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  1. Posted: August 23, 2016In: Examples

    An aging radical’s suicide reunites seven of his college cohorts to mourn and reflect on the gap between their youthful ideals and their middle-aged conformity.

    Roberto Alto Logliner
    Added an answer on August 26, 2017 at 10:49 am

    It sounds like an Abbie Hoffman movie.

    It sounds like an Abbie Hoffman movie.

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  2. Posted: August 26, 2017In: Drama

    After abandoning adoptive grandparents who later do not survive a crime he feels he instigated, a Texas senior must defeat hometown demons that follow him on his journey to find a place he can safely call home.

    Best Answer
    Roberto Alto Logliner
    Added an answer on August 26, 2017 at 5:18 am

    Singularity, I don't know what I can do to the log line to express what I just wrote - should I say the guy is a figment of his imagination?

    Singularity, I don’t know what I can do to the log line to express what I just wrote – should I say the guy is a figment of his imagination?

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  3. Posted: August 26, 2017In: Drama

    After abandoning adoptive grandparents who later do not survive a crime he feels he instigated, a Texas senior must defeat hometown demons that follow him on his journey to find a place he can safely call home.

    Best Answer
    Roberto Alto Logliner
    Added an answer on August 26, 2017 at 5:17 am

    Thank you! This is a great response. I would like to represent the "hometown demons" in the story as a character who keeps appearing. Yes, someone who represents his own feelings of guilt and fear for the town and family he abandoned. I'd like to write the character in as a person - antagonist - whoRead more

    Thank you! This is a great response. I would like to represent the “hometown demons” in the story as a character who keeps appearing. Yes, someone who represents his own feelings of guilt and fear for the town and family he abandoned. I’d like to write the character in as a person – antagonist – who later is revealed as a figment of his imagination. The protagonist is always looking forward, but I want to set up a situation that when references to the past come up, the antagonist emerges too, but by the latter half this doesn’t happen as much, indicating he is no longer burdened by these feelings and he is straight on devoted to attaining his goal, which is to find a place he can call home – a place with permanence and friendships that he can feel loyal to. I like your reference to looking in the rear view mirror because this is a highway-based story.

    In the story, some of the characters that surround his new home include an elderly man and an elderly woman – giving him an opportunity to have older souls enter his life?- perhaps a redemptive move on his part to make up for the perfect life he was not able to have with his adoptive grandparents.

    The backstory is that his parents were killed (car accident) when he was very young, and his grandparents stepped in when he was 6 and took over the parenting. It all goes sour his senior year, and he is forced to leave home. A few attempts to establish a home life after that – when he’s on the run trying to plant roots – make his urge to claim a place as “home” stronger toward the end of the story.

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