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A fireman is haunted by the flaming ghost of a man he failed to save from a burning building as it starts burning the survivors to death.
I'm confused. What are your referring to when you say "...as it starts burning the survivors to death"? Is the ghost burning them? First thing to do is to not repeat words in a logline, if at all possible. You use "burning" twice. Starting off with "As", "When" or "After" are usually good ideas in lRead more
I’m confused. What are your referring to when you say “…as it starts burning the survivors to death”? Is the ghost burning them?
First thing to do is to not repeat words in a logline, if at all possible. You use “burning” twice.
Starting off with “As”, “When” or “After” are usually good ideas in loglines, as it helps the reader understand the main elements you’ll need to cover.
The fireman is the protag, and the ghost is the antag. I am assuming the goal of the protag is to stop the ghost from burning survivors. His obstacle is that it’s a ghost, and that he’s haunted by the ghost because it was someone he failed to save.
But what is at stake for the fireman? This is what’s missing. If he doesn’t stop the ghost, so what? People are killed. It doesn’t affect him, personally. So, you have to devise a way of cranking up the conflict a bit, increase the stakes.
What if, for example, he married one of the survivors of that fire, and she’s the mother of his kids, with a belly of twins on the way? NOW, you have a personal stake in the game.
I endured one such horrific incident in my previous career in law enforcement, and while the haunting memory does dissipate over time, it doesn’t ever go away completely. It’s an interesting concept. I’m hoping the genre is supernatural/fantasy/drama, as that is what it portrays.
Hope this helped.
Geno Scala (judge)
See lessNearing the end of his parole and looking to put his criminal past behind him, an ex-con?s plans are derailed by the arrival of two former prison buddies, one with a bullet wound and the other with a plan to rob the local bank.
Pretty good start here, but I have a few suggestions to try to reduce the wording. I always suggest starting loglines with words such as "When...", "As...", "After...". I think some of the excess can be eliminated, and still retain the feel: "As his parole nears an end, an ex-con gone straight runsRead more
Pretty good start here, but I have a few suggestions to try to reduce the wording.
I always suggest starting loglines with words such as “When…”, “As…”, “After…”.
I think some of the excess can be eliminated, and still retain the feel:
“As his parole nears an end, an ex-con gone straight runs into his prison buddies; one with a bullet wound, and one with plans to rob a bank.”
It’s now 28 words, down from 44. I think the flavor is still there, too.
Conceptually, it’s not the most original “just-out-of-prison” ideas, so if you have an interesting “hook” in mind (something that separates it from others of the same genre and topic), I would definitely highlight it in my logline.
As it is, I find it interesting. Whether or not it is interesting enough to want to devote a few hours to read it? That’s the question.
Good luck, and I hope this was some help to you!
Geno Scala (judge)
See lessEyes opened to a blue sky, peeping in through the wholes of the make shift roof, he regained from a dreamless state, ready for the day, parched, quiet, cool and collected. First things first, to the copper water tumbler,still groggy he flt better as the metallic tasting water cooled his innards.
This has to be the opening line of the first scene, accidentally cut and pasted instead of the logline. That's the only explanation I can offer...and still maintain my forum decorum...
This has to be the opening line of the first scene, accidentally cut and pasted instead of the logline.
That’s the only explanation I can offer…and still maintain my forum decorum…
See less