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  1. Posted: November 2, 2014In: Public

    In the final moments before facing the firing squad, the charismatic leader of a murderous robbery gang makes one last request: to have her confession heard by the priest who was once her lover.

    Tony Edward Samurai
    Added an answer on November 4, 2014 at 10:12 pm

    Hi kbfilmworks, My two cents... Indie or mega budget extravaganza, it don't matter -- to be successful, both depend on having a strong story (and when I say successful, I mean financially or artistically...) concept captures interest, but story, with an identifiable/ or intriguing main character, maRead more

    Hi kbfilmworks,

    My two cents…

    Indie or mega budget extravaganza, it don’t matter — to be successful, both depend on having a strong story (and when I say successful, I mean financially or artistically…) concept captures interest, but story, with an identifiable/ or intriguing main character, make you want to see/ read a film. When a loglines’ story is clear, with an identifiable, fallible, or intriguing main character, it also sends a message that the film is in the hands of a professional… and if you aren’t funding the projects you’re writing yourself, then certainly you’d be using the logline to spruik the movie… I mean, Indie feature budgets can still shoot pretty high, right? At some point you need to get folks on board, even if you’re planning on shooting on bubkas. If you’re not, and the logline is just for your own tool to guide you through writing the screenplay, then whatev’s… As long as you know what the story is about — but — if it’s a case of you wanting to post your logline here to get feedback to help clarify it, make it stronger, more appealing for ANYBODY to get involved in it to see it made, then I’d echo others above in saying that the story itself is unclear… Nothing wrong with having dual protags, but I’m just lost on what this film is actually about… I get hints, but there’s precious space taken up on things that aren’t needed i.e. ‘STUNNINGLY charismatic…’ better just ‘charismatic’, imo. Also, “ends up as” feels like he had no say in the matter, or like he just fell into it… which i guess just doesn’t sit right given the profession. I don’t know, maybe that’s just me.

    If your intention is for dual protagonists, then we should know what they BOTH want… All I know of her is the she is full of Implacable hatred, and that he wants forgiveness from her for something that occurred in the past..? This last part is really confusing — he wants forgiveness from her NOW in regards to some undisclosed event, and he couldn’t forgive her in the PAST for some other undisclosed event..?? I get you’re trying to tease, but I think it’s always better to just to state very specifically what is wanted by the main character (or characters), as this is what brings clarity to both loglines and stories, and of course films.

    Best of luck.

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  2. Posted: October 21, 2014In: Public

    When a cattle drover losses the bonus his family was counting on to survive, he turns to bounty hunting War Criminals in a Post-apocolyptic Australian Outback.

    Tony Edward Samurai
    Added an answer on October 22, 2014 at 5:30 pm

    Very valid points from both dpg and Nir -- maybe a better focus/ motivation is redemption rather than financial gain (even though the financial gain equates to survival...)... "In a post apocalyptic Australia, a law abiding farmer joins an aging bounty hunter to find and kill the war criminals thatRead more

    Very valid points from both dpg and Nir — maybe a better focus/ motivation is redemption rather than financial gain (even though the financial gain equates to survival…)…

    “In a post apocalyptic Australia, a law abiding farmer joins an aging bounty hunter to find and kill the war criminals that killed his family and destroyed his farm.”

    Best of luck with it.

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  3. Posted: October 21, 2014In: Public

    When a cattle drover losses the bonus his family was counting on to survive, he turns to bounty hunting War Criminals in a Post-apocolyptic Australian Outback.

    Tony Edward Samurai
    Added an answer on October 22, 2014 at 5:30 pm

    Very valid points from both dpg and Nir -- maybe a better focus/ motivation is redemption rather than financial gain (even though the financial gain equates to survival...)... "In a post apocalyptic Australia, a law abiding farmer joins an aging bounty hunter to find and kill the war criminals thatRead more

    Very valid points from both dpg and Nir — maybe a better focus/ motivation is redemption rather than financial gain (even though the financial gain equates to survival…)…

    “In a post apocalyptic Australia, a law abiding farmer joins an aging bounty hunter to find and kill the war criminals that killed his family and destroyed his farm.”

    Best of luck with it.

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