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An intelligent but unsuccessful father must save his kids from terrorist who think that he is a Superhero.
Himanshu: I've pondered your logline for a while and am still unsure about how the underlying logic of the premise plays out. ?What is the theme you are exploring? ?What is the emotional payoff ?-- what do you want the audience to think and feel after seeing the film?
Himanshu:
I’ve pondered your logline for a while and am still unsure about how the underlying logic of the premise plays out. ?What is the theme you are exploring? ?What is the emotional payoff ?– what do you want the audience to think and feel after seeing the film?
See lessI did jot know where to post this question so I wrote it here. My question was: Is writing a logline same for a short film, feature film and Documentary. Very rudimentary question but I was curious.
Perhaps, but I don't think it is required or even possible in many cases. ?Whereas loglines are (now) expected in every case for original spec scripts.The purpose of a logline is to sell a script. ?I know we use them here to pitch ideas for scripts, send up trial ballons -- and that's another valuabRead more
Perhaps, but I don’t think it is required or even possible in many cases. ?Whereas loglines are (now) expected in every case for original spec scripts.
The purpose of a logline is to sell a script. ?I know we use them here to pitch ideas for scripts, send up trial ballons — and that’s another valuable opportunity the site provides. (A shout out to Karel!) ?But it was originally designed as a promotional tool, to entice producers and directors to read a finished script.
Now, I realize ?that for historical documentaries, ?a script may be written before any video is shot. ?I’ve amassed a pile of documentation for an historical drama set between 1908 and 1920. ? Enough enough to do a documentary. ?And in both cases, I would use the same logline. Because the story is done and finished — I know how it ends. ?It’s ?essentially the same “plot”.?
But in documentaries for a current ongoing events, you don’t know how it’s going to end. ?You may not even have identified a protagonist, a ?person around whom you will frame a narrative.
A logline is a concise description of a plot. ? And the formal definition of a plot, per Aristotle in the “Poetics”, is an imitation of action, ?a mimicry of real life. ? Which he differentiated from ?histories — the “written documentaries” of his day. ? ?Aristotle said dramatic stories need a plot to succeed whereas histories don’t.?
?Although documentaries must, of necessity, edit reality, they are supposed ?to make a good faith effort to ?conform to known?facts. ?Plot is under no such obligation; it’s has the freedom to bend, wantonly ignore the facts, or make up fictions to fit it’s dramatic purpose.?
Shakespeare’s “Richard III” is a fabulous — and fabulist –historical drama. ?It distorts events and warps characters for the purpose of its plot. ?A documentary of Richard III, faithful to the known historical facts, ?would present a different story, a different portrait.
See lessThe story follows group of friends,each with different idealism and with love for wrong person,as they begin suspecting some of them actually killed their friend who died in an accident.
Moses99 raises a very good point. What is the inciting incident that raises suspicion that the death wasn't just accidental?
Moses99 raises a very good point. What is the inciting incident that raises suspicion that the death wasn’t just accidental?
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