Paul Whybrow
Full Member
- Jun 20, 2015
On the British television service Freeview, there's a channel called Talking Pictures, which shows old films from the early twentieth century, as well as later cult classics. This morning, I watched a low budget hot rod/ pop music/ monster/ science-fiction film called The Giant Gila Monster. Whatever happened to that sub-genre?
It was less than terrifying, the monstrous lizard being rather amusing, but the acting was fine, the script surprisingly true to life and the characters were easy to root for. Curious about its making, I looked online, and found this comment in the Wikipedia article on the film:
Dave Sindelar, on his website Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings gave the film a positive review. Sindelar wrote in his review of the film, "Whatever flaws there are with the story, I find myself drawn to the regional feel of the movie, and especially to the likeable characters that inhabit this environment.... It’s rare for a movie to have this many likeable characters, and I think the reason I watch the movie again and again is because I just like to spend time with them.
The Giant Gila Monster - Wikipedia
This set me to thinking about which literary fictional characters I've enjoyed spending time with, especially repeatedly in a series of stories. As a writer, it sounds like an obvious prerequisite that readers should like your characters, or at least bond with them to the extent that they want to know what happens to them. Thus, the fate of villains is compelling; a character doesn't have to be a clean-living paragon of virtue to be admirable.
With my own Cornish Detective series, my protagonist Detective Chief Inspector Neil Kettle is a likeable chap, though he's definitely weird, and his left wing, green and arty approach to life will alienate some readers—which is fine with me—they might read on to see him get his comeuppance.
Books themselves can become friends and the characters in them allies to us in the loneliness of life; we want to know how they're getting on after we were last together.
In my chosen writing genre of Crime, some of my favourite likeable characters include:
* Inspector Salvo Montalbano—Andrea Camilleri's Sicilian detective.
* Dave Robicheaux—James Lee Burke's Louisiana lawman
* Harry Hole—Jo Nesbø's Norwegian copper.
In cinema films, the characters I relate to the most, and who I've watched repeatedly, are The Outlaw Josey Wales, played by Clint Eastwood, Blade Runner Rick Deckard, played by Harrison Ford and in the Alien series Ellen Ripley, played by Sigourney Weaver. It's arguable that all of the themes of these films are Westerns, with an anti-hero as the protagonist—which might be a clue to my own bolshy character!
Who are your favourite fictional characters in print and on the silver screen?
It was less than terrifying, the monstrous lizard being rather amusing, but the acting was fine, the script surprisingly true to life and the characters were easy to root for. Curious about its making, I looked online, and found this comment in the Wikipedia article on the film:
Dave Sindelar, on his website Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings gave the film a positive review. Sindelar wrote in his review of the film, "Whatever flaws there are with the story, I find myself drawn to the regional feel of the movie, and especially to the likeable characters that inhabit this environment.... It’s rare for a movie to have this many likeable characters, and I think the reason I watch the movie again and again is because I just like to spend time with them.
The Giant Gila Monster - Wikipedia
This set me to thinking about which literary fictional characters I've enjoyed spending time with, especially repeatedly in a series of stories. As a writer, it sounds like an obvious prerequisite that readers should like your characters, or at least bond with them to the extent that they want to know what happens to them. Thus, the fate of villains is compelling; a character doesn't have to be a clean-living paragon of virtue to be admirable.
With my own Cornish Detective series, my protagonist Detective Chief Inspector Neil Kettle is a likeable chap, though he's definitely weird, and his left wing, green and arty approach to life will alienate some readers—which is fine with me—they might read on to see him get his comeuppance.
Books themselves can become friends and the characters in them allies to us in the loneliness of life; we want to know how they're getting on after we were last together.
In my chosen writing genre of Crime, some of my favourite likeable characters include:
* Inspector Salvo Montalbano—Andrea Camilleri's Sicilian detective.
* Dave Robicheaux—James Lee Burke's Louisiana lawman
* Harry Hole—Jo Nesbø's Norwegian copper.
Of the three, Commissario Salvo Montalbano would be the most convivial company, with his love of food, but the other two are rather tortured souls. Harry Hole is a trouble-seeking nutter! In cinema films, the characters I relate to the most, and who I've watched repeatedly, are The Outlaw Josey Wales, played by Clint Eastwood, Blade Runner Rick Deckard, played by Harrison Ford and in the Alien series Ellen Ripley, played by Sigourney Weaver. It's arguable that all of the themes of these films are Westerns, with an anti-hero as the protagonist—which might be a clue to my own bolshy character!
Who are your favourite fictional characters in print and on the silver screen?