The ScreenWeaver Blog
Deep dives into modern screenwriting, visual storytelling, and how AI is reshaping the creative process.
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The Enneagram for Screenwriters: A Guide to Character Motivation
Use the nine types to define core fears and desires so every character has an engine. Not a box to stuff people into—a way to ask the right questions before you write.

Writing the Enneagram Type 8: The Challenger Archetype in Action
The conflictual leader perfect for drama and thriller. How to write the 8 so they feel inevitable, not like a cartoon bully—fear, desire, and one moment of vulnerability.

Jungian Shadows: Designing Villains as Mirrors of the Hero
Use the Shadow archetype to create an antagonist who is thematically tied to the hero—same want, different path—so the conflict is internal as well as external.

The Passive Protagonist Trap: How to Fix a Reactive Hero
Diagnose and fix a hero who is pulled by the plot instead of driving it. Give them a want, put choices in their hands, and use the midpoint to turn reactive into active.

Trauma as Backstory: Writing Wounds Without Clichés
Integrate a character's traumatic past organically—through behavior and avoidance, not exposition. How to make wounds feel earned and specific.

The "Want" vs. The "Need": The Engine of Character Arc
The gap between what the character chases and what would actually fix them. How to build want and need so the climax lands.

Designing Character Foils: Using Support Cast to Highlight Traits
Create supporting characters who contrast with the hero so their traits read on the page—without turning foils into one-note props.

The Unreliable Narrator: Writing Through a Distorted Lens
Signal that the point of view is biased—without giving away the reveal. Techniques for planting doubt and landing the payoff.