To say a villain in a thriller story is flawed is like
saying coal is black!
Of course a villain is flawed, I hear you say, otherwise he
would make a pretty poor antagonist. A “good” villain has a personality that
most of us would not aspire to as he may be capable of the most dastardly (I
just love that word!) acts. I am, however, talking about a villain who may be
flawed because he/she has some decent human traits that show us he isn’t
totally bad. The only villain who could be said to be totally bad is the devil
himself, I guess. Most others started out as innocent babies and children but
maybe something happened to make them bad. Or maybe not – maybe they simply
have more of the undesirable human traits in their genetic make-up. Nasty
traits do exist to some extent in all of us, but hopefully most people have
control of those urges and anyway have more humanity and caring for fellow
humans.
How villainous a character is depends mostly on the type of
story you are writing. If the villain is a love rival or a corporate executive
he may not be so nasty in all areas of his life… But on the other hand, if
he/she is a horror/supernatural villain, he may have no redeeming features at
all. For example a bad character may be wicked and malicious to people but may
love animals! In this way he is a flawed character and not true to the
caricature of through and through evil which we may assume him to be.
Always, when using
villains, a suitable adversary/hero is necessary and it is the juxtaposition of
their characters that allow the most conflict and tension in a story. The hero who has faults is a much more
interesting character than the perfect boring type of individual. I think we
can relate better to him because he is flawed – as we all are too. Similarly,
we all know people who we consider to be horrible individuals but we know
(maybe deep down) they will have some redeeming characteristics too.
For me, giving my villains one redeeming human trait,
amongst all the vicious, nasty ones, makes them much more interesting ( and
indeed fun) and if their malevolent ways came about because of something that
happened to them – well, it just makes them all the more intriguing. Not nice
and not worth rooting for but maybe a little more human. And more importantly
more believable…
Do you give your villains a small touch of the nice-ies?

