Writers want to create stories with unforgettable endings, powerful dialogue, and characters readers genuinely care about. But the problem is that we often spend most of our energy on the external plot: solving the murder, winning the trial, defeating the villain, or uncovering the truth. Those events create pressure, but they are not necessarily what makes the audience feel satisfied when the story ends.
In this episode, Jeff Elkins (The Dialogue Doctor) and members of the Dialogue Doctor Community break down the character structure of A Few Good Men to reveal why the movie works.
You’ll learn how a story’s “Vehicle characters” carry the reader’s emotional experience, how a character’s wound creates immediate hopes and fears, and why the real ending depends on whether the lead character becomes the person the audience hoped they could be.
Jeff also examines how supporting characters can raise the pressure by ending tragically, how “Engines” and “Anchors” push a character toward their best or worst self, and why Joanne’s storyline feels less satisfying than the arcs around her.
Finally, the episode breaks down the pacing behind the iconic “You can’t handle the truth” scene, showing how rapid-fire dialogue, strategic silence, emotional pauses, and a prolonged hero moment transform a courtroom exchange into an unforgettable climax.
Watch this episode if you want to build stronger character arcs, create a cast that actively shapes your protagonist, write more emotionally satisfying endings, or understand why some famous scenes stay with audiences for decades.
To listen on Spotify, click here.
To listen on iTunes, click here.