Difference between revisions of "The Rendezvous, television series pitch/Episode loglines"

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== Episode 1 - ''[[He's sinking!]]'' (1922) ==
 
== Episode 1 - ''[[He's sinking!]]'' (1922) ==
  
From the blustery winter outdoors '''boys''' burst into '''The Rendezvous roadhouse tavern''' with alarming news. Venturing out onto the frozen '''Lake St. Clair''' the '''men and boys''' find a stuck old '''jalopy''' weighed down with '''whisky''' perilously in danger of plunging into the '''frozen depths'''. Despite several attempts with different ideas, the subtle and not-subtle '''racist''' men succeed in '''freeing the vehicle''' to continue its smugglers' journey thanks to the idea of '''Cliff, the Black man''' who works at The Rendezvous.
+
From the blustery winter outdoors '''boys''' burst into '''The Rendezvous roadhouse tavern''' with alarming news.
 +
 
 +
Venturing out onto the frozen '''Lake St. Clair''' the '''men and boys''' find a stuck old '''jalopy''' weighed down with '''whisky''' perilously in danger of plunging into the '''frozen depths'''.
 +
 
 +
Despite several attempts with different ideas, the subtle and not-subtle '''racist''' men succeed in '''freeing the vehicle''' to continue its smugglers' journey thanks to the idea of '''Cliff, the Black man''' who works at The Rendezvous.
  
 
== Episode 2 - ''[[Packing for war]]'' (1943) ==
 
== Episode 2 - ''[[Packing for war]]'' (1943) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 3 - ''[[Auto grind]]'' (1967) ==
 
== Episode 3 - ''[[Auto grind]]'' (1967) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 4 - ''[[Shut up!]]'' (1922, 1943, 1967) ==
 
== Episode 4 - ''[[Shut up!]]'' (1922, 1943, 1967) ==
  
=== ''Wall hole'' ===
+
=== ''Wall hole'' (1922) ===
 +
 
 +
* -
 +
 
 +
=== ''Dish smash'' (1943) ===
  
=== ''Dish smash'' ===
+
* -
  
=== ''I won't'' ===
+
=== ''I won't'' (1967) ===
 +
 
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 5 - ''[[Ain't misbehavin']]'' (1922) ==
 
== Episode 5 - ''[[Ain't misbehavin']]'' (1922) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 6 - ''[[Having a riot]]'' (1943) ==
 
== Episode 6 - ''[[Having a riot]]'' (1943) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 7 - ''[[Seeds of discontent]]'' (1967) ==
 
== Episode 7 - ''[[Seeds of discontent]]'' (1967) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 8 - ''[[Roadhouse taverns]]'' (1922, 1943, 1967) ==
 
== Episode 8 - ''[[Roadhouse taverns]]'' (1922, 1943, 1967) ==
  
 
=== ''Fats bribes'' ===
 
=== ''Fats bribes'' ===
 +
 +
* -
  
 
=== ''Patriarch ache'' ===
 
=== ''Patriarch ache'' ===
 +
 +
* -
  
 
=== ''Supremes'' ===
 
=== ''Supremes'' ===
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 9 - ''[[Family tree]]'' ==
 
== Episode 9 - ''[[Family tree]]'' ==
  
 
: '''''Optional''' 1800s bonus episode.''
 
: '''''Optional''' 1800s bonus episode.''
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 10 - ''[[Tanks in Detroit]]'' (1967) ==
 
== Episode 10 - ''[[Tanks in Detroit]]'' (1967) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 11 - ''[[Father's funeral]]'' (1943) ==
 
== Episode 11 - ''[[Father's funeral]]'' (1943) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 12 - ''[[Gangsters rendezvous]]'' (1922) ==
 
== Episode 12 - ''[[Gangsters rendezvous]]'' (1922) ==
 +
 +
* -
  
 
== Episode 13 - ''[[Wealth of generations]]'' (1922, 1943, 1967) ==
 
== Episode 13 - ''[[Wealth of generations]]'' (1922, 1943, 1967) ==
  
 
=== ''Walk and patch'' ===
 
=== ''Walk and patch'' ===
 +
 +
* -
  
 
=== ''Real riches'' ===
 
=== ''Real riches'' ===
 +
 +
* -
  
 
=== ''Diamonds!'' ===
 
=== ''Diamonds!'' ===
 +
 +
* -
  
  

Revision as of 02:06, 20 July 2024

Anitque National television.
The Rendezvous Tavern with strategically designed look-out windows.
The Rendezvous Bar was wired into four other roadhouses with warning buzzers to alert them of impending police raids.
The Edgewater Thomas Inn was a high-class blind-pig in Riverside with secret passageways and hidden wine cellars.
Bertha Thomas was the eccentric roadhouse pioneer who ran the Edgewater Thomas Inn.

A logline (aka elevator pitch) is a one or two line plot summary.

Work in progress

Rather than directly adapt The Rendezvous screenplay, an unpublished feature screenplay by Jason Carswell, after many years of not looking at my script or copious notes I'm going to first outline (and maybe draft a treatment of) the story from memory to see what new gems may turn up before polishing.

At present, 12 or 13 episodes of about 10 minutes each (plus credits), would add up to 120 to 130 minutes - like a movie, but not.


Episode 1 - He's sinking! (1922)

From the blustery winter outdoors boys burst into The Rendezvous roadhouse tavern with alarming news.

Venturing out onto the frozen Lake St. Clair the men and boys find a stuck old jalopy weighed down with whisky perilously in danger of plunging into the frozen depths.

Despite several attempts with different ideas, the subtle and not-subtle racist men succeed in freeing the vehicle to continue its smugglers' journey thanks to the idea of Cliff, the Black man who works at The Rendezvous.

Episode 2 - Packing for war (1943)

  • -

Episode 3 - Auto grind (1967)

  • -

Episode 4 - Shut up! (1922, 1943, 1967)

Wall hole (1922)

  • -

Dish smash (1943)

  • -

I won't (1967)

  • -

Episode 5 - Ain't misbehavin' (1922)

  • -

Episode 6 - Having a riot (1943)

  • -

Episode 7 - Seeds of discontent (1967)

  • -

Episode 8 - Roadhouse taverns (1922, 1943, 1967)

Fats bribes

  • -

Patriarch ache

  • -

Supremes

  • -

Episode 9 - Family tree

Optional 1800s bonus episode.
  • -

Episode 10 - Tanks in Detroit (1967)

  • -

Episode 11 - Father's funeral (1943)

  • -

Episode 12 - Gangsters rendezvous (1922)

  • -

Episode 13 - Wealth of generations (1922, 1943, 1967)

Walk and patch

  • -

Real riches

  • -

Diamonds!

  • -


Reference

Wikipedia links, unless otherwise noted:

1922

  • Ain't Misbehavin' (song)
    "Ain't Misbehavin'" is a 1929 stride jazz/early swing song. Andy Razaf wrote the lyrics to a score by Thomas "Fats" Waller and Harry Brooks for the Broadway musical comedy play Connie's Hot Chocolates (opened June 20, 1929). As a work from 1929 with its copyright renewed, it will enter the American public domain on January 1, 2025.
  • Boardwalk Empire, an HBO television series, 2010-2014

1943

  • 1943 Detroit race riot, Sunday June 20 - Tuesday June 22, 1943
    • Belle Isle Park
    • MacArthur Bridge (Detroit), 1923+, replaced an iron bridge with wooden decking that accidentally caught fire and was destroyed in 1915. The bridge, popularly known as the Belle Isle Bridge, was originally named the George Washington Bridge and renamed the Douglas MacArthur Bridge after General Douglas MacArthur in 1942.

1967