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Hi all, i'm currently in the process of writing my first script and was interested in hearing your opinions on character descriptions.
The script that i'm working on is war-based, so there are a core group of around 10 main characters, and I was wondering how much of a description I should give to them.
Should i just keep it to name and age? Describe their appearance? List their traits/quirks?
Now that the annoying cliche is out of the way, describe the characters as they appear on the screen. Don't give us any additional information that isn't needed.
Good example: CORPORAL WALTER LAKE (35) is a beanpole of a man. His uniform is too short for his extremely tall and narrow frame. His face thin and coarse, with a crooked and scarred nose.
Bad example: CORPORAL WALTER LAKE (35) is a beanpole of a man. He's the fourth of six children of a devout Protestant family. Don't talk baseball with him unless you're a Dodgers fan.
Everything should be described in ways that can be recorded by the camera. A character's favorite food, or what he smells like, shouldn't be in the description.
It's a good question, Steve, and there's no one right answer. Like Phil said, make sure your description can be shown on screen but also decide whether the character's physical description serves a point storywise. Does it matter whether he's short, tall, white, black? Does his traits come into play?
Character descriptions are all fine and dandy but if your charatcters all behave alike anyway then you're in trouble.
Let your character's describe themselves through action and dialogue.
On a related note, you say you have 10 main characters and I say that's a lot!
Down in the hole / Jesus tries to crack a smile / Beneath another shovel load
Thanks both for your advice, it's been very helpful.
I know that I said there were 10 main characters, but this isn't completely accurate - the story will follow a squad of 10 soldiers. Only a couple of them will be main characters, the rest will be support.
hi steve i think it makes no diferance to the screenplay if you have a long description i would keep it a lean as you can just describe your charactere as he looks
hi Steve, For my two cents, with a cast of quite a few characters, even if they're minor, it's good to give the reader a description that will help identify the character, and make them unique amongst the other characters. A description that you can use repeatedly, even a character trait, that can quickly identify them. It helps the reader to keep track of who's who. So for example...
CORPORAL WALTER LAKE, a broad shouldered man of 45, rubs the long scar across his nose.
Maybe he rubs his nose whenever there's trouble brewing. It shows a character trait AND a quick visual description. This will help the reader remember 'oh ya, he's the dude with the scar." and then "Oh no, there must be trouble brewing". And you can refer to his broad shoulders again as well, for another identifier...
"He sighs heavily, his broad shoulders rising and falling in slow motion."
With a big cast, it's important to make your characters easily identifiable, and keep the reading from becoming confused. I had the same trouble in one of my scripts, and using this technique helped a lot.
With a big cast, it's important to make your characters easily identifiable, and keep the reading from becoming confused. I had the same trouble in one of my scripts, and using this technique helped a lot.
When dealing a large cast, you shouldn't introduce everyone together. It'll be too much on the reader.
Didn't we have this conversation before? Another time, another place.
What if you have to introduce everyone at once? With a squad of soldiers it sounds kind of likely. If you're a good writer you do it and it won't be confusing. Otherwise, you have these strange unnamed characters who morph into named characters and scenes used only to intro characters adding pages and slowing the story.
Write two pages max where you introduce ten characters and set up your story. If you can't do it then learn how.
If your story opens up at a dinner party, don't start with everyone sitting around the table eating. Start with Alice, Carol and Bob in the kitchen, geting dinner ready and talking. Cut to Marcia and Greg just arriving and being greeted by Bobby; they talk a bit. The cut to Cindy and Marcia at the bar, talking. Then cut to Alice, disposing of Peter's body, muttering about broken promises and lost loves.
Then bring them together, after we know who they are.
I guess the part where I said "What if you have to introduce everyone at once?" wasn't clear.
In your example you just said your story opens at a dinner party. If that's where your story starts why are you wasting time getting me to the story? Poorly structured screenplays always have these scenes that only function to get their characters to a scene that actually matters.
Try reading the opening to Rachel Getting Married (it's the only large cast one I could find on the first few pages of this site). In the first scene five characters are introduced as the errant daughter is picked up from rehab to be taken to her sister's wedding. We have three of the central characters, a ton of information and a story in motion. All in three pages.
Fading fog, a rising sun and the bare trees in the Forest of Argonne budding out to spring. If not for the rotting bodies of dead soldiers on the path it would be idyllic.
With his eyes half-closed, Captain DAVID FALLON, 25, trudges through mud. He turns up the collar of his Australian Army uniform for what warmth it can offer.
DOWD (O.S.) Captain Fallon!
Radio operator Corporal JAMES DOWD,20, jogs up beside him. An American with a too sensitive face for his current location, Dowd falls into step.
DOWD Captain Jenks would like to talk to you.
FALLON Thank you, Corporal. Keep a look out.
Fallon folds down the collar of his uniform revealing a chaplain's cross. He starts back down the line made up of stragglers from different units and different nations.
Four boys all with peach fuzz and badly laced boots march together. Two Brits, MORGAN and SANFORD are shoulder to shoulder. It’s hard to tell where one starts and the other ends.
Just behind them, the two Americans, WATTS and STANLEY study a racy French postcard. They see Fallon, panic and almost fall trying to hide it.
Taking up the rear of that contingent is Sergeant LYSANDER. British army with a Slavic face, he smirks at Fallon as he passes.
Fallon picks up his pace and closes on the rear of the line where the burly Sergeant VASCO half carries Captain ADAM JENKS. Dried blood from Jenks’ bandaged leg stains his uniform and his hands.
FALLON You need a break, Sergeant?
The American merely grunts and shakes his head “no”.
FALLON (to Jenks) How are you?
JENKS Still hurts. Which is always a good sign. I was seeing how you were doing.
FALLON Don’t know if putting me in charge was the best idea.
JENKS My long four months of being a Captain has taught me that as long as they stay in groups you’re just fine. The boys up there have Lysander. Vasco, O’Connor and me. It’s the stragglers you worry about.
FALLON Like me?
JENKS You’re a reverend, Reverend. If you mixed too much I’d be worried you weren’t any good at your job.
DOWD (O.S.) Captain, there’s someone up ahead! Someone alive!
Fallon steps off the path and spots a figure, Private TOM ERICKSON, sitting under a tree several meters off.
Fallon hurries up the line and acquires Lysander. They reach Dowd just as Erickson runs up.
Here is a description of Yvette the maid in Clue, from the shooting script:
Quoted Text
YVETTE - is the French Maid. She is, beautiful, with a great figure which is tightly encased in a maid's uniform -- black dress, little white apron and cap, sheer black stockings and dainty black shoes. But the skirt is shorter than normal, and very tight over her bottom -- and her black dress is very low cut. Her ample bosom is pushed right up and half out of the top of the dress. She is an outrageous young lady, with an improbable French accent which cannot be reproduced on the page. She has been polishing a glass, and dancing to the latest pop music on the radio. She bends forward to replace the glass on the tray, her breasts falling beautifully forward. WADSWORTH watches.
It seems like a lot, but I felt like I needed a cigarette afterward.