When their son takes his own life, his determined mother must seek out her orphaned nephew in an effort to support his dreams like she never could for her own child.
tsalex20Logliner
When their son takes his own life, his determined mother must seek out her orphaned nephew in an effort to support his dreams like she never could for her own child.
Share
mrliteral:
>>>Never start a logline with ?When.?
Why never?? Would you care to explain?
Never start a logline with “When.” No one cares about things that happen; we care about the people to whom things happen. Start with the protagonist.
Other major issues have already been mentioned here: use of “their,” why is her quest a must…also, if her nephew is orphaned, why does she not already have custody? Is the death of her son and those of the nephew’s parents related, or concurrent? If not, where’s the other kid been all this time? And what do his dreams have to do with anything? What’s really at stake here?
A logline should be a compelling summary of the script, highlighting these basic details: protagonist, antagonist, conflict, stakes. Give us this info, and phrase it so it flows in one smooth sentence.
I’m a bit confused about why the mother “must” seek out her nephew. Maybe it’s better if she learns she has an orphaned nephew she didn’t know about? It makes me question why she didn’t look for him sooner, even if her son was still alive.
Also it says “their” son, is the other parent a big part of the story? Otherwise I think its better to just say “her” son.
Blaming herself for the suicide of her son, a guilt-wracked woman adopts an abandoned boy for a second chance to be a good mother.
(24 words)