Open forum question from Manwhit:
hey scott,does a script absolutely need an antagonist character? is it possible to just create obstacles to what a character wants and not have them emanate from antagonists? for example, can there just be obstacles created by the circumstances of the outside world or even by the protagonist themselves. i.e. can they be their own worst enemy and cause the conflict by making poor decisions which stem from their flaws? can you think of any movies that use this scenario?
hope that makes sense. thanks!
The official answer I’d offer is no: A movie does not need an antagonist character (what I prefer to call a Nemesis). However a movie does require an antagonist function — that is some sort of oppositional dynamic(s) to confront and challenge the Protagonist.
An example of a movie that doesn’t have a Nemesis character per se is Cast Away (2000), where the Protagonist Chuck Nolan (Tom Hanks) is stranded for four years alone on a remote island. In this story, geography and weather generate the primary conflict in the life of the Protagonist by creating his isolation and standing in the way of his escape. It’s a successful story, however you know the filmmakers were up against it when they had to create a ‘character’ in Wilson, a volleyball Nolan doctored up so he could have ‘someone’ to talk to.
That said, Hwood much prefers strong, compelling, and dynamic Nemesis characters. Why? Part of the reason is that stories generally benefit from having a Protagonist vs. Nemesis dynamic, as it usually provides a much more visceral and personal conflict. Also a good Nemesis such as Buffalo Bill / James Gumb in The Silence of the Lambs, Warden Norton in The Shawshank Redemption, Jeff Sheldrake in The Apartment, Darth Vader in Star Wars: A New Hope, and Hans Gruber in Die Hard can be a fascinating character, driving up the tension in the story – how will the Protagonist overcome this worthy opponent – and therefore the entertainment experience for the viewer.
Now specific to this question – “can they be their own worst enemy and cause the conflict by making poor decisions which stem from their flaws?” – the answer is yes, a character can work at odds against their best interest. But does that constitute a Nemesis function or rather is that more an example of their Disunity state, a conflict between what they want (External World / conscious goal) and what they need (Internal World / unconscious goal)?
Oftentimes a Protagonist begins the story in a state of Disunity. For example, in The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy (Judy Garland) wants to leave and get away from her home, as expressed in the song she sings in Act One, “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.” Indeed, she runs away from home, albeit in order to save Toto from being recaptured and taken away by Elmira Gulch (Margaret Hamilton). But what she needs is precisely the opposite – to feel like her home in Kansas is a home. Remember she is an orphan, she is the only child on the farm, she has no job like everyone else, so in sum she doesn’t feel like she fits in – her home doesn’t feel like a home. In a way, her entire journey to Oz is to give her experiences, primarily in bonding with Scarecrow, Tin Man, and the Cowardly Lion, who are projections of three workers on the farm (Hunk, Zeke, and Hickory), and in feeling what it’s like to be separated from (especially) her Auntie Em, to change her world view: So that when she returns to consciousness in the farmhouse, she does feel like she belongs, leading to the final words in the movie, “There’s no place like home.”
So in desiring to leave the farm and actually run away, Dorothy acts in opposition to what she needs, and that does create a certain measure of conflict. But it is her struggle with an actual Nemesis character – Elmira Gulch / the Wicked Witch of the West – which creates the most significant set of challenges for Dorothy. And like so many Nemesis characters, Gulch / Wicked Witch represents a projection of Dorothy’s shadow self – someone who is a loner, who doesn’t feel understood, who doesn’t like her life. One of my students in the last class I taught at UNC had an interesting thought: Might Elmira Gulch be a sort of forecast what Dorothy could have become as she grew old if she didn’t go through her Oz transformation-journey?
To circle back to your original question: No, a movie does not need a Nemesis character, but it does require an antagonist function to create opposition to the Protagonist. However most movies fill that function primarily through the presence of a Nemesis character. And while a Protagonist character may act against their best interests, thereby providing opposition to themselves, more often, I think, this is a reflection of the P’s original Disunity state, something that gets worked out in their transformation-journey (Deconstruction-Reconstruction), ending up (typically) in a Unity state.


Scott, I took your UCLA "Protag's Arc" workshop this fall and loved it. Not in a million years would I ever think to apply your Disunity/Unity arc to Wizard of Oz but it actually seems like a great case study, so thanks for throwing that tidbit into this post.
What about films with a psychological bent, like A Beautiful Mind where the mental illness is the antagonist, or this year's Moon? Is Moon along the same lines as Castaway?
Another great example of a protag in disunity is 12 Monkeys, where Cole's antagonists take several different forms, almost all are institutions: the repressive, underground society of the future (his present), the mental institution in 1990, law enforcement in 1996.
But also several characters briefly assume the role of antagonist who hinder Cole's attempts at unity: Brad Pitt's Jeffrey Goines and even Madeleine Stowe's Dr. Railly.