A great complete can turn a good character into an unforgettable one. Think of Furiosa in 'Mad Max: Fury Road'—her quest for redemption isn’t just about reaching the Green Place. It’s about finding a new purpose after her hope is shattered. The moment she chooses to return and fight completes her arc in a way that feels both surprising and inevitable.
Even smaller completes matter. In 'Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind', Joel’s decision to relive his memories of Clementine, despite the pain, completes his emotional journey. It’s not a grand gesture, but it’s deeply human. These moments are why we connect with characters—they feel real, messy, and utterly complete in their imperfection.
Completes in film, especially those tied to character arcs, can be absolutely transformative. Take 'The Shawshank Redemption'—Andy Dufresne’s journey from a wrongfully convicted banker to a free man is punctuated by his ultimate escape. The completion of his plan isn’t just about physical freedom; it’s about reclaiming his identity and hope. The meticulous buildup makes the payoff feel earned, and that’s what sticks with audiences. Without that resolution, his character would feel incomplete, like a sentence cut off mid-way.
Similarly, in 'Parasite', the Kim family’s schemes reach a brutal culmination. Their actions and the consequences they face complete their arcs in a way that’s both shocking and inevitable. It’s not just about the plot twist; it’s about how their choices define them. Completes aren’t just endings—they’re the final brushstrokes on a character’s portrait, revealing who they truly are.
Character completes are like the last piece of a puzzle—you don’t see the full picture until it’s in place. In 'Breaking Bad', Walter White’s transformation from meek teacher to ruthless drug lord is only fully understood in his final moments. His admission that he did it for himself, not his family, completes his arc with brutal honesty. It’s not just about what happens, but how it reframes everything that came before.
On the flip side, some films use incomplete arcs to leave room for interpretation. 'Inception’s' spinning top is infamous because it refuses to give Cobb a clear resolution. But even that ambiguity is a kind of completion—it forces us to decide what his story means. Whether definitive or open-ended, a well-executed complete makes characters linger in your mind long after the credits roll.
2026-05-26 11:39:57
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Completion
Holly S. Roberts
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There’s nothing sexier than a hot jock any day of the week even if you don’t care for sports. Think sizzling dirty sweat and hard muscle that melts ice instantly. These jocks are ready to meet their match and score for life. Come along for the ride. Find a nice cool spot and bring plenty of iced water. Football, baseball, rugby, and tennis. There’s no end to dirty sex between clean sheets. Completion is created by Holly S. Roberts/D’Elen McClain, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
I was an emergency physician.
After finishing a night shift, I had just walked out of the hospital entrance when a colleague from the hospital called me.
"Dr. Doherty, hurry back. A critically injured patient was just brought in. The chief wants you to return immediately and help with the resuscitation."
I turned around without thinking.
But then a stream of floating comments suddenly appeared in front of my eyes.
[Do not enter the operating room! Do not take part in this resuscitation!]
[The patient is already dead. If you go in, you will be taking the fall for the hospital director's daughter!]
[This patient's family is powerful. You will not only be sentenced to death, your parents will also be forced to jump to their deaths as well!]
My steps stopped cold.
A few seconds later, my heart tightened.
I decided to believe the comments.
I would gamble on it.
My eyes swept quickly across the ground.
I immediately locked onto an uncovered deep shaft on the road.
I gritted my teeth, shut my eyes, and threw myself straight into the opening.
Maids don’t ever get to go to the ball… do they?
Jace Connors: Stretched thin from running a business and organizing a wedding, the last thing Jace needs is the world’s most eligible bachelorettes trying to sneak their way into his bed. When he meets Ella grooming the inn’s horses, though, she leaves him breathless. Jace knows that he can’t let her get away…
Ella McDaniels: What starts as an almost-kiss in the barn ends up captivating Ella, even though she knows that the richly dressed Jace is out of her league. However, when he keeps showing up wherever she is, her attraction to him grows. And if she can outwit her wicked stepmother, she just might be able to dance with him at the wedding reception ball.
There’s only one problem… What if Jace is actually the groom?
The doctor told me I had 72 hours left, unless I got access to the newest experimental treatment. However, there was only one slot available, and my husband Bowen Liddell gave it to my sister Yvonne Lawson instead.
"Her kidney failure is more critical," he said.
I nodded and swallowed the white pills that would only speed up my death. In the time I had left, I got a lot done.
The lawyer's hand trembled as he passed me the documents. "Are you sure you want to transfer the two billion dollars in shares?"
I replied, "Yes. Give them to Yvonne."
My daughter, Candice Liddell, was giggling in Yvonne's arms. "Mommy Yvonne bought me a new dress!"
I said, "It looks beautiful. Make sure you always listen to Mommy Yvonne, okay?"
The art gallery I built from the ground up now had Yvonne's name on the sign.
"You're too kind, Kathy," she said, crying.
I told her, "You'll run it even better than I ever did."
I even signed all my parents' trust fund away.
That was when Bowen finally gave me his first genuine smile in years. "Kathleen, you've changed. You're not so aggressive anymore... You're beautiful like this."
Indeed. This dying version of me finally became the 'perfect Kathleen Sullivan' in their eyes—obedient, generous, and no longer argumentative.
The 72-hour countdown had already begun, and I couldn't help but wonder what they would remember when my heart stopped for good.
The good wife who 'finally learned to let go', or the woman who completed her revenge by dying?
I was the kind of girl everyone called hopelessly lovestruck.
That day was no different from any other. I clung to my boyfriend’s arm, leaned in close, and shamelessly asked for a kiss like I always did.
However, right before my lips touched his, a line of glowing comments drifted across my vision. They floated in the air like a livestream chat.
[Can this side character wake up already? Can she not see the male lead avoided her the entire time? He hated clingy relationships like this.]
[The kind of person who really suits him is the female lead. Someone gentle, patient, and understanding.]
[Once the real female lead shows up, this annoying clingy girlfriend is definitely getting dumped.]
My body froze.
I slowly loosened my arms from around his neck.
In the next second, he suddenly looked up at me.
“Why’d you stop?”
There's this magical feeling when a story wraps up all its loose ends—like finally putting the last piece into a puzzle you've been working on for ages. Completes give closure, not just to the characters but to us as the audience. Take 'Harry Potter' for example; imagine if it just ended after 'The Half-Blood Prince' without Voldemort's defeat or Harry's future. It'd feel hollow, right? Completes validate the journey, making all the struggles and growth meaningful. They don't have to be happy endings, though. Some of the best stories leave you bittersweet, like 'The Last of Us Part II', where the resolution hurts but feels necessary.
Beyond satisfaction, completes also shape how we remember stories. An unfinished tale lingers like an itch, but a well-executed ending can elevate everything that came before. Think of 'Breaking Bad'—Walter White's arc wouldn't hit as hard without that final episode. And sometimes, completes even redefine the story retroactively. 'Attack on Titan' sparked debates, but its ambition to tie every theme together made it unforgettable, flaws and all. For me, a story without a complete is like a song cut off mid-chorus—it leaves you craving the resolution you deserved.