With the family farm in flames, his father murdered, and his mother and sister kidnapped it’s up to young Leif to track them, revenge his father, find his mother and sister and bring them back home, but the Gods have other plans for Leif and his family..
Patrick Thorrgils CorriganPenpusher
With the family farm in flames, his father murdered, and his mother and sister kidnapped it’s up to young Leif to track them, revenge his father, find his mother and sister and bring them back home, but the Gods have other plans for Leif and his family..
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Hello,
usually You don’t use personal names in the logline (like “Leif”), because names means nothing (unless the character is a famous real person like Mozart). The basic idea is that each elements of a logline must have a meaning for the plot (if the hero is called “Erlend”, to keep the name?scandinavian like Leif, does it make any difference?).
To understand if I would like the movie or not I feel like I need to know what you mean by “god have other plans”: I suggest to add?some details in the logline about this?-?besides you can cut some details from the setting – mother and sister kidnapped for me is enough, I don’t care a lot about the farm in flames in this context, maybe you can sum up better?- the kidnap gives enought motivation to the character. I would spend some words about the opponent too.
Hi Patrick,
Powerful setup! Reminds me of THE SEARCHERS…
Like I said elsewhere on this site, commas are your friend. You are using quite a few, but need more.
“The Gods have other plans…” may be a tad vague. Typically, you should reveal what the new direction is (at the Mid Point, I presume).
Finally, I would cut “his family” at the end. It feels tagged on, and is essentially unnecessary.
I hope this helps!
Cheers,
Karel