When the office nice guy?s ?work wife? starts sending him mixed signals about her relationship and impending move with her long-distance boyfriend, he risks his career and friendship by confessing his true feelings for her before he loses her forever.
mrtz17Penpusher
When the office nice guy?s ?work wife? starts sending him mixed signals about her relationship and impending move with her long-distance boyfriend, he risks his career and friendship by confessing his true feelings for her before he loses her forever.
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The logline assigns the greater risk to the guy, who? dares to confess how he feels about her. But it assigns the greater dilemma to the girl, who seems to be conflicted about which guy she likes more.? I am more attracted to her dramatic dilemma than his dramatic risk.? Because his blurting out how he feels, is one moment, one scene that lasts a minute or two.? Whereas her dilemma is an ongoing problem she must wrestle with for multiple moments, for many scenes — for the duration of the story.
And consequently,the girl is the one who determines how the story ends — not the guy.? Because she is the one who has to make the Act 3 dramatic decision that determines the denouement of the story.? From the moment he confesses, his fate is in her hands, in her mind.? But the protagonist should be the one who makes his fate.
Ergo, it seems to me she is more qualified to play the role of the protagonist than the guy.
Further, per the comment, he doesn’t confess it until about the midpoint in the story.? Which is awfully late for his action to constitute to the decisive act that drives the plot.
In talking about the protagonist, I like to use the metaphor of? driving a car.? The protagonist is the character who is in the driver’s seat with his hands on the wheel, his foot on the gas pedal.? He is the who? turns the ignition key, puts the car in gear, presses on the gas pedal? and starts driving in a specific direction — toward his objective goal.? ? That action needs to take place at the end of Act 1.
But, per your comment, at the end of Act 1,? the protagonist seems to? turn the ignition key — and then lets the engine of the story idle .? The car just sits there for the space of 30 pages? while he hems and haws.? Finally, at the midpoint, he engages the clutch, presses the gas pedal and confesses how he feels.?
All this time he’s sitting there in the driveway, letting the engine idle, what is happening, what is driving the plot forward to engage and sustain audience interest?
>>between weighing out the implications (both career and relationship-wise) of coming clean,
Blake Snyder of “Save the Cat” fame called that the “Debate and Decision” phase of the plot — and it should occur in Act 1 culminating in a decision that drives the rest of the plot.? ?Having it occur in the middle of Act 2 is too late.
Now then, that is not to say that the confession could not occur until the midpoint.? It might work , work very well,? as a pivotal complication to a plot already in progress.? What I am saying is that the logline (and perhaps the script) needs to be framed in terms of? an action that occurs at the end of Act 1 that puts the plot in gear and? gets the protagonist proactively driving toward a specific objective goal.
fwiw
Going off the latest version, it seems selfish of him as she is happy in her relationship with her boyfriend – she chose the boyfriend over him – accept it…
What’s at stake here?
Last thing, “…confessing his true feeling to her…” seems like a rather tame action for a feature – how long is this going to be?
After reading your last logline as well as this one.
I think for this premise to work,? you need to increase the dramatic tension by creating a stronger reason why the work wife can’t be with the lead.
Audiences are smart, they understand that the two leads are supposed to be together from the first time they enter the story.
What makes the story interesting is that there is an insurmountable obstacle?keeping them apart.
Romance is about two people desperately wanting to be together, but a barrier equally powerful keeping them apart.
You might consider having the ‘work wife’ from a different country such as India. It is not her ‘boyfriend’ but her fiance.
Both her family and her fiance’s family (Both who hold traditional Indian values) are gearing up for the wedding and it would be a very big deal if she broke off the engagement.
It could destroy her entire relationship with her family.
She can’t just break up with the guy.
Does the confession happen at the end of the story or the beginning?
Because if the confession happens at the end of the story it should not be in the logline.
But if the confession is at the beginning, it is the event that sets the story in motion and the logline should be about what happens after the confession.
ALT: When the office nice guy hears about his “work wife’s” plans to move to a different state to be with her long-distance boyfriend, he risks his career by confessing his true feeling to her to get her to stay with him.