Kamis, 27 Mei 2010

TV character development

With Lost having come to a close early this week, let's talk television. So stories are all about characters and their development. In a film, the big question is - what can the character do at the end that they were unable to do at the beginning? In other words - how have they changed?

In TV, however, this doesn't apply. Rather, the non-development of a character is what the show depends on.Let's say your character is someone who fights aliens for a living. If, after season 1, they no longer want or need to fight aliens, then they have developed, yes, but there is no story left to tell.

Or, perhaps a character's defining trait is the need to unravel the mystery behind a world-wide blackout that leaps to a particular date. If that date comes and goes, then there's nothing left for him to do. FlashForward got axed a bit ago btw.....

Movies tell us about a small, defining part of a person's life (the moment they realise they are The One, the moment a cyborg comes back in time to kill them, the moment a Roman General is thrown into slavery etc). But in TV, we get several years (hopefully) of a character's experience - what we care about is their day-to-day activities in whatever field they belong.

As a wise man once said:
In the end, we are all who we are, no matter
how much we may appear to have changed.

- Rupert Giles, Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
So with TV depending on characters not changing, how can they be developed without becoming boring?

A character doesn't have to change the fundamental traits of themselves in order to develop. We all change as people throughout our lives, but I don't ever stop wanting to be a writer. Likewise, the doctor may leave her husband, rob a bank and win the lottery, but they never stop being a doctor.

One character that changed dramatically in Buffy/Angel is Wesley. He joined Buffy season 3 as a jittery, comical uber-embarrassing version of Giles. But by the finale of Angel season 5 (6 years later) he'd become a Rogue Demon Hunter, betrayed everyone's trust, kidnapped his best friend's son, been exiled by the group, led the group, had his throat slit, shot and killed his father (kind of) and held the love of his life in his arms while she died, not to mention battle all manner of grizzly demons, including a particularly nasty warlock.

Upon being faced with a tough decision, Buffy season 1 Wesley would have run to help. Whereas Angel season 5 Wesley would have made the call, regardless of the consequences.

Supernatural's Dean Winchester hasn't changed that much over 4 and a half seasons in personality; his key trait (the way he mouths off at absolutely every demon around with a devil-may-care persona) remains, but I can't be the only person noticing differences in his 'I'll have sex whenever possible' attitude and the way he treats the sacred Chevy Impala. It's almost as if something happened to him to put everything into perspective. Can't for the life of me think what it is.......

Angel (in his self-titled show) needs to do what he does in order to repent for his sins. Along the way, he hopes to earn that redemption and (possibly) turn human - that's part of the drive from season 2 onwards. So if we suddenly realise that Angel will never find redemption or he signs away any chance of regaining his "once precious humanity", then there is no drive and, therefore, no show.

Dexter's hero has a need to kill - if that ever goes away, there will be no fuel for the show. He's changed over the years, taking new approaches to his "Dark Passenger" but his primary desire remains the same.

So obviously characters do change over the course of a TV show, but what is key is their continued development. You can change a character as much as you like, but what you have to do is make the audience keep watching in order to see:
a) how that change affects not only themselves, but also the other characters. And...
b) what change comes next.

Comments? How do you change a character enough to be interesting, but avoid resolving the key conflict that makes the show function?

Senin, 24 Mei 2010

Great Screen Moments - 30 Days of Night

There is no escape. No hope. Only hunger and pain.



Written by: Steve Niles and Stuart Beattie and Brian Nelson (based on the graphic novel by Steve Niles and Ben Templesmith)

Sabtu, 22 Mei 2010

Great Screen Moments - Beauty and the Beast

"I warned you never to come here!"
"I didn't mean any harm."
"Do you realise what you could have done?!"



Written by: Linda Woolverton

Kamis, 20 Mei 2010

It's going to be quiet

Yeah, there's not going to be that much activity on here for the next few weeks, while I cram in revision for an exam, desperately write and submit a late application for a Writing Masters (in the hopes that someone drops out before September), critique a few scripts, earn some more cash at work, celebrate leaving uni, possibly get paid in vouchers by doing some writing for uni and make a trip to do a commentary and interview for Three. In short, I'm stressed!

There'll be a few regular posts on Great Screen Moments and the odd musing, and of course I'll keep you up to date on what's happening with the film - which now has its own, very snazzy-looking website; go look! - www.threefilm.co.uk.

But fear not - there'll be more writing-related posts going out in a few weeks. And if in doubt, quote Oscar Wilde:

Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination.

At twilight, nature is not without loveliness, though perhaps its chief use is to illustrate quotations from the poets.

Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative.

I always like to know everything about my new friends, and nothing about my old ones.

I am not young enough to know everything.

Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.

And who doesn't love Nick Cave?!


Senin, 17 Mei 2010

Strip your characters #2

A while ago I wrote a post on stripping your characters, using Supernatural's Dean Winchester as an example:
Strip your characters down and take them to a place they'd do anything to stay away from. Expose their dark side. Make them overflow with emotion. That might result in buckets of tears, a psychological breakdown, a suicide or a blast in the chest from a sawn-off shotgun. Expose their fears and see what happens.
This time, why not take a look at this scene from Frasier. In this episode, Frasier is receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award for his broadcasting services over the years, but encounters his old mentor and delves into some serious self-analysis.

Examine how Frasier is stripped bare, at first by his mentor and then by himself:

(after the first segment, you'll have to skip through the awards ceremony to the self-analysis)


Now obviously this is slightly easier in a show all about analysis and psychiatry, but maybe it's worth entering into this sort of debate with your own characters at some point? Just to get to know them better? The key to this technique, as I said last time, is to force the character into this situation. If it takes no effort to get them there, then they have no internal conflict and nothing for us to care about.

Have fun!

Rabu, 12 Mei 2010

'Three' teaser online

Most of you will know about Three - the short script I wrote about 2 years ago:
'Three' is a short comedy about a trio of hitmen who discover they have been sent to kill one another. Finding themselves in a stalemate, they have no choice but to talk out their differences.
Starring: Mike Sani, Tony C, Dean Rees
Director of Photography: Neill Phillips
Sound: Carl Homer
Produced by: Gene Fallaize
Written by: Neil Baker
Directed by: Darren S. Cook
I haven't talked about it in a while, but last weekend, the entire thing was shot in one long night. I couldn't make it to filming, but it went really well and everyone got along swimmingly. There are a bunch of pics from the shoot in this post and more on the facebook group.

Darren (director) has been editing ever since and yesterday put together a teaser trailer. You can take a look here.

I'm rather excited about this being my first credit and really looking forward to seeing the whole thing in its entirety. I'd also appreciate any support on the facebook group :)

That's all for now!

Sabtu, 08 Mei 2010