I read this about 4 times, and am still unclear. It's fine up to here:
> a young man,in his early twenties, with a super long thick beard
> who gets the girl in the end. I set it up so he would be suspected
> of the crimes because of his
> beard. The killer only kills clean shaved guys and female who hate
> or make fun of beards.
I have seen my share of beard-phobic police. Since I'm a biker, I get
pulled over. I suppose it also helps that I'm greasy, therefore, I
must be a criminal.
So, it would be more logical that the clean-cut guy is murdering
numerous bearded guys because of his beard-o-phobia. But, if the
short haired guy is killing off other short hairs, it sorta runs into
a wall. I don't know, could it mean that he has a secret desire to be
with the bearded dude?
BD
On Jul 9, 2007, at 12:30 PM, kailongbeard wrote:
> For the past 6 weeks I've been busy writing a horror film script.
> I deliberately set out having the hero be a young man,in his early
> twenties, with a super long thick beard who gets the girl in the end.
> I set it up so he would be suspected of the crimes because of his
> beard. The killer only kills clean shaved guys and female who hate or
> make fun of beards. This was suppose to be a pro beard movie.
>
> They say that characters often take over and refuse to do what the
> writer wants them to do. My bearded hero is demanding that he be the
> Killer. Of course this would be the strongest character choice because
> the audience has ruled him out as the killer. My problem as a pro
> beard activist is by making the bearded hero the killer he falls into
> the ugly
> anti beard stereotype of the bearded bad guy.
>
> I'm desperately trying to find a way to rescue the pro beard stance of
> the film and have the bearded guy win.
>
> Any suggestions would be appreciated.
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> Yahoo! Groups Links
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