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ARTICLE

(Article
#5) Creating Bomb-Proof
Loglines (Screenwriter's Web Series) by Lenore Wright
All
screenwriters use loglines to sell their scripts.
We use loglines in query letters to impress agents we've never met. We
enter them in script competitions to entice judges to read our screenplays.
We post them in script registries to attract producers who live 3,000
miles away.
We ask a lot of our loglines. We need loglines that ROCK!
THE FIRST STEP TOWARD A SCRIPT SALE
In some situations, loglines work better as a sales tool than screenplays
do. Agents and producers look for easy outs when dealing with un-produced
writers. Loglines provide LESS for them to say no to than a detailed synopsis
or a complete script does. This can be a plus.
The logline introduces the story to them, offering a taste of the movie
without forcing them to devour the whole script. As they become familiar
with the movie idea, they exercise their own imaginations. This brings
them a step closer to asking to read the script.
CREATING A DYNAMIC LOGLINE
Logline techniques vary among screenwriters but most will agree with this
warning from the American Association of Screenwriters, "If you can't
say it in three sentences, you don't know what your script is about."
-- Some writers simply summarize their movie: set-up, conflict, and resolution.
-- Other writers create a one sentence TV Guide style logline emphasizing
both the external storyline and the internal one. An example would be
this logline for E.T.: A shy, alienated boy bonds with an extraterrestrial
child who's been stranded on earth; the boy defies the adults to help
the alien contact his mother-ship so he can go home.
-- My suggestion: Don't limit yourself to the set-up or the plot, emphasize
the unique elements of your script that enable audiences to connect with
the situation and identify with the hero. Think of the logline as a commercial
for your movie.
I'll show you what I mean by creating loglines for two popular movies:
LOGLINE FOR A CHARACTER-DRIVEN MOVIE: RAIN MAN
The set-up: A young, self-centered hotshot goes home for his father's
funeral and learns he's been cut out of the will. The family wealth goes
to an older sibling - an autistic brother he never knew he had.
Imagine we were making a commercial for RAIN MAN. What clips would we
use?
-- To create IDENTIFICATION with the star we'd show moments emphasizing
the contrast between the brothers and dramatize the star's frustration
with this unexpected obstacle to his ambitions.
-- To create CONNECTION with the star's situation we'd show the ACTION
he takes to get what he wants -- the family money. How does he try to
get control of the inheritance? He kidnaps the autistic brother. Since
the brother is afraid to fly, they drive cross-country. They visit places
(Las Vegas, fancy shopping malls) where the hotshot feels at home but
which the autistic brother finds challenging - comically and touchingly.
-- To highlight the POTENTIAL CRISIS the hero faces, we'd focus on moments
that dramatize the unexpected relationship developing between the brothers
as the hotshot realizes how unusual his 'savant' brother is.
-- To emphasize what's at RISK for the hotshot, we'd hint at the secret
that binds them and threatens the grandiose plans he has made.
LOGLINE FOR RAIN MAN:
A self-centered hotshot returns home for his father's funeral and learns
the family inheritance goes to an autistic brother he never knew he had.
The hotshot kidnaps this older brother and drives him cross-country hoping
to gain his confidence and get control of the family money. The journey
reveals an unusual dimension to the brother's autism that sparks their
relationship and unlocks a dramatic childhood secret that changes everything.
That logline would convince me to read the script.
LOGLINE FOR A PLOT-DRIVEN SCRIPT: SOME LIKE IT HOT
The set-up: Two male musicians witness the St. Valentine's Day massacre.
When the mobsters pursue them, they try to elude them by joining an all-girl
band headed for a gig in Miami.
What film clips would we use to create a commercial for this classic comedy?
We'd want to emphasize the accelerating COMIC COMPLICATIONS that result
from the cross-dressing.
-- The sax player falls so hard for a sexy girl in the band that he creates
a new male identity so he can pursue her.
-- The bass fiddle player struggles to keep from blowing their cover as
he dodges the comical romantic advances of an aging, nearsighted playboy.
We'd want to reveal the DANGEROUS COMPLICATIONS that the mob massacre
promised upfront. We must reveal that he mobsters show up at the Miami
resort where the 'girls' have a gig because their arrival complicates
the love stories and pressures the heroes.
LOGLINE FOR SOME LIKE IT HOT:
Two male musicians accidentally witness the St. Valentines' Day massacre;
to elude the mobsters who pursue them, they dress in drag and join an
all-girl band headed for Miami. One of them falls for a sexy singer and
poses as a Miami playboy so he can woo her; his pal has to dodge the amorous
advances of the nearsighted Miami playboy he impersonates. Love conquers
all -- till the mobsters show up at the same Miami resort for a convention.
Who wouldn't want to read that script?
CHECKLIST FOR YOUR LOGLINE
- Reveal the star's SITUATION
- Reveal the important COMPLICATIONS
- Describe the ACTION the star takes
- Describe the star's CRISIS decision
- Hint at the CLIMAX - the danger, the 'showdown'
- Hint at the star's potential TRANSFORMATION
- Identify SIZZLE: sex, greed, humor, danger, thrills, satisfaction
- Identify GENRE
- Keep it to three sentences
- Use present tense
How can you pack all that into three sentences? If you think of your logline
as a commercial for the movie you've seen in your head as you've been
writing the script, you'll breathe life and personality into those three
sentences.
Try it. Your logline will ROCK!
For a tutorial on how to write a dynamic query letter:
http://breakingin.net/tswquery.htm
FEEDBACK: screenwriter@breakingin.net
Copyright
© 2001 Lenore Wright

Lenore
Wright has 15 years experience selling spec
scripts and movie pitches to major production houses. This column is part
of her ongoing series - The Screenwriter's Web. For more insider information
on marketing screenplays log onto her site: http://breakingin.net/
or subscribe to her FREE newsletter SCRIPT MARKET NEWS by sending an email
to newsletter@breakingin.net

Final Draft 5.0
Program for Screenwriters! So you've got
a blockbuster movie idea floating in your head and you want to break into
show business? Final Draft won't put dialogue on the pages of your screenplay
for you, but it'll do almost everything else. With plugs on the back cover
from such notables as Tom Hanks and Oliver Stone, it's obvious that at
least some folks in Hollywood actually use Final Draft for their final
drafts.
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