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In 16th century Japan the African slave of a Jesuit priest rises to become a samurai in the service of its most powerful warlord and faces a corrupt general who plans to topple him.
I think the sizzle in the script-- the?feature of the script that grabs attention, wets interest?--is the situation.? Based on real events, a Black man become a Samurai in feudal Japan-- wow! That's different, that's unique. In this case,?I?think the plot is secondary in terms of getting the scriptRead more
I think the sizzle in the script– the?feature of the script that grabs attention, wets interest?–is the situation.? Based on real events, a Black man become a Samurai in feudal Japan– wow! That’s different, that’s unique.
In this case,?I?think the plot is secondary in terms of getting the script read.? But important when it come to getting the script filmed.
Maybe something like:
Based on actual events, in 16th century Japan, an African slave rises to become a samurai?serving a?powerful warlord where he must survive?plots?by jealous rivals to kill him. (31 words)
Notes:
“Based on actual events” — because it’s so?incredible that without it, it might be dismissed as fanciful fiction.? The logline needs to convey the message??”Truth is stranger than fiction. This really happened, folks.”
“A powerful warlord” rather than “its most powerful” –Could go either way, was just looking for the minimum number of words to make the maximum impression.? Good enough to get the point across.
“Jealous”.? Surely it was not just a matter of the general being corrupt.? Would it not be the case that his motivations were overdetermined and included jealousy?? And?,?would?there not be others who felt the same way?? He? may have been the primary nemesis, but he can’t? have been the only one who was offended by the very notion of an outsider, a Black outsider, being accept?into the ranks as a ?samurai.
See lessa terminally ill man sets out to take revenge on people from his past. But to his frustration they are dying before he can get to them.
I think it's a promising premise.? But??one problem is that after 2 or 3 beats where he discovers he's too late? -- the people on his shit list?die before he can do the job himself -- the running joke will get stale.?? Maybe it can be sustained for the 1st half of the 2nd Act - but through the entirRead more
I think it’s a promising premise.? But??one problem is that after 2 or 3 beats where he discovers he’s too late? — the people on his shit list?die before he can do the job himself — the running joke will get stale.?? Maybe it can be sustained for the 1st half of the 2nd Act – but through the entire 2nd Act?? I dunno.?
Wouldn’t he realize the pattern? by the midpoint?? And then what? ?It seems to me that’s where the really interesting story begins.?? (But I don’t know what it could be after the running?joke gets old because I don’t know what your theme is.)
“Overcoming his frustration” — well, yes, of course.? But his frustration is merely a symptom of deeper malady:? his inability to forgive and forget. ? That’s the “lesson learned” phase of the story.? But the “lesson learned” usually pertains to the subjective need of the protagonist.? While a logline is about the objective goal.?
So what this logline proposes is a character pursuing the wrong objective goal.? Which is okay,? depending on our theme, which I don’t know.
I know I’m sending mixed signals, here.? Because I have a mixed reaction.? As I said, I think it’s promising, but I as I don’t know the thematic target you’re aiming for, I, for one,?remain ambivalent.
See lessSeeking revenge for her sexual assault a woman crosses the line into vigilante; she is now hunted by police and the community she believes she protects.
I think the basic concept has great potential.? But ?"Hunted by the police and community" is too ?general.? ? One thing that might benefit the logline -- and story -- is to designate a specific nemesis who arises and becomes as obsessed with hunting her down as she is with being a vigilante.
I think the basic concept has great potential.? But ?”Hunted by the police and community” is too ?general.? ? One thing that might benefit the logline — and story — is to designate a specific nemesis who arises and becomes as obsessed with hunting her down as she is with being a vigilante.
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