Dmitri Johnson

Logline: Pitched as “The Wild Bunch” with Navy SEALs or “Three Kings” meets “Taken.” A team of disgraced Navy SEALs fight their way out of Mexico after stealing millions from a ruthless drug lord.

Logline: Abandoned to die on the island of Roanoke, the leader of America’s first colony must find a way to save his family, make peace with the natives, and together destroy an ancient creature lurking in the shadows, threatening to consume them all.

Logline: Pitted against his own rogue crew, an Air Force Sergeant fights to stop a multi-million dollar aerial heist, but finds that there is more than just his life on the line.

Logline: When a trio of 30-something friends discover the fourth member of their bumbling high-school posse recently died, they agree to honor his passing by embarking on a trip they were originally supposed to take right after graduation: to visit a Mexican Tequila factory. One epic tequila binge later the gang incorrectly suspect the factory workers of planning to use them as drug mules, and flee into the desert, only to chance upon a real drug gang who aren’t so keen on unexpected visitors.

Logline: CALVIN is dating the girl of his dreams, JESSICA. There’s just one problem — she never stays the night. When he calls her out on this he comes face to face with the problem. Literally. Every night, as the sun sets, Jessica transforms into a huge, fat man! As Calvin endeavors to further his relationship with JESSICA, he develops an unlikely friendship with her easygoing male alter ego, STEVE, leading to humor, complications, revelations, drama and ultimately pathos.

Logline: Inspired by true events, a closely knit group of sheltered 18-year-olds from San Diego go on Spring Break in Cabo San Lucas. When one of them is kidnapped they have 24 hours to learn how to become drug smugglers and traverse the state of Baja, CA – all 1,000 miles of it – to make a delivery on time or see their friend get killed.

Logline: Based on a true story- In 1991 as world leaders watched meekly from the sidelines, thousands of bloodthirsty rebels cut a brutal swathe through the peaceful civilian population of Sierra Leone killing and destroying everything in their paths. No sense of conscience would slow them, no UN policies deter them, and no army would stand in their way. No one that is until a small group of former South African mercenaries working for a company called Executive Outcomes accepted a contract to stabilize the country.

150 men from Executive Outcomes fought 15000 rebels, beating both intimidating odds and a turning tide of political opinion, which often seems to greet tyrants with peace agreements rather than the sound of guns. They came for the money, but left preventing genocide.