ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
16.05.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Why you Should Learn to Love the Logline

Author: Jeff Bollow | Posted: 20-04-2007 | Comments: 0 | Views: 114 | Rating: Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!

When I was a frustrated, struggling writer, I used to believe there was something wrong with the system. How was anyone with talent supposed to break in, if the people within the system made it virtually impossible to get noticed?

Take this ridiculous idea of LOGLINES.

Am I really supposed to be able to encapsulate my entire kick-ass, finely-detailed, one-hundred-page screenplay in TWO SENTENCES?! That's got to be the most ridiculous thing I'd ever heard. Impossible. Stupid. Narrow-minded. No matter WHAT I came up with, it could never truly reflect the richness of my words. Those producers are closing their minds to the more complex and valuable material, I assumed.

And then I started looking for screenplays to produce.

Being the enlightened one, I accepted any and all unsolicited screenplays through the Embryo films website. But a funny thing happened.

We got inundated.

And when I say inundated, I don't mean we were swamped with hundreds of thousands of screenplays. No. There just aren't that many people in Australia writing screenplays. We were inundated with about a hundred and fifty.

But, being a writer myself (and knowing how much effort you put into it), I didn't want to just reject screenplays out of hand. So I made a policy of reading everything that came in -- or at least of giving it a genuinely "fair go".

After about a month, I was so hopelessly behind, that I would never catch up. They were coming in faster than I could keep up. Within six months, I was sure I was being voodoo cursed by a couple hundred writers out there.

See, it takes about an hour and a half to properly read a correctly-formatted screenplay. And even if you've got a lot of time on your hands (which I didn't), you still can't read more than, say, 10 or 20 scripts in a week. Not if you're trying to seriously consider them for production. And as soon as you have ANYTHING going on in your life, you're lucky to get through 5 or 6 of them.

Eventually, I was consumed with guilt. Not getting back to writers who had submitted their screenplays made me just as wicked and evil as every other producer that had never gotten back to me. Skimming scripts to "get a feel for it" was going against what I claimed made me different. The mountain of scripts (okay, call it a "stack", but emotionally, it was a mountain) became overwhelming.

There had to be a better way.

Ironically, I found it. It's called a LOGLINE.

Turns out, there's a reason things are done the way they've been done for decades. (Funny that.)

A compelling logline does several things at the same time, and as a writer, you need to understand these points:

1) IT SAVES THE PRODUCER'S TIME.
And let's face it, if I spend all my time reading screenplays, I don't spend much time producing. If I make the decision about what to READ merely by looking at the logline, I can spend the time reading only those projects that fit the parameters of what I'm looking for. If you've written an amazing fantasy drama, and I'm really looking for a comedy, I helps us quickly determine we're not a match on this particular project. (It's a time-management thing, not a judgment on your writing.)

2) IT DEMONSTRATES THE MARKETING ANGLE.
A perpetual problem producers face is that they need to find money in order to make their films. If I can't imagine how I would sell the film, I'm not going to be very confident when approaching investors or distributors. By sending me a compelling logline, you're helping make my life easier, which in turns makes me want to work with you.

3) IT PULLS THEM IN.
Let's face it, which script would YOU rather read -- one whose concept is vague, generic, and run-of-the-mill (something you've seen a thousand times)? Or one that, upon reading it for the very first time, gets your mind racing, imagining possibilities, and excited about what that film could become? Well, I'm no different. I want life to be as exciting as possible, too.

4) IT LETS THEM KNOW YOU'RE A PROFESSIONAL.
Now this one I didn't realize until I'd seen enough proof of it. But I discovered something a few years ago -- that a professional screenwriter (or at least someone capable of writing professional caliber material) is GOOD WITH WORDS. Seems obvious, doesn't it? Well, it's not. As anyone who's read more than 30 or 40 unproduced screenplays can tell you, you pretty much know by the end of page 5 whether or not the writer knows what they're doing. What I've discovered is that you REALLY know after just the logline. If you can't grab me in two sentences, why should I believe you'll grab me in a few thousand?

So, in short, loglines are NOT the enemy.

In fact, crafting a powerful logline will help you exercise the very same skills that will help you craft a powerful screenplay.

And when you send off that logline, you should KNOW what reaction I'm going to have when I read it. When you can do that, you won't find every producer requesting your screenplay. But you WILL find the right ones.

Keep on writing!

Rate this Article:

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/screenplay-articles/why-you-should-learn-to-love-the-logline-134828.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Jeff Bollow is an award-winning filmmaker, acclaimed screenwriting teacher, founder of Screenplay.com.au, and best-selling author of Writing FAST: How to Write Anything with Lightning Speed, available through writingFAST.com and Amazon.com.

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

The Five Paths for Australian Screenwriters
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Screenplay
In Australia, screenwriting can seem like an impossible dream. Here are some specific ways forward.

Making Promises you Can Keep
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Writing
Why you keep making promises with your words, and how to live up to them.

All Drama is Conflict
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Screenplay
Before you dismiss the old cliche, take a closer look at just exactly what it means.

Make a Good First Impression
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Screenplay
Why the very first page of your screenplay is the most important one.

Screenplays and Scripts: Understand the Difference
By: M.d. Tabish Faraz | 20/07/2007 | Screenplay
Audience of the products of entertainment industries all over the world and people who are aspiring entertainment industry wannabes and workders if not the professionals in almost all parts of the globe have developed the habit of using the terms screenplay and script interchangeably with the later one most frequently used. This, however, is an errorneous custom and needs to be changed as to depict our correct understanding of the two terms as well as leading the people who are unconnected to t

22 Ways to Improve Your Screenwriting
By: Hal Croasmun | 05/09/2007 | Non-Fiction
Imagine how exciting it is to watch your screenwriting improve every single day. This article gives you 22 ways to improve -- without spending money or leaving your computer.

The Third Ear
By: David Hooper | 13/09/2005 | Art and Entertainment
A few edits today. I talk and the producer works the board... So why have two extra people in where space (and ventilation) are at a premium? Kathode Ray Music is ten.

You are the Box Office Smash: the Personal Screenplay
By: Gordy Hoffman | 16/02/2007 | Screenplay
Right this very second, in the heart of every struggling, undiscovered screenwriter, in the dark, hidden corner deep within, there is a voice, a clear whisper, saying one thing:

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Frequently Asked Questions

If a terminated employee's cancer returns...
By: lena9221 | 14-05-2008
If a terminated employee's cancer returns, does the company that terminated the employee have to pay for treatment?

Is a writer that is too bloody and too violent ...
By: Candy312 | 13-05-2008
Is a writer that is too bloody and too violent like Bob D Caterino, still a great writer?

Can I use Grace I&WS for an outside wall of a ...
By: skellas | 09-05-2008
Can I use Grace I&WS for an outside wall of a Pacific Coast cabin that will then be covered with cedar shingles

Do ins. company's cover this kind of process
By: markroberts | 09-05-2008
Do ins. company's cover this kind of process

I need a Director of National Safety for a ...
By: c1girl | 05-05-2008
I need a Director of National Safety for a construction firm out in New York...10 yrs experience...anybody know anyone ?

Who Is?
By: exunioninc | 02-05-2008
Who is Rev. Albert (Akono Jahi) Jackson Author of U.N.I.T.Y. A Message to the Black Woman?

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Screenplay Articles

What Can Go Into a Plot?
By: jaswalbhisham | 21/03/2008
Creative Writing Tips – We all tackle plotting differently. How you plot will be individual to you, as it is with eve

Finish your Screenplay, Find yourself a Writingmate!
By: kerry shahan | 20/02/2008
Do you still have that 1/2 written screenplay collecting dust in the corner or maybe an awesome movie idea that you haven't been able to put into words or the time to finish? Well writing success can be found through working with a partner to help propel your work to the next level..You got it, get yourself a Writingmate!

The Inciting Incident and Plot Point I: Understand the Difference
By: M.d. Tabish Faraz | 20/07/2007
What most fresh screenwriters don’t seem to understand correctly and make a technical mistake in is the first act (the beginning or the setup) where their writing indicates their misunderstanding of the difference between the inciting incident and plot point I, the two major highs in the first act.

Screenplays and Scripts: Understand the Difference
By: M.d. Tabish Faraz | 20/07/2007
Audience of the products of entertainment industries all over the world and people who are aspiring entertainment industry wannabes and workders if not the professionals in almost all parts of the globe have developed the habit of using the terms screenplay and script interchangeably with the later one most frequently used. This, however, is an errorneous custom and needs to be changed as to depict our correct understanding of the two terms as well as leading the people who are unconnected to t

Make a Good First Impression
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007
Why the very first page of your screenplay is the most important one.

All Drama is Conflict
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007
Before you dismiss the old cliche, take a closer look at just exactly what it means.

The Five Paths for Australian Screenwriters
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007
In Australia, screenwriting can seem like an impossible dream. Here are some specific ways forward.

What is Plagiarism
By: Jennifer Burns | 13/04/2007
As a university student, you came across the issue of plagiarizing. This article presents techniques on how to avoid unintentional plagiarizing.

More from Jeff Bollow

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Reviews and Spoilers -- How Did They Do it so Fast???
By: Jeff Bollow | 21/07/2007 | Writing
How is it possible that some reviewers can read and fully digest a 784 page book, and post a thoughtful, well-considered 1,100-word review in a single day?

Make a Good First Impression
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Screenplay
Why the very first page of your screenplay is the most important one.

All Drama is Conflict
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Screenplay
Before you dismiss the old cliche, take a closer look at just exactly what it means.

Making Promises you Can Keep
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Writing
Why you keep making promises with your words, and how to live up to them.

Give yourself Permission to Write Garbage
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Writing
My #1 tip for writing fast, or for writing better, is to stop aiming for such perfection.

The Five Paths for Australian Screenwriters
By: Jeff Bollow | 20/04/2007 | Screenplay
In Australia, screenwriting can seem like an impossible dream. Here are some specific ways forward.

Writing Fast: How to Write 10 Times Faster, Guaranteed
By: Jeff Bollow | 18/04/2007 | Writing
Four simple steps to writing fast, right here, right now.

Article Categories



Creative Commons License




Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below