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  1. Posted: June 3, 2013In: Public

    Clashing husband-and-wife inventors of a new process to design life-saving drugs need to settle their differences in time to fight off a global corporation using espionage tactics to bury an invention that will save millions of lives.

    dpg Singularity
    Added an answer on June 5, 2013 at 7:46 am

    Totally disagree about the characterization of "The Birds". One reason Hitchcock's movies pass the test of time is because he paid attention to plotting. The basic skeleton of the plot is there in "The Birds" and if it isn't obvious, it's a testimony to Hitchcock's craft that he hid the plot skeletoRead more

    Totally disagree about the characterization of “The Birds”.

    One reason Hitchcock’s movies pass the test of time is because he paid attention to plotting. The basic skeleton of the plot is there in “The Birds” and if it isn’t obvious, it’s a testimony to Hitchcock’s craft that he hid the plot skeleton so well behind the celluloid.

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  2. Posted: June 4, 2013In: Public

    A paranoid lawyer must confront his own personal demons when his elderly client strikes comparisons with Adolf Hitler, raising a dangerous hate mob.

    dpg Singularity
    Added an answer on June 5, 2013 at 1:21 am

    Re: the era. Can't win for losing can you? All I can say is that in the year 2013, 124 years after Hitler was born, if not clarified in the logline, I have no option but to assume it's set in the present. Which makes the whole Hitler mistaken-identity issue unbelievable. But then I find the London sRead more

    Re: the era. Can’t win for losing can you?

    All I can say is that in the year 2013, 124 years after Hitler was born, if not clarified in the logline, I have no option but to assume it’s set in the present. Which makes the whole Hitler mistaken-identity issue unbelievable.

    But then I find the London setting in the 80’s unbelievable, too. Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil — I can suspend disbelief. But England?

    One person’s opinion.

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  3. Posted: June 4, 2013In: Public

    A paranoid lawyer must confront his own personal demons when his elderly client strikes comparisons with Adolf Hitler, raising a dangerous hate mob.

    dpg Singularity
    Added an answer on June 5, 2013 at 12:32 am

    Then the time frame probably ought to be shoe-horned into the logline to make it credible. Another is the setting. The "angry mob" would be contingent on where the story is set. Ex-Nazis were able live in obscurity and serenity in German communities in other countries after World War II.

    Then the time frame probably ought to be shoe-horned into the logline to make it credible.

    Another is the setting. The “angry mob” would be contingent on where the story is set. Ex-Nazis were able live in obscurity and serenity in German communities in other countries after World War II.

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