bloodyrosemccoy: Beast from X-Men at the computer, grinning wickedly (Beastly)
bloodyrosemccoy ([personal profile] bloodyrosemccoy) wrote2008-04-09 02:14 pm

Typecasting

Jenkins's Ear Day
National Cherish an Antique Day
National Former Prisoner of War Recognition Day
Winston Churchill Day
National Day (Iraq)
 
I don’t think I’m the only person who does this: when I write a story, I have a tendency to “cast” the characters—I pick actors, other characters I like, people I actually know, what-have-you to play the characters in my stories.* Sure it’s fun, but it also serves a purpose for me: it helps keep all my characters from turning into two people.
 
And the fun thing about casting for stuff like this is that you can make some seriously weird choices, which would never be possible in non-speculative fiction.
 
Well, a few days ago I realized how very odd my casting choices have become when I realized who was playing one of those damn throwaway characters who stuck around demanding her own story.  Dweijidŕ is an arhode (fuzzy, bipedal, four-armed, predatorial as all hell), a former cop who became a soldier and then later wound up at loose ends doing mercenary work. She likes reading old epics, shows a dismissive genius with languages, and could tear even other female arhodes apart if she felt like it, and she often does feel like it, but she also has a distaste for murder, if not for property damage.
 
And she is played in my head, flawlessly … by Ron Perlman.
 
God, I love what I do.
 

*Granted, given the stories I write, a lot of these are in voice or even essence only. I tend to populate my worlds with the things from Jim Henson’s workshop, so that the workshop itself would most likely be hired to do a third of my characters, and only a third would be diverse actors. That last third, of course, would consist entirely of Doug Jones swathed in prosthetics and standing in front of a greenscreen.

[identity profile] piper-lee.livejournal.com 2008-04-10 05:22 am (UTC)(link)
I didn't know he played el Fauno AND the crazy chill'n-eatin' eye-hand monster. :) I love that movie to death.

[identity profile] padparadscha.livejournal.com 2008-04-10 05:30 am (UTC)(link)
AND he studied so hard to learn how to speak his lines in Spanish and then they dubbed him anyway, but it meant his lip sync was spot on!

Yeah, they were a pair of GORGEOUS character designs. God damn, that's a magnificent movie. Now I want to watch it again.