Holly Bario

Logline: A group of East Texas women, feeling left out by the snobby, serious book clubs they’ve encountered in the past, start a new kind of club.

Logline: A low-level crook must break out of jail to save his family from his former cellmate and confidante, who, it turns out, is a sadistic serial killer.

Logline: When a businesswoman starts lying in an attempt to advance her career and life, she runs into trouble when the lies turn into reality.

Logline: Inspired by true events, story follows a decorated war hero who returns home to his job as a police officer and to the woman of his dreams, only to have his world turned on its head when everything he believes in turns out to be fiction.

Logline: A writer attempts to join the outsourcing craze that sweeps corporate America by hiring a sweet assitant to organize his business from India. She is so efficient that soon the writer has a team of India-based assistants handling every part of his life, including dialogue with his parents and gifts for his wife.

Logline: Follows a struggling twentysomething man who, after flying home to L.A. for the funeral of his estranged record-producer father, discovers that the will stipulates that he must deliver $150,000 in cash to a 30-year-old alcoholic sister he never knew existed, and her troubled 12-year-old son. Determined to keep the money to solve his own problems, he’s nonetheless fascinated by his unknown kin and makes contact with the two without revealing who he really is.

Logline: Centers on a guy who accidentally hits “reply all” on an indiscreet e-mail, and then has to deal with the repercussions.

Logline: Story is set in a time in which humans have left Earth and sees Quatermain (the hero of “King’s Solomon’s Mines) return to the planet from a sojourn in space, embarking on another “King Solomon’s Mines”-style adventure but on a planetwide scale.

Logline: Story follows a young white woman in the early 1960s in Mississippi who becomes interested in the plight of the African-American domestic servants that every family has working for them. She writes their stories about mistreatment, abuse and heartbreak, all just before the Civil Rights revolution.

Logline: Kept under wraps, but said to be in the vein of “The Shining” that takes place in the Denver Airport.