Matthew Kalil is an accomplished storyteller with expertise spanning writing, directing, script editing, authorship, and public speaking. He wrote The Three Wells of Screenwriting.Having contributed to over 40 produced television episodes and with productions reaching international locations from Kenya to New Zealand, Kalil possesses insight into effective and ineffective practices within the entertainment industry.Speaking with Film Courage, Kalil broke down one important exercise writers should try for character development. Check out their conversation below, then dive into the takeaways. - YouTube www.youtube.com The biggest necessary skill to highlight from this interview is character empathy, or the ability to inhabit your characters so completely that you understand their motivations from the inside out.Kalil demonstrates this through his "becoming the character" exercise, where writers physically sit in different chairs to embody their characters and then observe them as the writer. All you need for the exercise is a bit of time and two chairs.Here’s how you do it:Sit and relax. Close your eyes, breathe, and think about your character.See your character. Look at the empty chair and imagine your character sitting there. Notice how they sit, what they're wearing, and their body language.Become your character. Move to that chair and sit exactly like they do. Feel what it's like to be in their body.Ask key questions as the character: What do I want? What am I thinking about?Look back at yourself. Still as the character, look at the first chair. Picture yourself (the writer) there. What does your character think of you?Return...
Published By: NoFilmSchool - Tuesday, 26 August