Lunar_Wolf
WTF face
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Base them on real people.
But for god's sake, give them names drastically different from the people you based them off of. You might think it's cute to base your characters off of your friends Mark, Alex, and Rodney and then rename them Mart, Alan, and Ronny, but your friends will figure it out within the first 5 minutes. Then they'll kick your ass.Base them on real people.
Base your characters off Hype members.
But for god's sake, give them names drastically different from the people you based them off of. You might think it's cute to base your characters off of your friends Mark, Alex, and Rodney and then rename them Mart, Alan, and Ronny, but your friends will figure it out within the first 5 minutes. Then they'll kick your ass.
But for god's sake, give them names drastically different from the people you based them off of. You might think it's cute to base your characters off of your friends Mark, Alex, and Rodney and then rename them Mart, Alan, and Ronny, but your friends will figure it out within the first 5 minutes. Then they'll kick your ass.
Reservoir isn't that hard of a word
If you aren't good at spelling...might as well quit writing![]()
I like this. A lot. Great advice.As odd as this might sound, this is actually a great idea. I do stuff like this when I write my own screenplays and/or comics: I base them off twisted versions of situations I've witnessed, been a part of, or read/heard about. As for characters, I tend base them off of certain attributes (characters have more room to blossom if you do not base them entirely on one person, plus you can avoid lawsuits more easily this way, as the character won't be as recognizable) my friends or famous people seem to have.
Especially since you're working with criminals, sit down for an extended period of time for each character- give it a day, a week, two weeks, etc., per character- and look up a certain mental illness, or extravagant feature that people might have. Also, you've got to give most, if not all, of them a criminal record. Or, perhaps, go the opposite route (similar to the movie Juice), where all of the characters are new to the criminal world, become overzealous, and mess up the entire situation. In which case, you would have to detail why which characters want to rob the store/bank, why another character may be pushed into it against his own will, why another has other intentions over financial gain. Vastly different characters can create awesome conflicts.
I'm sure you know this rule already, as you're a filmmaker, but keep in mind the reason we find these stories so engrossing: because they're about extraordinary people in extraordinary situations (they might seem ordinary at first, but as the rising action progresses, you'll see the more admirable or disgusting attributes of each character/plot line start to reveal themselves). Again, you're dealing with criminals, so try something like making one of them a newbie on his first criminal act, and the rest are hardened criminals. Perhaps he's the one that causes the botch that forces them to take refuge in the store/bank they're robbing? Perhaps there is one particular nut-job with anger issues who gets mad because a clerk back-talks him, so he cuts one of her hands off? Perhaps there is another who wants this to go as cleanly as possible, but has a certain "tick" that has never been revealed to his cohorts, but the "tick" is triggered, causing him to make the situation go awry.
If you want a great example of a similar situation with a great cast of characters, watch Reservoir Dogs.
Just my two cents. I'm no professional or expert by any means, but this is how I work.
This can also lead to lawsuits if you depict said people in a light they don't like.
You dont need to see the bank robbery because it isnt the main part of the story. Its the event that spawns it. Kinda like Res Dogs (cant spell for **** ok?).
- Invest in a boom pole or make your own
A continuation of that...- Don't use copyrighted music, try composing your own or getting someone to do that.
Have talent.