| High-concept and log-lines By By Ken Atchity, Chi-Li Wong, and Mike Kuciak |
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If you're truly angling for the big spec sale, start
dealing with reality: The studios today are producing, for far the most
part, two kinds of films: pre-established franchises (comic books, TV
series, famous novels, toys, etc., like "Spiderman," "Charlie's Angels,"
"Prey," "Power Rangers")and high-concept scripts that are either
conceived of in-house by executives, producers, managers, or agents
who know what the market responds to - or by spec screenplay writers
determined to break the bank.
The "log line" is a one-line description of the story, very much like the one-liners you would read in TV Guide ("Hollywood makes movies you can advertise on TV," says pro Joe Roth). Jaws can be advertised, visually or verbally, as "Shark bad - Kill shark!" After all, television is where you hope your work will end up eventually, so making buyers think it can fit there is the smartest first step to selling. Mike Kuciak in our office offers these examples of script AEI is currently marketing:
It's not necessary for your log line to mention character names. A strong character trait will do - with a dramatic teaser about the story. All log lines go back to that ancient storyteller's formula, "What would happen if a character like x ended up in a situation like y." Next add a specific catch word that quickly tell the reader what the story is about. Is it about love, greed, obsession murder, family turmoil? Once you're set on one or two words you can push out from there adding a few more economical adjectives and verbs to make up your long line.
"Cape Fear": A lawyer's family is stalked by a man he once helped put in jai
"Erin Brockovich": An unemployed single mother becomes a legal assistant and almost single-handedly brings down a California power company accused of polluting a city's water supply
"Saving Private Ryan": US soldiers try to save their comrade who's stationed behind enemy lines. "American Pie": Four teenage boys make a pact to lose their virginity by prom night.
"Castaway": A FedEx executive must transform himself physically and emotionally to survive after a crash landing on a deserted island. "Cliffhanger": A retired mountain climber must conquer an unclimbable peak to save the survivors of a plane crash from certain death. or the system? "People Vs. Larry Flynt": A pornography publisher becomes the unlikely defender of free speech. "Class Action": A female attorney finds that her nemesis is her own father, and must choose between her corporate client and justice."
"Enough": On the run from an abusive husband, a young mother begins to train herself to fight back. Here's what we long to see, in our daily email submissions and by mail: A high concept log line that makes a story out of one of the most universal
and incarnates that element in characters we can care about, relate to, and root for to shape an "original story" that feels both fresh and relevant to today's global market. If you can do that, and your writing equals your vision, you're only steps away from financial success and recognition on the biggest screen of all. Ken and Chi-Li, coauthors of Writing Treatments That Sell, newly revised Los Angeles Times Hollywood Booklist bestseller (Owl Books), are partners in AEI, a literary management and motion picture production company that represents writers who are "ready for prime-time." Mike is associate manager and creative exec at AEI, and can be reached at AEI's affiliate company, The Writer's Lifeline, Inc makes writers and novelists ready for prime-time. |