1. Stuart says:

    Characters are the bridge into the new world. They give us the hero to cheer and the villian to jeer.

    They serve as our emotional link to the events. If you don’t care about the characters, then it doesn’t really matter what happens to them.

    That’s the bottom line of why great characters make great stories.

    Setting, plot and all that are important, but if your characters are cardboard, that translates out to the rest of the world, giving everything the feel of a fleeting shadow play that will have no impact in the long run.

    • Thanks, Stuart! I think the million-dollar question for writers is, how do we write characters whom readers do, in fact, care about?
      In First Class, for example, they took two characters who are ultimately villains (Magneto and Mystique) and made them so heart-wrenchingly human that I cared deeply about them even though I know they are the “bad guys.”
       

  2. I’ve never thought of the theology behind connecting to characters before, Rachel. How intriguing. I think you’ve made a great case for our attachment to personality coming from our creation by Personality. Love that idea.

     

    As I think of it, I believe the principle might also explain why we have become such a culture of celebrity. We long for that connection with the person of fame and fortune, power and notoriety because we actually long for connection with He who is most notorious, most powerful.

     

    Good thoughts. Thank you.

     

    Becky

    • Glad I provoked some thought :). I hadn’t thought about this in connection to celebrity before, but I’ve often seen it in our fascination with/connection to royalty (perhaps we in Canada feel this more strongly than Americans?), as in the recent wedding and the current visit by the young Royals.
      I am all for democracy, but ultimately, this world is an absolute monarchy, and we are drawn to a king who will embody everything we wish human royals would.

  3. So true, Rachel. I find that lovable characters are always the most important element in a good movie. And I completely agree with your assessment of X Men: First Class. While I find the premise a little hokey (Seriously? Random biological mutations can result in a human who can shoot electricity out of his body?), I still enjoyed the movie because I loved the characters so much. Your explanation for why this is so is compelling. Good thoughts!

    • I recently expressed to my sister (also a big X-Men fan) that I kinda think one has to get into comics as a kid in order to swallow the hokey premises. You get over all the ridiculousness really young, and then you can just enjoy it when you’re older :).
      X-Men in particular has always been a strongly character-focused franchise. I was really happy to see this movie get that right!

What do you think?