hope it helps.

      • 0
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp
    5. Nicholas Andrew Halls Samurai
      2012-07-20T12:04:58+10:00Added an answer on July 20, 2012 at 12:04 pm

      thanks – that logline you’ve suggested is getting pretty close. i’d watch that movie!
      i’ll take another stab at it.

      • 0
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp
    6. Andrew Bates Logliner
      2012-07-20T12:07:38+10:00Added an answer on July 20, 2012 at 12:07 pm

      good luck!

      • 0
      • Reply
      • Share
        Share
        • Share on Facebook
        • Share on Twitter
        • Share on LinkedIn
        • Share on WhatsApp

    Sidebar

    Stats

    • Loglines 7,997
    • Reviews 32,189
    • Best Reviews 629
    • Users 3,710

    screenwriting courses

    Adv 120x600

    aalan

    Explore

    • Signup

    Footer

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