
Logline Lesson Plan | Cinematic Arts Curriculum
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How can students pitch a movie in 30 words or fewer? Quarter 1 of our curriculum introduces loglines, a staple in the cinematic arts that sharpens summarizing skills and hooks audiences.
- Key Takeaway #1: Loglines combine protagonist, conflict, and stakes in one punchy sentence.
- Key Takeaway #2: Six core elements—protagonist, antagonist, setting, rising action, problem, resolution—guide student writing.
- Key Takeaway #3: The free preview lets you test a full movie guide before committing.
Why Teach Loglines in an ELA Class?
Loglines train learners to distill theme, conflict, and character into concise language, directly supporting CCRA.W.2 (informative writing) and CCRA.SL.1 (concise presentation).Unit Context—Dystopias and Underdogs
These lessons appear in Units 1 and 2 of Quarter 1. Students first analyze loglines for The Giver and 1984, then craft original sentences for inspirational films like The Karate Kid.Extension Activity: Writing Loglines
Guided Discussion Prompts
Definition brainstorm, six-element breakdown, and famous logline guessing games (“A pragmatic paleontologist… cloned dinosaurs run loose”—students shout Jurassic Park!).Student-Led Tasks
- Label six elements in a Home Alone logline.
- Create a reusable template from Jurassic Park and Home Alone.
- Write a new logline for Frozen using supplied elements.
- Compare two Aladdin loglines—identify missing elements and accuracy.
- Rank three Back to the Future loglines and justify choices.
- Invent original loglines and present in class with visual aids.
Lesson Ideas and Classroom Activities
Pre-Viewing Anticipation Guide
Display only the logline; students predict genre, tone, and likely plot twist.During-Viewing Discussion Stops
Pause when the protagonist faces the call to action—does the moment match the logline’s promise?Post-Viewing Projects
- Rewrite the film’s logline changing genre (comedy → thriller).
- Storyboard the six elements on index cards.