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Bojack Hump is a photographer and the unidentified serial killer later referred to by the media as “The Target Killer.”
“ She took me, we danced at the prom while he sat in the corner crying. „ ~ Bojack explains how he meet Richie Mercury
“ Brother James, Brother James, Are you still sleeping? Are you still sleeping? Don't you hear the bell? Don't you hear the bell? Ding, dang, dong, Ding, dang, dong „ ~ Bojack sings before killing Reks Raymond
Bojack Hump, also known as The Target Killer or The Terror Bringer of Alaska, is the titular main antagonist of The Fan Movie Script Target. He is a prolific serial killer who kills the Bullies of his Girlfriend who died from Suicide
Because its a Fan Script there is no Actor who played him but the writer said in his mind he would be played by Jon Hamm
Biography[]
Childhood[]
Early Life & Relationship with Richie Mercury[]
Little is known about Bojack’s early life. Before the killings, he worked as a photographer, mostly within the fashion and commercial scene.
He met Richie Mercury during one of his photo sessions, and the two began a relationship. After her apparent suicide, Bojack became increasingly isolated and emotionally unstable. His grief eventually twisted into a belief that the people responsible for her pain had to be punished.
First Killings (1968)[]
The film references Bojack’s early murders in dialogue and flashbacks.
The first confirmed victim is Bob Spielman, Richies Ex who raped her multiple times
Following Bob’s death, Bojack kills a trio of drug dealers who supplied Richie with the cocaine that led to her overdose.
These murders remain unconnected to him at the time.
The Target Killings (1976)[]
By the time of the main story, Bojack has killed several more victims, each marked by the same precision and ritualistic violence.
Victims[]
Says about himself that he killed 61 people (possible lie)
- Bob Spielman - Strangled with bare hands
- Unnamed Drugdealer - Knife in the Heart
- Carl - Beaten to death with a bowling pin
- Abby Vinyl - 42 Stabed, Shot in the Head and hit with a Baseball Bat
- Reks Raymond - Tomahawk to the throat
- Unnamed Victim
- Unnamed Victim
- Elliot Duke - Axe in the chest
- Arthur Peterson - beaten to death in prison (indirectly)
- Honey Smith - Burns caused by water and brain injury (Died from the consequences)
- Jonathan Elias Quinn - Shot in the Head
- Grandma - Throat slit
- Deputy Tony - Broken neck
- Yanick Domogala - Drill in the eye
- Zora Kingshell - Thrown off the balcony by Bojack (bound)
Each crime scene displays a symbolic target motif, giving rise to the name “The Target Killer.”
Personality[]
Bojack Hump is a man divided between control and chaos. Outwardly calm, articulate, and almost magnetic in conversation, he hides an obsessive mind shaped by grief, jealousy, and the need for permanence. Everything he does — from the way he frames a photograph to the way he kills — reflects a desperate urge to preserve what he believes is “truth.”
Calculated and Patient[]
Bojack never acts out of impulse. Even his violence feels deliberate, almost choreographed. He studies his victims, learns their patterns, and turns each killing into a composition. He is a perfectionist trapped in his own delusion of meaning — seeing life, death, and justice as part of a single, symmetrical image.
Emotionally Detached but Deeply Sentimental[]
Despite his cold demeanor, Bojack’s actions are driven by sentiment, not sadism. He kills to immortalize, not to destroy. Richie Mercury’s death left him emotionally shattered, and instead of grieving, he began documenting. His affection transformed into ritual, his love into violence. He feels genuine sorrow for some of his victims — but kills them anyway, as if it’s a duty.
Obsessive and Symbolic[]
Everything has a symbol for Bojack: the camera lens, the target sign, the VHS tapes. He believes objects carry memory — and that by controlling those objects, he controls the truth. This obsession often crosses into paranoia; he edits reality the same way he edits his films, erasing mistakes and retelling events until they fit his narrative.
Charming but Unsettling[]
Bojack’s charisma lies in how normal he appears. He’s polite, eloquent, and reserved, but his words carry an uncanny precision. He never wastes a sentence. When he speaks, it feels rehearsed — as if he’s already heard the conversation before. He doesn’t threaten; he persuades.
Philosophical and Self-Justifying[]
He sees his crimes as a kind of moral art — an act of documentation rather than destruction. He truly believes that death reveals honesty, and that his victims are part of something bigger: a visual truth about decay, love, and guilt. In his mind, he’s not a killer; he’s an observer.
Identity and Duality[]
At his core, Bojack Hump is defined by duality — photographer and killer, lover and destroyer, creator and eraser. He believes that by capturing death, he’s keeping life intact. This contradiction defines every choice he makes and every word he speaks.



