1. Story Statement: When a small plane crashes in the Amazon, three triangulated characters must navigate the jungle, Colombia’s political landscape, and their haunted pasts, to reunite with their families and ultimately, themselves.
Ch’aska must leave her abusive husband and reunite with her father to tell him the secret she’s held since for ten years: Her mother had an affair, and her brother, whom her father trains to be the next shaman, is the son of a greedy American businessman. As a result of this secret, Ch’aska left her tribe for the city, but is desperate to return to herself, which requires returning home.
After a plane crash killed both pilots and her mother, Gabriela must navigate her three younger siblings and herself, to survive alone in the jungle.
Vishal travels to the Amazon to work with a shaman’s plant medicine, to make peace with his parents’ rejection of his homosexuality, so he can make peace with himself.
2. Antagonistic Forces:
Ch’aska’s husband Rodrigo Garcia: Rodri is a colonel in the Colombian National Army with hopes of becoming a General like his father, the man whose love he’s desperately sought and never received. His inner child leads him to abuse and demean his wife.
Gabriela’s brother Mateo: Mateo refuses to believe his sister regarding their father’s involvement in drug trafficking and betrays all her advice in the jungle, leading to them to be held hostage by a guerrilla soldier.
Vishal: Toby, a British facilitator at the plant medicine retreat center, antagonizes Vishal with harsh reality checks about the jungle and life.
3. Titles
Breakout title: Pintas
The Lost Plane
The Technology of Plants
Visionary Plants
4. Comps:
Into the Jungle by Erica Ferencik
Lost in the Jungle by Yossi Ghinsberg
The Hike by Susi Holliday
In the Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez
5. Core wound + super powerlogline with conflict and core wound
Ch’aska: Ch’aska turned her back on culture at 15 when she learned her mother had an affair with an exploitative businessman, and that her father is training a son not of his blood, to become the next shaman. She has tried to return home on several occasions, and to leave her abusive husband, a military colonel, but cannot find the courage. When a plane crashes near her tribe’s village, the military requests Ch’aska to assist their search party because of her knowledge of the jungle and languages. Ch’aska must return home under betraying conditions to her family and face the truth she’s hidden from herself: She wanted to become the next shaman.
Gabriela: When a plane crashes in the Amazon and kills her mother, Gabriela discovers arms and drugs on the plane, confirming her suspicion her father is involved in trafficking. Lost in the jungle, Gabriela must utilize her ability to connect with ancestral visions to navigate her siblings to survive.
Vishal: When Vishal’s religious parents reject his homosexuality, he travels to the Amazon to work with a shaman in hopes of overcoming his sadness. Upon arrival he’s pulled into the tribe’s search party for missing members of a plane crash and thrust deep into the jungle where guerilla soldiers hold them hostage.
Logline: When a small plane crashes in the Amazon, three interwoven characters must navigate the jungle, Colombia’s political landscape, and their haunted pasts, to survive, as their journeys triangulate to a crescendo that will forever change how people look at plant medicine.
6. Conditions: Ch’aska feels like a traitor for leaving her tribe and finds herself miserable in her marriage and the city. She’s afraid of returning home to confront her parents about the secret she’s held for the last ten years about her mother’s affair, that her brother and next-in-line shaman, is the son of an exploitative American. This narrative keeps her from admitting her truth: that she wants her father to train her to be the next shaman. This secret has stolen her vitality and keeps her small, snarky, and living in her husband’s shadow. Until she sees the American professor on television proclaim he’s going to patent her father’s plant medicine. Her furious reaction is the driver to get her home.
Vishal wants to be a journalist—his only experience is one of nepotism, working for his father at a Christian newspaper. Whenever he wanted to report a real story, he was turned down for conflicts of interest. In the jungle, he vlogs his experience, disgusted with himself for succumbing to vain Gen Z behavior, but comforted by the act as a way of journaling his thoughts and fears. When held hostage by a guerilla soldier he interviews the man on camera and learns he’s not the enemy after all—and develops feelings for him. Back in the States, when the vlog attracts major media attention, Vishal realizes how fake the limelight is, that it’s the driver behind society’s demise, and decides to leave capitalism and return to the jungle.
7. Setting: Putumayo jungle: Colombia
The jungle is no joke. You couldn’t even attempt to run without tearing yourself up. A verifiable carwash of florae hosting a circus of shrieking sounds. Mesozoic-era-sized palm leaves and vines swipe against your head and body as you make your way through an endless tunnel of greenery. Insects buzz by your ear too fast for you to swap. Bird calls rise and fall, others sing melodic tunes. There are whistles and screeches, and hollers as if the birds (or are they monkeys?) are poking fun at you. Bird calls emanate from a full three-hundred-and-sixty degrees, unlike sounds from home which have a clear start and endpoint, like a siren going from point A to B. These sounds are this world and now you’re in it.