Logline Writing Skill
Purpose
Create compelling, marketable loglines that hook readers in a single sentence. A logline is the elevator pitch of your story—it must convey the essence of your narrative while creating intrigue and demonstrating commercial viability.
Logline Formula
When [INCITING INCIDENT], a [SPECIFIC PROTAGONIST] must [GOAL/ACTION] before [STAKES/DEADLINE], or else [CONSEQUENCES].
Core Components
| Element | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Protagonist | Specific, relatable descriptor | "a burnt-out detective" |
| Inciting Incident | What disrupts their world | "discovers his partner was murdered" |
| Goal | Active, specific objective | "must find the killer" |
| Stakes | What's at risk | "before he becomes the next target" |
| Irony/Hook | The unique twist | "only to realize he's the prime suspect" |
Quality Criteria
Must Have
- •Active protagonist (not passive victim)
- •Clear goal with obstacles
- •Tangible stakes
- •Specific details (not generic)
- •Present tense
- •25-50 words
Must Avoid
- •Character names (unless famous IP)
- •Questions ("What if...?")
- •Vague language ("must fight evil")
- •Backstory dumps
- •Multiple plotlines
- •Passive voice
Format Variations
Punchy (Under 25 words)
A disgraced surgeon must perform an impossible transplant on a dying mob boss—using his own heart—to save his kidnapped daughter.
Descriptive (40-60 words)
When a disgraced cardiac surgeon's daughter is kidnapped by a ruthless crime syndicate, he's forced to perform an impossible transplant: remove his own heart and transplant it into their dying boss. With only hours to live, he must find a way to save his daughter without sacrificing himself.
High-Concept
"Saw" meets "Grey's Anatomy" - A surgeon must operate on himself to save his daughter from kidnappers.
Genre-Specific Elements
Action/Thriller
- •Physical stakes
- •Time pressure
- •External threat
- •Visceral verbs
Drama
- •Emotional stakes
- •Internal conflict
- •Relationship dynamics
- •Transformation arc
Comedy
- •Comedic situation
- •Fish-out-of-water
- •Ironic juxtaposition
- •Escalating complications
Horror
- •Survival stakes
- •Atmosphere hint
- •Threat nature
- •Isolation element
Output Format
## Logline Package ### Primary Logline [Main logline - 25-50 words] ### Variations **Punchy Version:** [Under 25 words] **Descriptive Version:** [40-60 words] **High-Concept:** [X meets Y format] ### Hook Analysis - **Ironic Element:** [What makes this unique] - **Genre Signals:** [How genre is conveyed] - **Commercial Appeal:** [Why this is marketable]
Examples by Format
Feature Film
"When a retired hitman's dog is killed by mobsters, he comes out of retirement to wage a one-man war against the entire criminal underworld—discovering they've put a $14 million bounty on his head."
TV Pilot
"A public defender discovers her new client—accused of a brutal murder—is actually her long-lost brother, forcing her to choose between her career and her family's darkest secrets."
Limited Series
"After a small-town sheriff arrests a drifter for murder, she uncovers evidence that her entire town has been covering up crimes for decades—and her own father may be the mastermind."
Short Film
"A grieving mother receives a phone call from her dead son, leading her to question whether she's losing her mind or being given a second chance."
Best Practices
- •Start with conflict - The story is the struggle
- •Be specific - "Astronaut" not "person"
- •Show stakes - What's lost if they fail
- •Create irony - The unexpected twist
- •Imply genre - Through tone and situation
- •End with hook - Leave them wanting more