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When new clues from the diary of her long lost brother, help a young woman to solve a riddle of decades old crime, she is compelled to go to Siberia in search for her vanished family and a missing treasure.
The problem I have with this logline is that I don't comprehend the causal relationship between clues that help her to solve the murder and the trip to Siberia, how the former is the inciting incident for the latter. And I shouldn't have to read the book, or a synopsis, to figure that out.
The problem I have with this logline is that I don’t comprehend the causal relationship between clues that help her to solve the murder and the trip to Siberia, how the former is the inciting incident for the latter.
And I shouldn’t have to read the book, or a synopsis, to figure that out.
See lessWhen new clues from the diary of her long lost brother, help a young woman to solve a riddle of decades old crime, she is compelled to go to Siberia in search for her vanished family and a missing treasure.
Why not roll it all up into one: she has to go to Siberia to solve the murder, too? (Nowhere is it written and rarely is it done that an adaptation must be slavishly faithful to the source material.)
Why not roll it all up into one: she has to go to Siberia to solve the murder, too? (Nowhere is it written and rarely is it done that an adaptation must be slavishly faithful to the source material.)
See lessAfter a land survey reveals that her fence is in the wrong place, a homeowner, unwilling to lose part of her backyard, wages war against her neighbor ? no matter what the law says.
Seems like a natural for a comedy, a dark one perhaps, but still a comedy of human folly.
Seems like a natural for a comedy, a dark one perhaps, but still a comedy of human folly.
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