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StardustfortheearthlingsPenpusher
Posted: July 21, 20202020-07-21T23:44:36+10:00 2020-07-21T23:44:36+10:00In: Fantasy

When a magical spirit reveals the world’s destructive fate, an introverted high school girl must flee her privileged upbringing and journey through an impoverished land to find a saviour, which she later learns is actually herself, and confront the powerful government of the city before the world collapses beneath her feet.

When a magical spirit reveals the world’s destructive fate, an introverted high school girl must flee her privileged upbringing and journey through an impoverished land to find a saviour, which she later learns is actually herself, and confront the powerful government of the city before the world collapses beneath her feet.
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    1. Scott Danzig Samurai
      2020-07-22T03:50:10+10:00Added an answer on July 22, 2020 at 3:50 am

      The low-hanging fruit given this current iteration of the logline is that you can easily pull out “and journey through an impoverished land to find a saviour, which she later learns is actually herself,”. That part is the plot, but doesn’t need to be in the logline.

      So you have the protagonist, the high school girl, the goal… to save the world… the conflict… confronting the powerful government. The stakes… end of the world. The urgency… have to do the goal before the world ends….

      The inciting incident I think you should change. Learning about the end of the world is a lost opportunity to tie in HOW a high school student ended up in this mess. Maybe have the inciting incident be like when the kids walked into the closet in Narnia. The “how they ended up in never-never land”.

      You can trim it down, like for example with my first suggestion, but… all the pieces in the formula are there, which is great. But I think ironing out the hook will be more challenging.

      Why do people care about your story? I see this notion of a privileged girl journeying into an impoverished land, which is interesting, but it doesn’t look like she has to overcome that privilege in order to save the world. It’s like when I toured Ward 9 on a bus tour a year after Hurricane Katrina happened. However, Ebenezer Scrooge must learn generosity to save Tiny Tim, for instance. That is a meaningful character arc that is interesting to the reader.

      I’m thinking something like this:

      When a privileged high school girl is lured by a magical spirit into another world, she must lead the rebellion of its impoverished, enslaved people and overthrow a powerful monarchy before she is allowed to return home.

      Okay…it doesn’t have to go all Braveheart…. can keep it non-Bravehearty…

      When a privileged high school girl is lured by a magical spirit into another world, she must save an impoverished, enslaved people from a powerful monarchy before she is allowed to return home.

      Either way, you don’t need any details of a mountain, or how she tries to save them.

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    2. dpg Singularity
      2020-07-22T06:17:31+10:00Added an answer on July 22, 2020 at 6:17 am

      There is an awful lot of story in one logline. Is this all to be packed into one feature film? Or is envisioned as a saga to be spread out over the course of a series?

      Also it seems to be a story line tailored along the lines of the “Hero’s Journey” paradigm as formulated by Joseph Campbell and amplified by others. All guys — it’s an heroic paradigm for young men suffering the effects of acute testosterone poisoning. A number of feminist writers, such as Kim Hudson, have advocated a different “Heroine Journey” paradigm for female protagonists. FWIW.

      And “introverted” is a temperament trait — but it is not a weakness, not a character flaw.

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    3. thedarkhorse Samurai
      2020-07-24T00:13:59+10:00Added an answer on July 24, 2020 at 12:13 am

      Hi Stardustfortheearthlings,

      There is a lot of fat here – especially for a logline. Let’s get it down to its very essence.

      INTENTION: must flee her privileged upbringing and journey through an impoverished land to find a saviour.
      OBSTACLE: powerful government of the city.

      Attempt 1:
      When a magical spirit tells her the world will soon end,
      a teen must journey through a dangerous land to find a prophesied saviour, whilst a powerful government stands in her way.

      – I’m not sure about “powerful government” as an obstacle.
      – I got rid of “introverted high school girl”. We don’t need that much ornamental for a logline. Keep it simple.
      – “, which she later learns is actually herself” – not for logline. Sounds like a plot twist for the script.

      Attempt 2:
      When a magical spirit tells her mankind will soon end, a teen must journey through a forbidden land to find a prophesied saviour – someone who may or may not exist.

      – My attempt at a twist/hook for the logline. To risk everything/your life/to get so far – and for someone who may or may not exist.
      – I’ve currently been reading WRITER’S JOURNEY by Vogler. The fact that the elixer/the prize is this knowledge that she is the hero is a very good plot twist. It’s a good arc for the character. It’s a good direction for the story to go. But not good for the logline. (It’s giving away the punchline.)

      Regardless – it’s a cool idea. Reminds me of Studio Ghibli material.

      Good luck!

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