Chigozie Obioma on writing. Well, he was discussing reading, but the concept translates to the flip side.
"This is why I tend to avoid works of fiction in which plot isn't a function of character but the reverse, in which a set of events is orchestrated and characters are thrown in as fillers."
He cited Don Brown's novels as an example of what doesn't work for him.
(I may go too far in the other direction as I tend to fall in love with my main characters and may throw in a plot or two to support them. I took Lee Child's dictum โ all anyone remembers is the character โ to heart.)
Christopher McQuarrie (writer-director of one of the "Mission Impossible" films) talked about viewers instead of readers. Specifically, how to write a high-stakes action scene when the audience already knows that the hero will survive.
"They (moviegoers) want to be tortured, but never, ever punished. And they are always smarter than you. They've seen it all before. They'll turn on you the instant you take them for granted. Treat them with respect and remember you work for them.
"Then grab them by the throat, and never let go."
Torturing readers, a specialty,
Paige