Bad: A sibling who is purely cruel for no reason. Complex: A sibling who is cruel because they are terrified, or because they were taught that love is a zero-sum game.
Bad: A hug at the airport and a sweeping score solves everything. Complex: A tentative text message. A shared joke at a funeral. An agreement to disagree, which is the most realistic "happy ending" for most families.
There is a reason we cannot look away from a family on fire.
And we cannot look away.
From the crumbling dynasties of Succession to the haunted kitchens of August: Osage County , remain the most enduring and volatile fuel source in all of storytelling. Unlike a corporate thriller or a romance, family drama is the one genre that has no demographic ceiling. Everyone has a family—whether biological, adoptive, or chosen—and therefore, everyone has a scar.
Whether you are writing the next great novel, pitching a limited series, or simply trying to understand your own family’s Thanksgiving dinners, remember this: Complexity is not a bug. It is the feature. The wound is where the light gets in, but in family drama, it is also where the poison lives.