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How can you motivate characters in your screenwriting?

22. Bourne again: Infuse your characters with purpose motivation

Listen up, screenwriter! You know your character has to act in certain ways to create your story – but how deep does her motivation really go? Are you sure your character has sufficient backstory to lend her identity truly powerful motivation?

What’s that? You’re not sure? Don’t worry your pretty little scribe head! As usual, Film Daily has got your back.

We’ve got the perfect tricks up our sleeve to motivate you into motivating your awesome character.

From David Lowery’s ‘A Ghost Story’ to Yorgos Lanthimos’ ‘The Killing of a Sacred Deer’, these are the other genre movies that also deserved Oscar nominations this year – movies sadly left out of the race.

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A common technique to aid a character’s motivation can be a “ghost”, something or someone the character is haunted by. FYI, we’re not referring to a Patrick Swayze-type ghost, and we definitely ain’t talking about Casper! (Although it’s probably next on the list of classic comic reboots).

Just like real people, characters often have a defining event that happened before the story in question that shaped them drastically. Writers commonly use this device to influence characters’ decisions in their stories.

A ghost can come in whatever form suits your story best. Here are two common examples:

  • Someone the character loved died an untimely death.
  • The character was a victim of abuse as a child. 

Ally’s ghost

In A Star is Born, Ally spent her whole life trying to make it as a singer – singing better than almost everyone else, but not given a chance because of her appearance (essentially Lady Gaga’s life story). When she is finally given a chance, the logical consequence is that Ally works extremely hard. 

Ally sells out a little in becoming a sex symbol because she knows her whole career could vanish if she’s too fussy. She is motivated by her experience being a superior singer but having to work a crappy job because she wasn’t pretty enough. The character is willing to do anything to avoid her old life. 

Giving them a ghost gives your characters depth, as they enter the story with baggage already. People resonate with motivation – they want the character to have motivation. The bigger the motivation, the more satisfying the story. The character’s goal must have a clear motivation behind it so the audience can root for them. 

The two goals

A protagonist chases two goals in a screenplay:

  • The false goal the character thinks he or she wants. In seeking this goal, the protagonist gets a glimpse of a different, more profound goal . . . .
  • The true goal is that which the character really needs to make him or her whole. Often, the protagonist can only achieve the false goal by attaining the true goal first.

Weave fierce motivation into these goals and you’ll take your audience on a hell of a ride. Relatable motivations work the best; for example, the threat of losing custody of one’s children. 

The protagonist must change to acquire his or her desire (false goal) – specifically, by assimilating his or her need (true goal). The stronger the motivation, the more captivating your character will be. This person has to want something so damn badly that they are willing to go to exciting and potentially dangerous lengths to get it! 

We’re onto day five into this year’s annual SXSW and already there’s been a plethora of talent in film and interactive media. This time round there’s been relative buzz, particularly over Spielberg‘s new flick Ready Player One, as well as a new movie hailed the next Get Out.

Motivate to captivate

Think what Wade goes through in Ready Player One. His motivation? He has nothing to live for in the real world as an orphan living with his abusive aunt and uncle. The story details his chance to use the one skill he possesses in order to make a better life for himself.

Form motivation when you first start crafting your characters and your plot can benefit from well thought-out backstories. It will resonate with your audience and you’ll be onto a winner.

Audiences love a motivation to latch onto. They enjoy stepping into the protagonist’s shoes and feeling like it’s them on the journey, that it was their backstory. Give ‘em something real and they’ll come crawling back every time.

Homework

Film theory like this is often overlooked, and stories suffer for it. Fish for nuggets of truth like these in everything you watch. This kind of understanding will make you a screenwriting supergenius!

There’s no place like home

In some TV shows or movies, pinpoint exactly where on Maslow’s hierarchy the protagonist’s motivations reside. Pick films & shows vastly different from each other to provide a varying outlook on story.

Make a firm decision on where the protagonist in your script will fall on the hierarchy.

Next step

Page count too high? Go through your script and see if any dialogue can be removed.

Remember: actions speak louder than words.


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