Project Pitch: The Promise Kept (Part of a Trilogy)
Genre: Crime / Thriller / Drama
Format: Feature Film
Logline:
A troubled teen grows into a police officer and spends a decade secretly hunting the female crime boss responsible for his parents’ death.
Synopsis:
Once known as a troublemaker, Jakeur disappears from the spotlight in his final school years, quietly reshaping himself into someone disciplined and focused. Years later, he shocks everyone by joining the police force, stepping into a dangerous world of crime, justice, and complex moral choices.
At the center of it all is Virginia, a manipulative and powerful figure whose actions trigger a dark case leading to a dramatic trial capturing national attention. As secrets, consequences, and challenges collide, Jakeur is forced to confront the weight of past decisions while navigating a world where loyalty, morality, and justice are constantly tested.
Through change, loss, and redemption, a single silent promise guides Jakeur’s journey — culminating in the revelation that some promises never disappear; they wait patiently until the day they are finally kept.
Looking For:
Producers, directors, and collaborators interested in crime-driven drama with strong character arcs and suspenseful storytelling. Open to co-development, creative input, and production partnerships.
Next Steps:
A complete script is ready for review. Interested collaborators can DM me or contact me via email for a private PDF.
Sean Flanagan - consider forming a relationship with a smaller animation studio that works with the larger ones as well as streamers. You might get a bit more insight about the market talking to someo...
Expand commentSean Flanagan - consider forming a relationship with a smaller animation studio that works with the larger ones as well as streamers. You might get a bit more insight about the market talking to someone like that. If there's one close by to where you live, even better.
1 person likes this
Sean Flanagan This is a great post and you’re asking a lot of the same questions I’ve been thinking about for a short I’m currently working on. The packaging side of animation development is something...
Expand commentSean Flanagan This is a great post and you’re asking a lot of the same questions I’ve been thinking about for a short I’m currently working on. The packaging side of animation development is something I’ve been trying to better understand as well, especially how different buyers respond to different levels of attachment.
I don’t have anything concrete to add yet, but I’ll definitely be following this thread to see the insights people share. Really interested to hear how others have navigated it.
1 person likes this
Bob Harper great feedback! Things I personally need to think on especially "What are you offering them besides a concept and your stellar personality?"
Leonardo Ramirez As a smaller animation studio,...
Expand commentBob Harper great feedback! Things I personally need to think on especially "What are you offering them besides a concept and your stellar personality?"
Leonardo Ramirez As a smaller animation studio, it’s also something for me to consider and continue developing, building strong relationships with larger studios and streaming platforms. Thank you for the insight!
Sean Flanagan This is a really great question! First, let me say it’s amazing that you’ve already put together an amazing project based on all you’ve accomplished thus far. Obvi it’s amazing project t...
Expand commentSean Flanagan This is a really great question! First, let me say it’s amazing that you’ve already put together an amazing project based on all you’ve accomplished thus far. Obvi it’s amazing project to have attracted talent at this stage. Animation is an incredibly difficult market to get into. In my last position through a deal at 20th Studios, I brought in an animated project that was considered. There were two producers attached along with a very high profile actress and the amazing creators. We went in with an amazing pitch and character drawings. I think the reason we intimately weren’t able to sell the show is because we did not have a showrunner who had experience running an animated show attached. I’d like to take another swing at the series and when / if I do, I will try to partner with a showrunner and animated studio that has sold and produced shows that understand the stories and world our project.
Whitney Davis how are you finding possible showrunners? Ive got connections to a few but all in the live action space, so I absolutely get the obvious appeal of saying heres the person qualified to ru...
Expand commentWhitney Davis how are you finding possible showrunners? Ive got connections to a few but all in the live action space, so I absolutely get the obvious appeal of saying heres the person qualified to run the multi-million dollar budget of any season of TV -- but as with most of Hollywood - its easier said than done. Ive heard so many horror stories since the strike of writers rooms being made up of entirely show runners because they bring in their friends to help them get work, and then everyone has the added "sex appeal" of being over qualified...