When the ultimate betrayal comes to surface, 8 friends will become enemies and only 1 will be left standing.
KathrynPenpusher
When the ultimate betrayal comes to surface, 8 friends will become enemies and only 1 will be left standing.
Share
Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
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.
Since the betrayal is what sets the story in motion you should be more specific about what it is.
Some questions pop to mind –
1. Who betrays whom?
2. Who’s your protagonist?
3. What was the nature of betrayal? &
4. ..As a result of which, what becomes the protagonist’s GOAL
PS. If you are aiming to write for multiple protagonist’s, the link below might be helpful:
https://loglines.org/logline/how-to-write-a-story-with-multiple-protagonists/
Good Luck!!
Thanks for the feedback. If I tell you what it is then it spoils the plot of the movie. I tell you enough to peak your curiosity which proves my point.
If the betrayal is a big reveal at the end of the movie, then it is true, you should not reveal?it in the logline.
However,?we still need a specific event in the logline that sets the story in motion.
Hi Kathryn,
As variable said earlier, this is a tagline for a movie, not a logline.
As a logline it’s incredibly vague. You could describe a crime thriller in vein of Reservoir dogs or a high school comedy where 8 friends are vying for the same guy for example.
Until we get more details, it will be difficult to help you develop the concept or improve on the logline.
“Ultimate betrayal ” is vague.? What does that mean?
And the logline also contains a spoiler; it gives away the ending (only 1 will survive). That is something a logline should never do.
8 friends will become enemies with the betrayer or each other? It’s just mush.