#not criticizing the romance - I love how its done and fits his character a lot đ«
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
There is something really comfy about Lucanis being a ~30 something year old man confirmed to be demisexual and a virgin
#I say as an almost 30y old trans gay demisexual virgin man#idk its just comfy#as much as I loved Davrin I did not vibe with his hookup-still flirts - which make perfect sense btw!!#not criticizing the romance - I love how its done and fits his character a lot đ«#I'll try Lucanis romance in my second playthrough and see if I vibe with it#but from what I've read and seen I like the approach#I like the slow burn yknow#this is how I perceive romance this is what love looks like and feels to me#Also I'm talking about the Romance themselves - when it comes to Characters I prefer Davrin hhfjfhjg#Lucanis is not my type đ but hell yeah for the representation yknow#damn I yapped!! don't mind me#blah blah#dav
35 notes
·
View notes
Note
Hi , I want to ask if you think Lucien was always meant to have a rejected mating bond with an Archeron sister ?
Hello lovely anon!
So.... this is a tough question to answer- because where does always begin in the writing process?
Does it begin in the first draft? Does it begin in the wild prophetic visions you have at three am that you want to scribble down but you don't because you are trying to sleep, but still, it lingers? Does it begin in a beat sheet, a plot outline, a Pinterest board?
I'm not sure if SJM always intended a rejected mating bond. To be completely honest, I go back and forth. I think that Sarah has let a lot of things slip that she wrote that were never going to even be submitted to her editor on a first draft (like the famed Nesta/Cassian/Azriel batwich, RIP and I'm still waiting on SJM to write a threesome). And yet when she shares those things, people almost consider it canon and analyze it to death and use it to prove certain things. At some point, she probably really genuinely considered making Lucien and one of the sisters a couple, but I can't say for sure where in the process that died.
I remember seeing Emily Henry share on her stories recently an addition to her "RIP" character list- as in characters that she had written that literally did not even make it into the book. The first draft of Beach Read was actually a love triangle, involving some local guy who owns an ice cream business or something of the sort who is also trying to romance January. I can see what she might have been trying to do there- give January two options reflecting two sides of her. Ice Cream Steve (not sure if those details are correct but we'll go with it) would have served as a perfect foil to Grave Digging, Bleak Literary Fiction Author Gus. But ultimately, Ice Cream Steve did not even make it to the book. Do we treat him as real? Do we wonder if he may have been a better fit for January? Do we analyze what this means for January and Gus?
I'll get a little bit into the technicality of what developmental editing is and how it can completely reshape a story, erase characters, create characters, and shift their storylines, but what I do know is this- the function of Lucien being assigned an Archeron sister, any Archeron sister, is completely clear: To win him over to the Night Court as an ally and embolden him to help Feyre get away from Tamlin. This is absolutely critical. Lucien's role in the story since this hasn't developed romantically because he is mated to one of the Archeron sisters, it has spun off in a new direction plot wise with the Band of Exiles, Vassa, Koschei, and the human queens- which also develops a tentative relationship between himself and his brother Eris again, with his mating bond hovering in the background. However, his mating bond began this new direction, and it wouldn't have existed without it:
Lucien would not have left if it were not for the mating bond. I believe that is the element that was always true. Lucien's mating bond, be it with Elain, or Nesta as originally planned, was always going to be a plot device. And I can answer where I believe the story of a love triangle at the very least began its groundwork- which is A Court of Mist and Fury. I personally think that as of publishing ACOMAF Lucien and Elain were already done, fizzling out in the developmental editing process, and Azriel and Elain were endgame, but I'm open to those who see it differently.
Before we move on, here are the different types of editors:
A development editor basically edits the story at large. They focus on elements like theme, character development, plot holes, ECT. When dealing with a series, often times an author will provide a detailed packet to their developmental editor before doing dev runs. This is because the developmental editor needs to understand where the story is headed. They need to understand what needs to be appropriately foreshadowed, what themes to highlight, and keep their eye on the big picture so that everything comes to a well developed, emotionally charged, and thematically satisfying conlcusion.
What is clear to me is that Azriel and Elain were being developed emotionally and thematically in ACOMAF:
These are the types of passages that focus on the big picture. Before Feyre's sisters have become Fae, Feyre is musing on what her sisters would be like in Velaris. She thinks about how Nesta would like it, despite herself, and become fast friends with Amren (true) and how Elain would like Velaris, but she would cling to Azriel for peace and quiet. True. Feyre considers how handsome Elain and Azriel would be together if he ever stopped loving Mor.
Developmentally- what is the purpose of this? It's the same book that Lucien and Elain's mating bond is revealed, so why muse on Elain and Azriel as a couple if Azriel could get over Mor, which he now has because of Elain? Meanwhile, Elain is engaged. Feyre doesn't say a word about that. She sees how her sister would want to be with someone like Azriel, and Feyre doesn't even think twice about Graysen because Azriel is right for her sister. This isn't Feyre being an unreliable narrator. Everything else in this passage came to be true.
These are the types of moments developmental editors hone in on to make sure theme and foreshadowing are strong and successful.
Of course this is already after the beautiful moments Azriel and Elain have together- Azriel getting shy and self conscious before dropping one of the most beautiful lines in all the books about being born hearing the song of the wind. Elain already being able to read Azriel- looking to him and smiling and finding comfort and assessing his countenance to see if everything is going okay.
If I'm a developmental editor, and I wanted it to be really clear why Lucien and Elain were right for each other- why would I keep all of this in? Why tie Elain and Azriel together thematically and emotionally? So again, this is where the question "where does always begin" comes into play. Did SJM realize in her first draft that Nesta and Lucien weren't going to work, so she switched to Elain, only to realize that Elain and Lucien don't have chemistry either? Was it after a developmental edit? I can't say for sure on that end. Maybe ACOMAF truly was just setting up a love triangle, but personally I think Elain and Az were always endgame as of the books being published, and trying to explore Elain and Lucien as a couple probably died out before the final draft of ACOMAF and SJM realized Lucien still needed to be mated to one of the sisters, thus ideas about the rejected mating bond started stirring instead and then were hit HARD in ACOWAR. I can see the argument that the door was being kept open for Lucien in ACOMAF, though I personally think Lucien's mating bond reveal was strictly a plot device. But what is extremely clear is that as of ACOWAR the path was set in stone.
Again- these are the things where, not to take credit away from Sarah, a developmental editor really comes into play. If Sarah is going, okay- who is Lucien going to end up with? Nesta? No, it can't be Nesta, even though that was originally the plan. Elain? Maybe, it could be Elain. What does that look like? Maybe it was Lucien and Elain in the pitch packet. Then a developmental editor goes, okay- where are we headed? What are the themes? What are the character arcs and growth we are looking for?
Then we move on to ACOWAR, and both of them were developed to have a theme of choice threaded into their interactions:
What these moments make clear is that the mating bond makes it impossible for Elain and Lucien to get what they truly want out of love with each other- for someone to love and choose them beyond the circumstances placed on them. Lucien wants this just as much as Elain does. They are now thematically connected in that way- in wanting to be chosen above all, despite everything. That's where this Facebook comment makes soooo much sense:
Nesta didn't have any growth or healing to offer Lucien, because thematically there was not really anything there between them. Nesta and Cassian also had this instant, intense connection that could not be ignored or played slowly. Nesta also didn't lose her fiance, she herself saying she had as little at stake in Velaris as she did on the other side of the wall. Nesta had anger and resentment. Elain had loss, which on the surface could thematically match Lucien, but then we dig deeper to learn that they aren't only needing to heal from the loss of love, they are needing to heal from the loss of choice.
Elain was engaged to a man who hates fae. And Elain was always going to become Fae.
Lucien had his history and story with Jesminda since book one. He thought Jesminda was his mate. The woman who loved him for him, not because he was a High Lord's son or because of any other High Fae customs Lucien rejects. This is where you see the development. Lucien and Elain could have worked on an incredibly surface level, both of them having lost their first loves, but deeper themes revealed themselves that showed they mirror each other in a way that doesn't make them right for each other, but that allows them to face what needs to be faced: being strong and brave enough to choose for themselves instead of letting the world control them.
For Elain and Lucien to have made sense together thematically, everything should have been reversed. Elain should have been mated to Azriel, and then Elain and Lucien should have met somehow and fallen in love, and the choosing each other above all, love trumping even a mating bond, Lucien being chosen and loved without question, without hesitation, would have belonged to them.
But again, without the mating bond, Lucien and Elain wouldn't even have met in the first place and Lucien would not have left Spring. So where does that leave us? The mating bond as a plot device. It was literally required to move the story forward, but thematically is anticlimactic for both parties in terms of the kind of love they want for themselves.
So- was Lucien always going to have a mating bond rejection? Probably not. But where in the years long process did all of this reveal itself? Only Sarah knows that. But I think what is quite clear is that it was always going to happen if we start from what is published in the books between him and Elain.
I think it's very possible that SJM did really intend for Lucien to wind up with one of the sisters. But if you've ever gone through the writing process yourself, you realize pretty quickly how many things fall apart and don't work/make sense/are actually anti-thematic to the characters you've created. Maybe she'll tell us one day exactly when Elain and Lucien fell apart, just like Nesta and Lucien fell apart. But we do have to keep in mind that an author like SJM, who was able to sell a trilogy all at once, probably had to have at least a 25 page packet outlining the trilogy and it's development. So- was it Nesta and Lucien in the pitch packet? Was it Elain and Lucien, because even while structuring a pitch she realized Nesta and Lucien would never work while outlining, but thought Elain and Lucien would? Only to discover Elain and Azriel connecting while drafting ACOMAF?
Writing a book is years of plotting, outlining, writing, rewriting, editing, writing again, and sometimes what you come up with is unrecognizable from the plan. And considering SJM contracted a trilogy, she would have pitched in pretty significant detail what would happen in book two and book three. We'll see what Sarah does and does not choose to reveal!
I think that's everything! I love getting these questions from you guys. I still have a cue in my inbox, and I am sorry it's kind of random when my inspiration strikes and I have a clear answer and can quickly think of the passages and ideas! But I will try to get to my older ones that have been sitting for a minute, I promise!
What do you guys think? I know everyone has different thoughts on this and I love to hear them!
56 notes
·
View notes
Note
hi corynn! how about 2, 9, 17, and 40 for the fanfic writers ask game?
so this has been sitting in my inbox for literal weeks and i have just not been able to find the time to answer it. so sorry bri. đ©”but iâm here now! letâs go~
2: talk about a notable time a narrative or character has looked you dead in the eyes and said âfuck your plan, hereâs what weâre actually doing.â
honestly this doesnât happen TOO often to me bc iâm such an outliner, but the one plot-point that comes to mind is how in natgig san wasnât originally going to have feelings for seonghwa right off the bat. but then i started writing and it just fit. it required some re-outlining, but not that much, because as silly as it sounds i think the characters iâd created were really meant to love eachother. it took a little shifting of tone for their future scenes, but thatâs about all.
thereâs also been a couple of times that certain scenes go a bit different than i expect them to, but nothing drastic. i try to stick to my outline, especially for elaborate stories like natgig that require a lot of foreshadowing and build-up.
9: in an ideal world where youâre already super successful and published, would you want to see a tv or movie adaptation of your work? why or why not?
i think it really depends on what kind of work of mine were to get an adaption. if weâre talking natgig, i absoluetly think it should be a tv show. thereâs far too much content in there for it to be limited to two hours. plus there will be 15 chapters, all very long, that i think could each be its own 45 minute episode.
however, other works i have in the holster (such as the contemporary-style romance iâll likely be working on next) i think would work better as a movie. no sense dragging it out for a whole mini-series like certain book-to-tv show adaptions have done.
but realistically, if any work i write ever gets made into a movie or tv show or literally anything i think iâd just die of happiness LMAO. so it doesnât rlly matter.
17: what is your favorite line youâve ever written?
omg i have no idea. i donât think my writing is extremely âquotableâ per say. i think iâve written quite a few lines that pack a real punch, but itâs more about their impact within the story itself.
so i think iâll just cheat this question and say my favourite overall chapter/story iâve written is part 07 of natgig. there was so much in there that iâm proud of. and while i often am too critical to reread any works older than a month or two back, i donât have any problem with that one. i think itâs some of my best work.
40: best piece of feedback youâve ever gotten.
anything and everything @sorikkung has ever sent me LMAO. while i absolutely love receiving compliments and they make me feel all warm and fuzzy inside, my favourite feedback is when people just ramble about the story and what they think of the characters/plot/setting etc. it gives me so much insight into what people are thinking and whatâs leaving an impact. and nobody gives me better insight into that than rascalđ«¶đ«¶
send me an ask for fanfic writers!
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Pit-A-Pat
Date Night HC
Genre: Fluff
Warnings: none
Characters: Chifuyu, Baji, Mitsuya
⧠Chifuyu Matsuno
Random dates at the weirdest times, but itâs Chifuyu, so itâs fine
Picks you up early in the morning to have a pre-school breakfast date
Picks you up from school without telling you, youâd only hear your schoolmates whispering about that cute boy and his bike at the gate
You walk over to him, being like âwth Chifuyu??â
And he is just standing there, leaning against his bike and greets you with the warmest eye-smile while handing you a helmet
Wants to spent time with you, but it is kinda problematic with his school-life and nightly gang activities
âWalking in the park and buying ice-creamâ dates for him
Wants you to lick his icecream??
Like, he has seen another couple doing this somewhere, and he wants you to do it too
And you wouldnât get his bragging about how delicious his choice is
 At last, heâd ask you
ây/n. you wanna try it?â
âsure. đâ
Heâd be oddly satisfied after, but whatever makes him happy is fine with you
Another kind of date is the âlate night playground dateâ
With him texting you at the most random hour that he is in front of your house
You greet him at the door, about to decline his offer, when he gives you the âChifuyu-lookâ
Needless to say, you ended up seesawing on a sway in the middle of the night
But he gave you his jacket if that makes things up
⧠Keisuke Baji
That guy that tries to be coolest boi out there while dying internally
Definitely talked this date over with his mom
Not because he wanted, but he needed her to lift the grounding
She would go and give him tipsâŠyou knowâŠmom-tips
How he should dress nicely, behave, give you flowers and everything
 And him being the good son he is, he would listen
Now imagine you waiting outside a cinema (totally not Baji-style, I know, you know, he knows) in cute clothes, having typical date thoughts like âwhat if he forgotâ, âwhat if he is going to dump meâ until someone taps you on the shoulder
At first you are surprised by the person in front of you
He feels so uncomfortable, but would not complain
Ironed suit, slicked back hair, flowers in his hand
you have some trouble finding your Keisuke in this person
gritting his teeth while giving you the flowers
In that moment some random dude bumped into him and he kinda fell into your arms while the flowers landed on the ground
You chuckle while holding him up, fully expecting him to go into Berserker-Baji mood
But he just takes a deep breath, trying to calm his temper
 âSoâŠyouâre really not gonna do anything about that guy? Where is Keisuke and what have you done with him?â
 âY/n.â
You tried your best to hold back, but the whole situation was so hilarious
Things got even worse
The movie you planned to watch had already begun
Baji was about to beat the guy at the entrance, but you intervened, assuring him that its fine and that you could do something else
You bought some snacks at a 7/11, while Baji walked behind you being all pouty
After you left the store you stopped him, ruffling through his hair to make him look more like himself while chuckling
âKeisuke. Anything that involves you is fine with me. Donât worry.â
Now he is pouty and blushy
Your late-night adventure ended on a bridge, sharing snacks, and looking at the river. Not your worst experience and you made sure he knew that.
⧠Takashi Mitsuya
Home date, home date. HOME DATE.
I imagine your date to go two ways depending whether he needs to babysit his sisters (which is the usual thing) or if he is free (which is rare)
If you have a home date it wonât be less exciting than going somewhere else
Because the Mitsuya household is so cozy and comfortable
Home-cooked meals by Takashi, who asked you about your favourite dish before
Mana and Luna greeting you at the front door while he stands in the kitchen
The two girls being all over you, admiring the âpretty guestâ
You try to make your way into the kitchen, where he is stirring something in a pan
He turns around and gives you the warmest smile ever (it feels like you just came home to your husband cooking smth for you)
He tells the girls to get off you and lay the table
Finally greets you with a soft hug
So much fun while eating, the girls babbling all the time and, of course, embarrassing Takashi, saying how he was âexcited for his special person to comeâ
Both of you help them to get ready for bed, but they complained the whole time that Takashi just wants to do âkissy stuff with youâ and now youâre both blushing like hell
Once both of them are (finally) asleep, its couple time
Iâm talking about laying on the couch, your legs over his, a big bowl of snacks between, watching a cheesy romance or something (The Devil wears Prada? Got a feeling thatâs a movie heâd love)
You either end up sleeping in his bed while he takes the couch, or you go home
In that case heâd insist to bring you, but you would stop him with a wave of your hand. He needs to watch his sisters after all
 A kiss on the cheek as a goodbye for him to see him turn mushy. He is used to female contact, but with youâŠit is something else entirely
Those would be weekly dates for you
Now, if he is without siblings, expect some crafty dates, like a pottery workshop, going shopping without actually buying anything (money??), him telling you what would fit you (he would be deadly honest about it. No sugar-coating)
Nice café dates with the whole "ordering one milkshake and drink it together" thing
Cute and wholesome, puts a lot of effort into those dates, cuz he feels like the home-dates donât do you justiceÂ
This is my first time writing for husband material Takashi Mitsuya. I hope I did him justice.
Also, I kinda mixed first date with general dates, so I hope this isnât a problem? Any opinion and criticism is welcome, and I hope you like it anyways!
Rosalie đč
#tokyo revengers#tokyo revengers x reader#chifuyu x reader#chifuyu matsuno#keisuke baji#keisuke baji x reader#baji x reader#takashi mitsuya#mitsuya x reader#takashi mitsuya x reader#tokyo revengers chifuyu#chifuyu matsuno x reader#tokyo revengers baji#tokyo revengers imagine
767 notes
·
View notes
Text
Alright, back from seeing Black Widow, my first movie in an actual theater since this whole Covid nonsense blew through. (For the record, the last movie I watched in a theater was Birds of Prey.) Thoughts below.
SPOILERS SPOILERS SPOILERS
You have been warned.
This movie should have been released 4 years ago. Considering everything that has gone down with Infinity War, Endgame, and the TV shows (specifically Falcon & the Winter Soldier), it was somewhat jarring to slingshot all the way back to the period just following Civil War.
On the whole, the action was...okay. Marvel, for me, has always been about the characters more than the boom-booms, and while it was great to see Natasha and Yelena kicking ass all over the screen, it didn't quite have the same immediacy as the hand-to-hand fight sequences in Winter Soldier, which I personally hold as The Standard for Marvel fight choreography.
The best parts of this movie came in the quiet moments, which there were a surprising amount of, considering some of the pre-release criticism had excoriated the film for weighing down the scales on the action side, which I didn't find to be the case at all.
So, chemical subjugation as opposed to straight-up brainwashing. We didn't get too much background on this, beyond Melina's pig experiments, but I'd be interested to see if they expand on this concept (and the antidote) in future media.
(And imagine if that chemical were combined with the serum - Zemo (and Bucky) would have apoplexy. I know there hasn't been much Winter Soldier/Red Room crossover in the MCU thus far, but that would have...legs, I think.)
Speaking of super-soldiers, Red Guardian was fantastic. I laughed. A lot.
Now, he does boast in prison that he fought Captain America in the 80s. Obviously, this was not Steve, as Steve was still doing his best frozen dessert impression in the Arctic at that point. Two possibilities come to mind here (and yes, I realize he could be bullshitting but let me run with this): firstly, (and this is the one I think would be most accurate for MCU projects going forward), is that this might have been Isaiah Bradley. The timeline fits and he's had a solid enough introduction in FatWS that it wouldn't be a stretch of the imagination. My second idea (which is admittedly a lot more fan fiction-y and something I posit solely for the angst angle) is that this "Captain America" was actually a Bucky/Winter Soldier who had been dressed up in some approximation of a Steve costume and made to act as "Captain America" for propaganda/training/observation purposes with the Red Guardian, Bucky's handlers knowing he would be able to emulate Steve's fighting style and vocal cadence, especially with the right manipulations. (Yup, there's a story in there which I will not be writing but would totally read.)
Also, along the line of super-soldiers - what is Red Guardian doing in 2025? Because Zemo would have probably wanted to have a word or a bullet or two.
So Dreykov's plan was to take over the world at his leisure through brainwashing and global assassins? Ehhhhh...didn't love that part, it really felt like Vanilla Hydra-esque World Takeover Mambo #9.
This being said, the scenes with Natasha and Dreykov were some of the best in the movie outside the family shenanigans. ScarJo got to show some real range there and it worked.
And this leads to the social commentary about women in the film. It's funny, because I feel that it was both very well-done (Natasha/Derykov, the forced hysterectomy conversation on the helicopter) but also wholly hamfisted (basically everything with the nameless mass of other Widows and Dreykov's far too pointed, Ebeneezer Scrooge line about controlling the "excess population" of women). The film, as a totality, did well by its female characters, allowed them to be messy, to kick massive ass, didn't touch any kind of forced romance, and definitely communicated how men can exploit women (and young girls). But Marvel (at least in the films - the TV shows tend to be more nuanced) is still not quite getting that balance right and have a habit of tipping into the "tell" (more like instruct from a soapbox) not "show" messaging strategy.
Taskmaster was...okay. Her introduction and first few scenes were cool, as was the way she emulated many familiar fighting forms (I caught Bucky's knife flip, Hawkeye's shooting, and Natasha's whole...thing), but in the end, she was a generic villain of the week, kind of like Ghost in Antman and the Wasp. I really didn't care one way or the other what happened to her.
Anyone else feel like we didn't really get much of an explanation re: Bucharest Budapest even though we kind of got an explanation about Bucharest Budapest?
More of a general cinema comment, but I've been watching all my streaming with captions the past year or so (which has helped me immensely, because sometimes the mixing in these is just not good) and I missed having them here, as a lot of characters tended to deliver lines somewhat sub rosa, and it wasn't always easy to track what was going on.
The family dynamics and Yelena's character were highlights. Gotta find that "cool" away to die.
Interesting that Yelena is already working for Val in the post-credits. Wonder what kind of organization she's setting up there. (Gods, I love Val.)
I will say that Natasha had a lot of wonderful character moments in this film, and it really bridged the gap between the Captain America movies and her Endgame character.
I'm always a sucker for a found family trope. No complaints there.
On the whole, great character moments in the quiet sections, forgettable action (although I'm still figuring out the whole nerve/bashing your head on the table thing), decent meta-commentary but far too removed from its real-life timeline. 7/10
#hello there#black widow#black widow spoilers#legobiwan watches a movie#edit: oy budapest not bucharest#oof i should know better too as ive actually been to budapest and was reminiscing about it in those scenes
68 notes
·
View notes
Text
Talks Machina Highlights - Critical Role C2E113 (Oct. 27, 2020)
Good evening and good night, lovely people of the world! Weâre on the internet and ready to go. Tonightâs guests are Travis Willingham and Sam Riegel. This will be calm, controlled, and sane, I can feel it. Brian points out itâs been seven months since either of them were on Talks. Oof. (Sam asks if itâs been going the whole time without him. Bigger oof.) Travis keeps sneaking bites out of an acai bowl or something and tries to look sneaky about it, and I laugh every time because heâs just...so big. Heâs such a big person.
(Brian is wearing a lobstrosity shirt. He and Travis talk about Dark Tower for a bit; then Sam tries to get into the conversation: âIs that the thing from It?â Brian: âIs what the thing from It?â Sam: âIs that lobster the clown from It? Iâm not very literate. Is that a Langolier? Is that a Shawshank?â)
Announcements: none! Maybe they just forgot. Weâve been talking about Samâs spooky skeleton decorations for like five minutes. Brian suggests taking them to Travisâs house. Travis: âThatâs the fastest way to get to the smell of burning plastic.â Brian: âSpeaking of your girlfriend...â
On Avantika: Fjord wouldnât call it a relationship as much as a casual sexual interaction. Not official! Super not official!!
The first sea voyage wasnât great for Fjord, but he tried to be thoughtful about preparing for this one before they left: praying, kneeling at the bow of the ship, etc. Heâs a little disappointed the Wildmother didnât even throw him a âyo, famâ heads up.
They werenât sure how to resolve the conflict at first, since Avantika went for Fjord rather than the crystal. No one expected it to get exposed in that way. Travis thought the necklace was a pocket dimension and was alarmed to learn it wasnât. Travis wants it destroyed along with the third gateway, so until they are he wonât rest easy.
Everyone enjoyed watching them all fail on the battlefield again. (Sam: âYou used [Counterspell] so effectively!â) Travis thought heâd said Thunder Step, which would imply Avantika was running, rather than Thunder Wave. Sam says itâs fine since none of them have that spell and he wouldnât know it anyway.
Itâs very difficult for Veth to find reasons to stay with the M9. She loves the adventures and making a difference, but she also wants to come home and have weekends and have a husband and life. âSheâs a career girl!â Heâs very excited about the possibilities of Calebâs transportation effectively creating an easy commute for her. He also, as a player, doesnât want to be the person whoâs always leaving the party. âMy characters wanna roam!â
Travis was fully tilted that Avantika might have gotten away right before the break. He doesnât think he could have focused on Vess DeRognaâs task knowing Avantika had gotten away; he was seriously working out how Fjord would leave the party to go make a last stand at the third gate if sheâd escaped.
Sam looooves how Matt plays Yeza, but it honestly makes him feel a little worse at how encouraging he is for Veth to chase her dreams. âHeâs always like - go shine! Go blossom!â He wants to have the conversation about Yeza feeling a little ignored. Itâs fun to share the tales of adventures with Luc & Yeza.Â
Travis says thereâs no way itâs Molly--itâs all Lucien. They donât know if it was a resurrection, if heâs undead, possessed, etc. Everyone--everyone--rags on Taliesinâs accent work. Brian surreptitiously claims Ashly was brought on to relieve him of the burden of the accent. Poor Ashly, ha!
Initially, Travis landed on the Oath of the Ancients, but it had more nature & pacifism in it than he felt fit Fjord very well. Many of them also had a focus on good & lawfulness, which also didnât feel quite right; he also wasnât that vengeful for some of the others. He & Matt got together and discussed options. Matt asked what Travis liked about Fjord; Fjordâs love for the ocean was a huge part of it, since Travis himself also loves the ocean & scuba diving, and so Matt created a custom oath for him. Travis does not plan to post its details, but he thinks Matt will at some point.
Cosplay of the Week! a lovely Scanlan by Air Bubbles Cosplay! Sam tells us the âcanonâ Scanlan cosplay was actually borrowed hodgepodge, and the boots were falling off all day.
It was really cool to see how Yeza & Luc have made a home in Nicodranas. Felderwin was okay, but kind of your basic D&D fishing village, and she likes the Nicodranas is much better. Sheâs confident & comfortable knowing her family is safe and sound.
Why is Fjord so interested in finding Sabian? To him, post-orphanage, his time with Vandren was the best of his life & the most love heâd ever received, because he mattered & had worth. It was taken by someone heâd known basically his whole life, so Fjord is not going to let that go. âThat fuckinâ bill needs to be paid, my friend.â
Sam acknowledges that he should NOT have looked at his phone in re: the Vilya reveal, but it was pretty surprising! He canât believe none of them recognized it! Travis points out the M9 had never met, heard of, or known anything about Vilya, so itâs not that surprising. Brian points out Matt has also done a really good job keeping the two campaigns separate, so any references were tasteful. Sam marvels that it was so well done: it was tasteful, had emotional and story impact... âThat Matt. Heâs getting better!â
Liam texted Sam back something like âoh SHIT.â
Knowing Veth had a chance to help someone else return to her child made Veth feel almost karmically forgiven for being away from her kid, but it also made Veth a little guilty--âthis lady wants to desperately return home, shouldnât I want to go home too?â Calebâs teleportation spell couldnât have come a better time.
Sam wants Caleb & Astrid to get back together (well, he says âhump each otherâ), and Daniâs eyebrows climb off her forehead. Veth/Nott really thinks Caleb needs to have a roll in ze hay, and feels like after meeting her that there is a kindness or vulnerability to her that could be worthwhile. Travis thinks she feels like someone tethered, that it feels like she has a bomb or something in her chest thatâll explode if she tries to leave. Sam thinks Eadwulf is super cool. None of these names are spelled like I think.
Travis found the dinner super frustrating, because he felt Caleb was trying to walk a diplomatic line and he just wanted to backhand Trent.Â
Fjord is still coming to terms with his feelings for Jester, and the feelings are definitely real, but thereâs a lot of timing that heâs considering and he also wants to figure out what the relationship is like outside of constant tension and battle. Fjord is also having trouble figuring out how to exercise the ability to display affection as well since heâs never received them, and is feeling out how to give and receive them. âItâs fine now, because heâs feeling it, but once you say it out loud, or once you come to a point where you make it known to the other side, then what happens? It might be ruined. It might be broken. Or it might not be!â The moment with the porcelain unicorn was too good not to try. Travis also sighs that heâs not a romance D&D guy, âbut now I am! Fuckinâ Laura Bailey!â Heâs definitely feeling it out and will see how it unfolds in the game.
If Jester hadnât let go of the Traveler, Fjord would have either attacked the Traveler or the Moonweaver and tried to kick them both off.
Sam doesnât think the Travelerâs realized yet what a dick he is. Brian thinks it may not happen in this campaign, but agrees the full weight of what he deserves hasnât been felt yet. Travis: âYeah, he came to the edge, but it didnât cost him anything.â Brian: âYeah, heâs a real edgelord.â
Fanart of the Week! a beautiful portrait of Molly in the snow by @claygryphon on twitter.
Veth acknowledges that they work for shady people with shady pasts, so Vess DeRogna isnât her first rodeo, but this time itâs personal. Itâs Jaws 2: Electric Boogaloo. Sam canât commit to actual actions, since Vess is like level 20 or something, but âI will get some kinda revenge. Be it petty or significant, I will get revenge.â
How are they feeling about being in Eiselcross? Theyâve only just landed, so not sure yet. The cold is intimidating. Theyâre excited to explore a new island thatâs part of Wildemount, especially with the river of lava running through it. âItâs icy with lava? Sounds like a Dairy Queen.â
Thereâs still a ton of unknowns regarding the Tombtakers, Vess, the nature of their job, and whoâs here on whose orders. Theyâre excited to see how itâs all going to play out. Travis laughs that he doesnât take notes, heâs just here to fight things. It just washes over him when Matt starts talking about names and places. âItâll reveal itself in time. [...] I donât write those notes down. I donât even know how to spell it off the bat.â I have never identified more with Travis. Sam actually does pay attention and take notes and was really impressed by Marishaâs dive.
Veth became interested in branding her own spellcraft as soon as she saw Caleb doing it. âThatâs what the influencer agents are gonna be looking at. It would be nice to leave the world better than we found it, but also with some branded spells.â
What were Fjordâs thoughts on dropping so much money on the ring & the Ioun stone? It wasnât about money for Fjord, it was about a cool thing to acquire. Itâs why he saves money in his campaign. Caleb needs âas much of a flak jacket as he can get.â He also REJECTS the idea of buyerâs remorse on the ring and touts the effectiveness itâll have on the lava river.
Travis talks about his old coins - a 340AD coin he bought at a ren faire and a 120BC coin that was a gift from a friend.
Sam marvels at the love and thought that Caleb put into the tower. Sam points out they forgot to go to the top two floors altogether. Travis: âDid the mansion get as much careful planning from Scanlan as the tower did from Caleb?â Sam: Absolutely not. But they were still thinking small in C1, figuring out how things went, and they didnât have as much detail in their heads yet.
And thatâs all the time we have for tonight! We end on everyone whispering way too close into their mics and tapping fingernails on mason jars. A fitting end to this crazy episode, I think.
Is it Thursday yet?
287 notes
·
View notes
Note
Ok hereâs why I personally thought BL S4 was a hot mess (but still better than anything TF has recently released)
SPOILERS
Overall the storyline was all over the place. They brought in new characters that were obviously supposed to facilitate with the main actorsâ storyline but I felt like it was empty and took away from it instead? There was too much focus on the painkiller, he had a plot that just didnât make sense (I think itâs because they were setting him up for his own show but he had like 2 whole eps dedicated to him that just didnât fit). Same old with Tobias, Lala, Lady eve etc. Villains doing the same thing season after season is just boring. Itâs was clear that Crisis changed things in their lives but it was never fully explained so there were just these huge plot holes that made no sense. All the characters had no development, it actually felt like they were reverting. The âJen changing identityâ plot was surprising the saving grace of the season.
Jeff: Completely unhinged in the first few episodes. Attacking police unprovoked, getting into fights, refusing to be BL when there was war going on in freeland. It was so bad, it even had me wondering what the hell happened to those âInjustice Protocolsâ?? They named dropped the flash in an ep so Barry was present in his life but did nothing? Do those protocols only apply to when Barry is a danger to others?? Anyway, he was basically a Joe level deadbeat at some point. And everything we established about his character in S1 and his development was basically destroyed. His relationship with Lynn and the girls was non-existent. Armageddon Jeff did him a favour.
Jen/Anissa: No development at all. Jen stayed the troublemaking hothead âlittle girlâ that doesnât listen, but worse. I could never figure out what they were doing with her character?? Like I understand sheâs supposed to be a teen but the attitude she has all the time was exhausting to watch. Anissa stayed the same. Like I couldnât even tell you what her character arc has been throughout the show? Consistently angry? And her powers never grew which bothered me. They couldâve done a lot more with her. Career driven but still makes time for everyone, supportive, loved by the people, wants to protect others, proud to be black and a lesbian etc. She couldâve stolen the show if they let her.
Lynn: Lynn⊠Oh donât even get me started on her đ. Itâs like they sat down and put together all the ways they could make her unlikeable. Do you know how Mirror Iris was towards Barry? She was like that but 1000x worse. Which annoyed me the most because it just fit into so many stereotypes about black women. She somehow managed to blame Jeff for literally everything. Tobias is trying to ruin their life? Jeffs fault. The girls got injured on a mission that he told them not to go on? Jeffâs fault? It rained today? Jeffâs fault. The milk is expired? Jeffâs fault. And she was completely unsympathetic to the fact that he was still grieving (she actually told him to get over it). I think the biggest mistake they made with the show was trying to force a relationship between them when there didnât need to be one. They were separated for a reason, she couldâve still been a part of the show and family without the romance needing to be rekindled. The flash has many faults, but I will always be thankful that they wrote Iris as a matriarch that is proud of and supports her superhero husband and kids. Lynn on the other hand⊠And this isnât just S4, she was like this throughout the duration of the show. But she was also let down as a character because her family were very unsupportive of her addiction and brushed off her ideas a lot because she wasnât âlike themâ.
I could honestly go into more detail, but spoilers and also I feel like Iâm being too critical about the show. It has its faults, but itâs not too bad. Maybe it was cancelled before it could reach itâs full potential đ€·đœââïž
Sorry this was a lot longer than I intended it to be
âïžâïžâïž
18 notes
·
View notes
Text
Review: é»èŻ» MĂČ DĂș (Silent Reading)
Notes:
(Very) long post ahead
Contains spoiler
This is my personal review and does not represent the entire audience, you are free to agree or not agree with what Iâve written here
Feel free to reply/send me a message if there are things you want to discuss
Using the Donghua poster because it fits the overall story more than the Audio Drama cover. :'))
Summary:
Yan City is a bright, bustling metropolis filled with all sorts of wonders, all sorts of people. From the richest occupying the city's most prestigious residential areas to the poorest huddling together in rundown slums, from the most fortunate blessed with a life of comfort to the wretched deemed to struggle until their last breath, from the virtuous walking in the path of light to the wicked lurking under the cover of darkness.
There is as much good as there is evil, and days gone by, people coming and going along with the passage of time.
Since their first meeting during a certain case seven years ago, Captain of the City Bureau's Crime Investigation Unit Luo Wenzhou thought he would never see eye to eye with Fei Du, son of a well-known conglomerate who inherited his father's position and wealth after the latter fell into comatose due to a near-fatal accident three years ago.
Words as sharp as knives dyed their bitter exchanges, even their personality was like the heaven and earth; the bold, blunt, and straightforward Luo Wenzhou - and the astute, secretive Fei Du, with his beautiful peach blossom eyes and a smile that is not quite a smile seducing countless people, his very presence seems as if it was covered under layers and layers of deceit.
Every single time they meet, they would always part on bad terms. Yet Luo Wenzhou would never have thought that a seemingly ordinary murder case of an ordinary deliveryman would lead him into the mystery of multiple long forgotten unsolved cases, turning over the Yan City and the City Bureau itself upside down, making him question his faith to those he respected and trust - and along with it, opening a door to the truth of Fei Du's past never once known to others.
STORY: 9/10
At first glance, the overall plot of Silent Reading seems neither extravagant nor exceptional. It's just one of those police drama where the main leads had to wrestle in a battle of wits with the villains looming around them, struggling to outsmart each other and eventually, bringing justice to those who deserve it.
But that is exactly what is so good about it. Silent reading could take all of those cliche and packed them into one nerve-wrecking, enticing journey from start to finish, complete with both intense and amusing interactions, and just the right amount of romance that does not disturb the flow of the main story.
And it actually does have its own uniqueness.
In most police dramas I've ever seen, the enemy is usually either a corrupt high-ranking official committing some hideous criminal acts by abusing their authority, or an individual/group with some very extreme values or obsession. Silent Reading, however, have both of those two most general types of villains in the story and what's more? It pits them against each other, pulling around and forcing the main leads to wreck their brains, slowly unravel the tangled mess until the truth finally comes to light.
The action and suspense, the atmosphere, the analysis, everything was almost impeccable to the point of perfection.
I have to especially give my kudos to how the author (Priest) structured the mystery in such a way, connecting one dots to the other from beginning to end. During the first few cases, I thought the resolution of the case didn't feel very solid, as if there are still some details that have yet to be properly elaborated. Yet halfway through, I realize that there is actually a bigger plot that encompass everything, tying all loose ends together.
And here, I would also like to highlight my two most favorite scene.
The first one is in Chapter 114-115 when Luo Wenzhou finally peeled of Fei Du's defense and for the first time exposed his true feelings, making Fei Du faced and spoke what he truly felt for Luo Wenzhou - that he really, actually did care for him. Their entire interactions and development up to this scene fits so well with these two main characters. There was no nonsense, no sappy crying and needless drama. Luo Wenzhou was as blunt as he was desperate and Fei Du, for once, admitted to the truth straight out with his own mouth.
The second one is in Chapter 157. In this case, one of Fei Du's most trusted men and an extremely important witness (that would later become their ally) were being chased and surrounded by thugs hired by their enemy. At this point of the story, the City Bureau was already in turmoil. Luo Wenzhou was suspended, nobody knows who they could or could not trust. Yet still, his subordinates all set out swiftly under his command and followed him to save the two witnesses, appearing at the most critical time.
It was actually a typical scene that exist in many police action drama, but given the development of the story, the well-built character relationship and interactions, I think it is Luo Wenzhou's coolest scene in the entire story and it makes me admire him a lot as the main lead and a leader figure.
One thing that does not quite sit well with me is Fan Siyuan's obsessiveness towards the late Gu Zhao. His motive for the crime was clear and I understand that he was using Gu Zhao's case as an example of injustice. But his extreme emotions whenever Gu Zhao was mentioned seems strange, even baseless. It makes me think whether he considers Gu Zhao as his own family or he was maybe madly in love with Gu Zhao, whereas in the entire story, unless I'm missing something, I have only ever known that Gu Zhao was Fan Siyuan's student - nothing more, nothing less.
CHARACTERS: 9/10
Silent Reading has a balanced, yet still very much appealing casts, from the major characters to the minor ones. Even the suspects and witnesses each had their own distinguishing features that didn't make them look like they were just there as canon fodders.
The composition of Luo Wenzhou's team itself is ideal; they've got the dependable leader, the smart advisor, the best friend and trustworthy right-hand man, the genius nerd, and the dependable aide.
I especially like Tao Ran (and I think most readers would agree with me). While he looks like the typical good guy type, he really, truly is a very good person. It's hard not to find him lovable. His relationship with Chang Ning was as cliche as it could get, but hey, as long as he's happy. Dude deserve it after everything he's done.
As for the two main leads, they are probably one of the most interesting couple I've found in the past few years.
Individually, Luo Wenzhou is the type of character I always like. He is confident to the point of having a narcissistic streak, but all of those are based on real talents and experiences. He speaks bluntly, but he cares for others through his action. He does not sugarcoat things and speaks the truth for what it is. Everything about him simply screams "reliable" as a leader (and a significant other to a certain someone). He deserves all of the respect and loyalty his subordinates gave to him.
Fei Du at first looks like a complex character whose real self is hidden beneath countless coats of pretense, but at the core, he is just a pitiful young man who does not know how to value himself, does not know how to love and be loved due to the abuse he suffered during childhood in the hands of his sadistic father. Despite his composure, his intelligence, his capability, he is almost like a lost little child, wandering in the darkness, going wherever the flow would take him until Luo Wenzhou pulled him out of that abyss. It is nothing less than commendable that he could restrain himself from succumbing into his father's manipulation, even if he has to correct himself through such extreme means for a long time.
And I'm glad that now he has someone who gives him the love he has long since been bereft of.
With Luo Wenzhou, Fei Du finally has a color in his life, someone to make happy memories with, and someone who genuinely love him for who he is. Likewise, with Fei Du, not only Luo Wenzhou got someone he could genuinely care for, he also finally has a place where he could relax, taking off the strong front he'd been putting before others all day long.
It was just so fulfilling to see two characters growing from "cat and dog" into inseparable lovers. They weren't sickeningly sweet, but just two people who are content with each other and would be each other's strength. I was especially happy when I saw how Fei Du changed his phone's ring tone into the one Luo Wenzhou in the extra chapter.
Now that I've finished reading this story, these two straight up went to the top of my all-time most favorite pairing list. But of course, this is just a personal opinion. Luo Wenzhou and Fei Du simply hits all of my favorite tropes, that's why. đ
If I really have to point out one mini flaw, I suppose it's that the main villains aren't as appealing as the rest of the casts. They were practically overshadowed, even by some minor characters that only appeared for a short while.
TECHNICAL ASPECTS: 9/10
Just some very minor complaints:
1). When the story first introduced Fei Du in the beginning, it felt kind of abrupt. The narration had only been addressing him with his physical appearance, but suddenly they changed it into "Fei Du" with barely any proper start.
2). The international conference in Yan City (Chapter 2) was supposed to be a background information of the general setting of the first case, yet it was not properly mentioned at the start - rather, one sort paragraph about said conference was simply being slipped in the middle just for the sake to be there.
3). The switching of scenes between characters in the 3rd person POV are sometimes too quick with no signs of incoming transitions beforehand like taking shortcuts.
And by that, I mean that other than those three issues above, everything else was nothing less than perfect.
OVERALL SCORE: 9/10
A realistic story with perfectly balanced action, mystery, suspense, and romance - with a dash of comedy sprinkled at the right time and place.
Reading the novel from start to finish was nothing less than enjoyable. Whenever there needed to be a flashback or explanation, it didn't feel like info dump being thrown in all of a sudden.
I would like to point out a bit about the Zhou Conglomerate Case in Book 3.
Personally speaking, I think this is the most realistic case out of the others, and by that, I don't mean the crazy rich family drama.
The other cases in the books are something that to me feels "faraway"; murders, child trafficking, psychopath, organized criminal gangs. Yet in Book 3, due to the nature of the case, it was posted publicly for all to see, and damn if it didn't bring out the most annoying thing I actually hate in real life.
Clout-chasing media, meddlesome netizens commenting without thinking on the Internet, spreading personal information of the involved individuals without consent, handing down judgment based on rumors and personal opinions even if they have nothing to do with it (and know nothing about it), crashing the website due to mere curiosity, further hindering the police working on the case from doing their job.
They weren't thinking about those actually involved in the case, especially the victim. They don't care, or maybe don't even think that their meddlesome acts could cost a human's life because they see everything as mere passing entertainment. And if something were to happen because of their meddling, the most they would say is, of course, as quoted from Chapter 72:
"I didn't do it on purpose"
"I wasn't doing it to you"
"I didn't expect this to be the outcome"
"From a certain point of view, I'm a victim, too"
Even if I was just reading a fiction, at that moment I truly wished I could shut down the Internet for a bit. đ
Anyway, amazing story. I might re-read everything from the start again when I have some free time.
76 notes
·
View notes
Text
Analyzing the writing of Eagles
Here's a post I've been wanting to make for a while! I've expressed my thoughts on some of the storylines in previous posts, but I've never done a complete post on the writing of the whole show. I've divided this post into separate parts, focusing on each season and its plot points. Keep reading to see my analysis of the writing in Eagles! đ Word Count: 18k
If you've stumbled upon this post from the Young Royals or the Beartown tag (tagged them since I've drawn some parallels from those shows), here's a brief summary of what Eagles is, which you can watch with English subtitles here. This post contains Eagles spoilers from 1x01 - 3x10.
Eagles is a Swedish TV show that revolves around a few teenagers living in the Swedish ice hockey town Oskarshamn while experiencing friendship, love, and rivalry on the ice.
To start this off I would like to say that I have no experience with professional screenwriting and if anything, this is just a way for me to procrastinate on actually writing my own projects.
I love experiencing new stories and when I discover one I really like it's just natural for me to branch off with "what ifs" and to start wondering how the story would've turned out if some things were changed. Sometimes it's with a storyline improvement in mind, and other times it's just out of plain curiosity.
You might feel like this post is leaning towards the critical side, and I can definitely understand why since there are a lot of small details that I've picked apart from all seasons. I added a section for each season with things that I thought were really well done so this post wouldn't be too negative.
I actually did enjoy all seasons and I feel like the quality of not just the writing but every single thing has steadily increased each year.
Season 1: Tropes and clichés
Eagles premiered its first season in 2019 and was, despite many negative reviews, a big success among its target audience. Every episode on SVT Play amassed around 700 000â800 000 views and there didn't seem to be any doubt that the show would get renewed.
What the critics had issues with were that "Eagles rarely takes the unexpected path, and feels like a slightly soulless product of studied target group thinking a little too often," (Karolina Fjellborg in Aftonbladet) and "In Eagles, the characters seem to be locked in the role of a "teenager" but the humanity is missing. They've simplified the construction of the character," (Django Lorentzson in MovieZine).
Eagles was unfortunate enough to constantly be compared to SKAM in its infancy, and that's a tough comparison to live up to. SVT sort of shot themselves in the foot as they were the ones who contributed to it. While the show was still in the casting process, SVT wrote an article hyping the show up as a Swedish SKAM (which has since been edited, but led many to falsely believe that it would involve all the familiar SKAM characters with some hockey elements sprinkled in).
So, why exactly did critics think the first three episodes of the show were predictable and soulless? Well, it's pretty simple. They'd seen it all before. The setting, the characters, the storylinesâjust in different TV shows and movies.
Season 1 for me is nostalgic and very enjoyable despite its clichĂ©d nature. I also felt like I'd seen the show before due to its generic storylines, but there is a reason why tropes are tropes and why clichĂ©s are clichĂ©s. It's because they're tried and true, and actually somewhat good writing tools as long as you expand on them. The keyword here is to expandâa story doesn't magically become good simply because you mimic something another writer has done. Tropes are fine to use but you can't just apply them and stop there. Everything in a story needs to be developed in order to be good.
It's safe to say that it's pretty much impossible to write a story without any tropes that have been used before. Striving to avoid clichés at all costs in hopes of making your story as original as possible is harder than it sounds, and almost impossible to boot. Here's a great piece of advice for aspiring writers written by a user on Carvezine:
[...] if you look down at your story and are worried itâs already been told before â donât spend another second thinking about it. It has. A million times. The only difference is that it hasnât been told by you. Accept that regurgitation is part of writing, and just do your best not to regurgitate the same way as the guy next to you. Weâd all do well to acknowledge there is at least a portion of our stories that are really someone elseâs. [...] Beyond that, write with the motivation that if you donât get around to telling your story, eventually somebody else will.
Even the greatest books have storylines with some clichés. And that's not really a bad thing, either. Think about it. How many times have you decided to binge a TV show solely because it reminded you of another series? Or picked up a book simply because you love a good enemies to lovers romance, a battle between good and evil fantasy, or whatever it might be?
I found this article from Masterclass that perfectly describes what tropes are and why they're used. It's written from the perspective of novel writing but it is still applicable.
A trope in literary terms is a plot device or character attribute that is used so commonly in the genre that itâs seen as commonplace or conventional. For example, a trope in superhero stories is a villain who wants to take over the world. Tropes are popular for a reasonâif something has been written about over and over again, thereâs a good chance that itâs something readers enjoy reading! Tropes can be helpful, but a novel made up only of tropes will quickly start to feel stale and predictable to readers. Thatâs why you need to read up on tropesâand then innovate. Deliberately taking a favorite trope and turning it on its head is a great way to put your own unique spin on the genre and keep your readers interested.
Eagles, in its first season, didn't really do a lot of expanding upon the tropes they used and it's understandable that they were still trying to find their footing. I can also imagine it's difficult to do so when you only have eight 20 minute episodes in the season.
However... There definitely should've been more work put into these characters to make them their own. It's tricky, yes, but still achievable if you don't abandon them in their cookie-cutter form and try to actually decorate them with something unique and fresh.
So, how did they write their characters?
Felicia's character and backstory
To start off, Felicia is a famous influencer known for starring in a reality show next to her former NHL professional father. There's already a clear disconnect because it's hard to relate to a character with such a public past and large following. But it is 100% possible if you let the viewer know the character has humane qualities just like the person watching the show.
Look at Wilhelm from Netflix's Young Royals, another Swedish TV show. Wilhelm is the prince of Sweden, set to attend a prestigious elite boarding school, and is the heir to the throne. That doesn't exactly sound like a relatable scenario, does it? And yet the writers make it work because when we're introduced to Wilhelm we realize he's just like everybody else. He wants a normal life, he latches on to his older brother for support, he has anxiety, and he struggles between following his heart versus doing what his family is expecting him to do. A lot of these factors are relatable among the audience.
So, let's look at Felicia Kroon. She is in many ways portrayed as the main character of the show. Eagles starts off with her family having moved to Oskarshamn and the following episodes focus on her developing relationship with Ludde as well as her traumatic past. There's almost too much focus on Felicia here, and I'll get back to that.
Comparing Felicia to Wilhelm from Young Royals, they're both well-known teenagers with famous parents. Of course they have different circumstances considering Felicia is Instagram popular and Wilhelm is a blood royal, but in the grand scheme of things they're similar. Felicia is even referred to as a "Kroon princess" because of her last name Kroon bearing a resemblance to the Swedish word kronprinsessa, meaning crown princess.
The students of their respective schools treat their attendance as a big deal when they first arrive and then Wilhelm and Felicia start spending time with the "popular" crowd despite not really fitting in there.
I personally found it easy to relate to Wilhelm but difficult to relate to Felicia. Some people may feel differently, but her character is basically a popular party girl who attracts the attention of one of the school's star players and is "welcomed" by the popular crowd on her first day of school. I put welcome in quotation marks because Klara, the leader of the girl group, isn't exactly the most welcoming person but she does welcome Felicia to the school. My point is, Felicia doesn't have a lot of relatable traits in the first episodes.
Felicia then goes on a date with the guy she's met, Ludde. Okay, so there haven't been that many layers to her character yet. We're at the third episode and so far she's been kind of flat.
Near the end of the third episode, we get some depth to the character and we hear her back story.
Felicia: [...] We donât have a good relationship, my dad and I. And thatâs probably why we moved from the beginning, because heâs an idiot. Weâve never been close, but⊠Elias and he have been since theyâve had hockey. [...] And mom has been really involved, so⊠And I⊠Theyâve never really cared about me. And⊠And I havenât really been a problem either. Iâve had good grades, good friends, and⊠I donât know why Iâm telling you this. I donât talk about it to people. [...] I just felt so fucking lonely and invisible. I was worried all the time, couldnât sleep, panicked because I couldnât sleep⊠So I started going out more. It went overboard. It started affecting school, my grades slipped⊠I started taking things to be able to concentrate. Everybody does stuff like that. And then I still couldnât sleep, so⊠I started mixing with sleeping pills. And thereâs always wine and booze at our place. I donât want this to come out, thatâs really important. Ludde: Of course, Iâd never tell. Felicia: One night, something happened that made me⊠Act out of control more than usual. I woke up the next morning in the hospital. So they sent me to rehab. It was really rough for mom and dad that I was suddenly in focus. When I woke up, dad wasnât even there. Ludde: What made you take too much that night? Felicia: Iâd forgotten my phone at home, so I ran up and got it while my friends were waiting in an Uber. Then I came into the hall and I heard noises. You know, like, when somebody is doing it. Ludde: Okay. Felicia: And I thought it was really weird because mom wasnât home. So I went into the living room⊠Dad was fucking my momâs best friend. On the rug below the couch.
This gives Felicia more layers and does separate her from every other "popular pretty party girl" trope that you see on TV. But this is a huge info dump, and that's a problem. I would've liked to see this happen on-screen instead of only being told what went down. The golden rule of Show don't tell, as people like to say.
Show, donât tell is a writing technique in which story and characters are related through sensory details and actions rather than exposition. It fosters a style of writing thatâs more immersive for the reader, allowing them to âbe in the roomâ with the characters. In his most commonly repeated quote, Chekhov said, âDonât tell me the moon is shining. Show me the glint of light on broken glass."
This back story could've been more impactful that way if, perhaps, the show began with Felicia in a hospital bed with a strong headache and hazy flashbacks of that night where she saw her dad sleeping with another woman. Then we're introduced to her mother and brother sitting next to the hospital bed tired and worried, and Felicia notices her dad isn't present. They tell her Felicia is being sent to rehab and then there's a time-jump before we see the Kroon family having moved to Oskarshamn.
That's just an idea I threw together at the top of my head, but you get my point. It would've been more interesting if we knew from the beginning that Felicia had a traumatic past like this, leading the viewer to want to know more about what actually happened.
We did get a brief flashback at the very beginning of the showâwe see Felicia partying with her friends and taking some pill before lying unconscious on the ground. There's also a glimpse of Ludde's car accident with Andreas yelling at him to get out of there.
That segment only lasts for around 45 seconds and it's easily forgettable upon your first viewing of the show. It's also hard to even recognize Felicia in the dark nightclub setting with the flashing lights. Some dialogue in that short scene could've made it more memorable, because I found that when I first watched season 1 I remembered Andreas yelling at Ludde despite that being drowned out by the music.
Ludde's backstory was way more well-done, in my opinion. We see him having crashed the car and bleeding from his head. He looks terrified and almost frozen by fear, needing to be pulled out of the car by a panicked Andreas yelling at him to bring Ludde back to the reality of the situation. We see Andreas yelling and pointing, telling Ludde he needs to run now. It's more powerful when we get to see it.
And in episode 8, when we learn the truth of what happened, it's not a long and dragged-out monologue. It fits into what's going on in the story. Felicia and Ludde have known each other for a few months now and are much closer than they were on their first date. They've had disagreements and fights, but at this moment they're in a good place.
And it feels like the right moment for Ludde to come clean about what happened to him.
Ludde: Hey⊠Thereâs something Iâve been meaning to tell you. Felicia: What? Ludde: About⊠My brother. Itâs not really as everybody thinks. Felicia: What do you mean? Ludde: That night when he crashed⊠It wasnât Andreas who drove the car. We were on our way home from one of his buddies. Weâd had some fun drinking. And then⊠Iâd just started learning how to drive. So I nagged and nagged at him. Felicia: So you were the one driving? But heâs an adult- Ludde: He was drunk as hell. He was going to leave the car, but I thought it was so cold and it was only three blocks away so I thought that I could drive. Felicia: And what happened? Ludde: It was slippery and really dark⊠And a car came. I hit the brakes in time, but it⊠Yeah. Right after he pushed me out of the car and yelled that I should run home straight away. He really didnât want me to get into trouble. So, yeah⊠It was fucking bad luck. I want to just gather everybody and scream that it was me. Felicia: Hey⊠I love you. Ludde: I love you too. I love you so fucking much.
As Ludde is telling Felicia what happened as the other car came, we see a silent flashback of it along with Ludde's voice narrating. We see Andreas pulling him out of the car and yelling. Cutting to this scene that we've already seen in the beginning but might've forgotten about is a smart choice and makes the story Ludde is telling more real. We see it unfolding as Ludde is telling this to Felicia. It's a powerful scene.
We then see Felicia hugging Ludde from behind, a sign of support with no words needed. She tells him she loves him and Ludde says it back. It's an honest and sweet moment that comes at a perfect time in the story. It's not too early like Felicia's backstory was.
I sort of understand why Felicia's backstory was info-dumped because it was right before the drama of Mats accidentally spilling the beans to Klara's family. They wanted the audience to know what happened to her early, so they could move on to the plot point of Felicia thinking Ludde was the one who told everybody.
But we don't need every single detail of Felicia's story. Let it come organically. The only thing that was really needed was for Ludde to know that Felicia had struggled with drug use and was sent to rehab for this storyline to work. The reason why could've been saved for later, and it would've made for a more interesting reveal. Maybe just have Felicia allude to seeing something that night, but don't tell the viewers right away what it was.
In 1x06, Felicia is incredibly upset when she hears that her dad was the one who told Klara's family what happened to Felicia in the US. And rightly so.
Felicia: Donât you get it? You ruined everything! Mats: What? Felicia: You told the whole damn town about me! About the US! Mats: I really didnât mean to disclose you- Or disclose us. Sorry. Hey, sorry. Flisan, please. Hey. Felicia: Did you tell them you fucked momâs best friend too? Yes, I saw you.
If this had been the moment where we first find out what Felicia saw, it would've been more surprising. Our reaction would've mirrored Mats's, and it would've been more heart-wrenching to know that Felicia was traumatized by an affair her dad had only to be cheated on herself in the very same episode.
Ludde's problematic nature
One of the scriptwriters of Eagles, Fanny Ekstrand, was interviewed in the behind-the-scenes documentary Edvins SkÄdisdrömmar. In this interview, she states:
Ludvig, he's the one who's been the easiest to retain the personality of. Because he's so... He's calm and friendly, but he makes dumb decisions. Ludvig isn't a typical hockey guy. He has a bunch of other qualitiesâmusic being one of them.
I found myself slightly disagreeing with this take, despite knowing Ekstrand is literally a part of the writing team and most likely helped shaped Ludde's personality. I just interpreted Ludde's character (at least in season 1) differently.
I also didn't find him that much different from any other typical hockey guy just because he happens to have another interest. That's a bit like saying Archie Andrews from The CW's Riverdale isn't a stereotypical jock because he also plays the guitar.
In season 1, we see Ludde break into the rink because he wanted to test out the ice. He just loves hockey that much. He also uses it as a way to express frustration and anger, which we saw in 1x05. He flirts with the new girl in school and in the beginning he even uses it as a tactic to gain a position on the main hockey team. This was confirmed by the creator Stefan H. Lindén in his Q&A, where he said:
My idea has always been that Ludde was blown away by Felicia and that he really likes her but that they both initially interacted and met to go swimming because Felicia knew it would piss her dad off and Ludde knew that it might throw Elias off since they were competing for the same position in the team.
I would say that the characteristics of a typical hockey guy would be someone like Adamâobsessed with the sport, flirting with girls, going to parties, and just spending a lot of time in the rink. Ludde checks off all of these points. However, I will give this the benefit of the doubt since season 2 Ludde seems to change a lot and it's easier to interpret him as the calm and friendly guy he was supposed to be in season 1.
So to me, Ludde wasn't calm and friendly at all. In season 2, yes, but when we're first introduced to him?
Ludde shows anger issues and violent tendencies in 1x05 when he head-butts Elias and breaks his nose. It's violent and messy. He then yells at Felicia to leave when she's trying to communicate with him and belittles her drug problems solely because she's rich. To me, Ludde wasn't a nice person in 1x04 either when he let his friends make suggestive comments about Felicia and what she was like in bed.
Omar: I can tell you one thing - youâre not borrowing my towel today cause I donât know where that dick has been. Adam: Itâs nice when she sucks, right? Omar: Canât you tell us some more, does she bite you or is it just really, really nice? [...] Adam: Is that what you sound like when youâre coming? What does she sound like?
This was described as "locker room talk" and the writers probably wanted to show an authentic view of what being a hockey player is like. I understand that. But it's a little problematic when it's later swept under the rug and treated like something that we're just supposed to accept.
Elias: [...] itâs not very fun to sit in a hockey locker room where people are talking about how nice it is to fuck my sister. Felicia: Ludde would never say anything like that, you know that. Elias: He wouldnât? Itâs a locker room, Felicia. Thatâs the only thing they talk about.
It did not sit right with me how Felicia seemed to be the one Elias blamed in this scene, and Ludde and his friends never faced any real consequences for what they said. Elias did lash out at Ludde, but there was no severe consequence for Omar and Adam's comments.
Compare this scenario to another Swedish show, Beartown on HBO. Beartown is similar to Eagles and focuses on a hockey team in a small town with one of the star players hooking up with a girl who's recently moved to their small town.
This girl is raped by the hockey player. And because of his status as the star of the team, he has almost the whole school behind him. The girl however is labeled as a lying slut. It's unfair and frustrating to see it happen, but it's authentic and done in a way that doesn't glamorize the ugly side of hockey culture.
Eagles is not as dark as Beartown so this comparison might be a little unfair. Beartown's whole storyline did revolve around this incident while in Eagles the hockey culture is treated more as a side thought. It's like they decided to throw in a taste of what goes on in a locker room just to create drama without really addressing it further.
Beartown did a much better job of portraying the problematic and toxic elements of hockey culture without making it seem like it's just something normal that we should accept. It was honest and raw. If you haven't seen the show, this short video does a great job of depicting how much thought was put into the toxic hockey culture, winning mentality, and subsequently hockey players thinking they're entitled to do whatever they want.
So, to respond to Ekstrand's quote from Edvins SkĂ„disdrömmarâI did not experience Ludde as a "good guy" who only makes dumb decisions at all. In season 1, he's a bad person for letting his friends sexualize a girl he likes and letting her brother hear their disgusting comments. He's a bad person for fighting with her brother and later yelling at her, saying her drug issues are insignificant despite acting supportive of her only two episodes earlier.
I don't mind conflicts like these because they drive the story forward. I didn't particularly like Ludde in season 1 because of the reasons I just stated, but they're necessary to create drama and make the show interesting.
It's just weird to me how one of the writers is saying that Ludde is a calm person and a good guy when that is not at all how I interpreted his character.
Eagles is a show targeted towards a young audience, among them probably a lot of easily influenced pre-teens. What kind of message does this send to them when the guy letting his friends sexualize a girl he's slept with and on top of that laughing at their inappropriate comments is referred to as the good guy?
Klara is mean... What else?
From the moment we're introduced to Klara, it seems obvious that she'll play a living and breathing version of the infamous Alpha Bitch trope. She's also a prime example of the basic Popular is Evil trope and has her own Girl Posse consisting of Sara and Amie.
Klara feels threatened by the arrival of a potential new popular girl, Felicia, and does everything in her power to bully Felicia to show dominance. She barely shows any good sides of herself.
The only instance I can think of where we sort of see season 1 Klara in a positive light is when she talks to Amie in 1x05 about their friendship and then accompanies Amie to her audition for the school band.
Klara: Ever since Felicia started at school⊠Itâs felt like you only hang out with her and that youâve forgotten about me. She like took you from me. Amie: But I havenât forgotten you. Klara: No, but do you get what I mean? Amie: I get it, but I havenât forgotten you. Klara: No, I know. Amie: I know, but it just turned out that way when school started. Klara: Okay. Amie: But Iâm sorry. Klara: Itâs fine. Amie: Are you sure? Klara: Yeah. You can make it up to me when you go on your world tour.
Klara is really supportive of Amie's musical endeavors, but she also uses her support as a way to alienate Felicia from the girl group. It's very on the nose and kind of feels suffocating in the way it's written.
Klara: Amie, did you remove the clips? Amie: Yeah, she said they werenât good. Klara: Sheâs just jealous. Itâs so obvious. I mean, Iâm jealous. You sing absolutely amazing. I donât know, I just think it was really rude of her to sit in the cafeteria and criticize you like that Amie: Yeah, maybe. But she apologized. Klara: But still. That clip of you in the bathroom⊠Like⊠Sorry, but Iâd be so mad if someone had posted something like that of me. I mean, you were standing there without makeup, completely non-fixed up. And the whole thing with her filming you without you knowing. Thatâs really weird. You donât do that. Donât you think so?
I'm sure there are plenty of people who act like this in real life. And maybe that's part of the problem, because Klara in season 1 really isn't an interesting character. We've met this person before and we know exactly what she's like. There's nothing new to discover. So season 1 is essentially just Klara being petty and rude every chance she gets, and to me it felt like a large part of her character was written just to stir up drama.
In 1x06, we see Klara backstab Amie by filming her making out with Ludde at her Halloween party. But I thought it was established in 1x05 that Klara feels like Amie was taken from her? And if Klara actually cared about Amie and didn't want to lose her as a friend, she wouldn't just stand by and watch with her phone recording the whole thing. It doesn't make a lot of sense.
Klara even made that whole point about how it was really weird of Felicia to film Amie without her knowing. So why would Klara do it, when she expressed that's weird and not something a normal person does? Is that supposed to be foreshadowing? Because if so, that's a clear contradiction and not how foreshadowing works.
When Sara happens to see the video on Klara's phone she immediately says that Klara should delete it.
Sara: What is that? Did they know you were filming? Klara: No, of course they didnât know. Sara: Oh my god, Klara. You should probably delete it. Klara: Iâm going to! But itâs crazy, right? Sara: Yeah, god. But seriously, delete it. Klara: Iâm going to.
So Klara says she's going to delete the video. But it's still unclear why it was filmed in the first place if Klara insists that she's going to delete it. It's not like she filmed it just to show it to Sara either, since Sara wasn't meant to see it and only saw it by chance while swiping through Klara's photos on her phone.
It doesn't make sense for Klara to film a video like that of her best friend that she's supposed to care about. It doesn't make sense for Klara to film a video of anybody without their knowledge when she previously made a big deal about how you shouldn't do that.
What Klara's character is, is a bad attempt at the classical mean girl. She's clichéd, boring, and full of tropes.
Even her eventual character development is riddled with tropes like the Heel Realization where a character realizes they're actually one of the bad guys. This realization seems to come in 1x08, where Felicia calls Klara out on her behavior.
Felicia: You know what, Klara. Iâm so fucking tired of your fucking comments. You didnât get to be Lucia this year. Poor you! Was dad unable to fix that? Cry then, Klara. Cry. Youâre so fucking mean. Everybody here is tired- Everybody here is scared of you. Even those who liked you once, they canât take it anymore. Klara: Thatâs not true. Itâs not true. Felicia: Yes, everybody is scared of you. You know what? Look around. Show people some fucking respect. Klara: Well say something, Amie! Amie: What is there to say? Sheâs right.
Klara needed a wake-up call like this. It's just unfortunate that she goes back to her mean girl behavior and posts the video after Amie insinuated that Klara wasn't a real friend. Klara already knew that Amie felt that way since she said Felicia was right in her assessment of everybody being scared and tired of Klara. So wouldn't it have made more sense for Klara to post the video right after that moment instead of during Amie's performance?
Or rather, why not pull a Subverted Trope and not have Klara post the video at all after she realized how horrible she'd been acting? That would've made me respect her so much more and be a great introduction to her character development in season 2.
The Halloween Incident
To me, the whole Halloween episode was questionable. First off, we never got actual confirmation of what happened in that room between Amie and Ludde. Some viewers insist that they only made out and others believe they went all the way. Here's what the creator of the show, Stefan H. Lindén, had to say about this in a Q&A post he did:
I think if you went into the writers room of Eagles and asked all of us what really happened in that room [between Ludde and Amie at Klara's Halloween party] we would all have different answers. I know what happened, but Iâm not sure we will ever truly know for sure, unless Ludvig or Amie eventually are open enough to admit to anyone what really happened.
This is kind of a vague answer, but that's fair considering that when Stefan did this Q&A the latest episode that had been released was 2x05 and he probably didn't want to spoil anything. However, looking back at this answer knowing how the season turned out I still feel like it's unclear what happened. It's also strange that Stefan seems to be saying that they never actually decided what happened between them since the writers "would all have different answers".
1x06 was just an odd episode for me overall. Lots of things felt rushed and underdeveloped. Let's not forget that this episode also contained, in my opinion, some of the weirdest lines in the whole show (along with Elias's strange monologue about plague vampires).
Ludde: Hey, I only have like 3%. Do you have any power? Adam: Are you wondering if I have a power bank in my shorts? Itâs coming-
Ludde: I like shellfish. (said to Amie, wearing a lobster costume)
Up until this episode, Ludde has shown zero interest and attraction towards Amie. We are basically told that Ludde only hooked up with Amie because he was so drunk that he practically had no idea what he was doing.
In 1x02, we see a drunk Amie try to kiss Tobbe and upon getting rejected she moves on to make out with Adam. She gets overly friendly when she's drunk so the fact that she makes out with Ludde later is... Weird, but not entirely out of the realms of possibility.
Ludde on the other hand is moping about Felicia all night. He regrets how he yelled at her at the end of 1x05 and it shows. He's trying to drown all his problems in alcohol and it seems to be working, because when it enters his system he seems to be on top of the world.
What I found kind of ambiguous in this incident was if Ludde even remembered what happened that night. He was drinking so much compared to Amie, who doesn't really need as much alcohol before she reaches her "overly friendly" state. I thought for sure that Ludde was oblivious to the situation when he woke up in his bed the next day and immediately messaged Felicia.
There are just so many questions to unpack here that were never answered. What prompted Amie and Ludde to go into that empty room? Why did Ludde come with her? Why didn't Adam seem to care about this, when he'd been sitting next to Ludde and taking care of him most of the night? And as I wrote before, why would Klara film this video of her best friend when she previously expressed that was a weird thing to do?
There's just too much in 1x06 left unanswered. The Amie/Ludde hook-up was a badly executed plot twist because there wasn't anything hinting that this would happen. It just came out of nowhere.
Unbalanced screentime and Elias's wasted potential
A large portion of season 1 was dedicated to Felicia. This was kind of a let-down for me since I thought more focus would be placed on Eagles as a hockey team (after all, that's what the show is named after). I also thought more attention would be on Elias since he's the talented star player who's supposed to live up to his father's legacy.
The show starts with a couple radio hosts hyping up how Elias Kroon, son of the legendary Mats Kroon, is going to join the Eagles hockey team.
Host #1: [...] Itâs finally official. New center in the junior team - Elias Kroon, son to the legendary NHL-pro Mats Kroon, who has now chosen to move home from the US to his hometown where Elias will play in his fatherâs old club Oskarshamn Eagles. Host #2: This is so freaking cool. Who doesnât want a Kroon on their team? Host #1: We hope that heâll take a spot on the A-team.
But we don't learn a lot about who Elias actually is in the first episode. The attention is on Felicia and her interest in Ludde.
Elias is so discarded that he barely has anything to say in the first couple of scenes we see him in. Here are all his eight lines in 1x01, and I'm not even joking.
Elias: Yes. Elias: Shut up. Elias: Ow. Elias: It's fine. Elias: Really? Elias: Fucking hell. Elias: I'll stay here. Elias: No, it's fine.
In 1x02 he has even fewer lines. Three, to be exact, and all he says is that his injury is a sprain and that it's fine. Essentially just an echo of two of the lines he had in the previous episode. It's nothing new.
There's a way to have a character stand out when they don't have many lines, but Elias just fades into the background with every other extra. There's too much time spent on having other characters talk about Elias than us actually getting to know him. So when we do meet him, it's pretty underwhelming.
Compare Elias to his sister who gets so much more attention from the writers. I don't really understand why either, since I thought Elias was a much more interesting character than his influencer sister. Felicia's character only seems to revolve around a guy. I wonder how many times we've seen that before?
In 1x02 we see the Eagles hockey team play their first game, but Elias is unable to play and has to sit in the stands for what was supposed to be his debut match. Why? Because during a hockey practice session in 1x01, Adam rams his stick into Elias to purposely injure him. I mean, fair enough. Adam is trying to get Ludde on the main team since he and Elias are competing for the same position. The shot of Adam smiling after Elias sprains his wrist is a bit too on the nose, but whatever.
What this does is minimize Elias' presence in season 1 by a lot. We don't see the son of the legendary NHL professional play an actual game until 1x05, which is more than halfway into the season. It's kind of disappointing but I understand the injury is done to dramatize his situation.
Elias barely gets his own storylines in the first few episodes. He just has things done to him instead of acting on his own. When we do see him on screen he gets injured by Adam, reprimanded by his father, and later told he can't play in his debut game.
His sweet side (or any side of him, really) isn't shown until 1x03 when Amie wakes up at the Kroon house and Elias reassures her that they didn't do anything together and that she can borrow Felicia's clothes.
Elias doesn't really do much for the plot until he hears Ludde's friends objectify Felicia and he starts a fight with Ludde and confronts Felicia about it. That's when it feels like Elias is actually a part of this show instead of just being an extra shoved into the background. His actions are finally affecting the plot.
Elias's potential in season 1 was hugely wasted. The only episode where we actually got to see him shine was 1x07, when he travels to Karlskrona with Amie. We find out he doesn't want the hockey arrangement his dad has planned for him and that he's actually a pretty goofy guy who likes making jokes (and eating green candy).
If less time was spent with Felicia and the distribution of every episode's 20 minutes was more balanced, season 1 could've been massively improved. It got much better in season 2, but season 1 suffered and made many people think that Felicia was a basic and unentertaining character.
The side characters and their comic relief
So one thing that I found really disappointing with Felicia's amount of screentime is that we barely got enough time for the other main characters, let alone the side characters.
What I mean here is that the only people we really know on the Eagles hockey team are Ludde and Elias. Ludde's friends, Adam and Omar, just feel like comic relief sidekicks. We don't really know what they're like, besides the fact that they like to make jokes and mess around.
This issue is largely created by the short running time the episodes have along with season 1 only having eight episodes in total. That's definitely understandable. It did get better in season 3 where we see Ludde having a deeper conversation with Adam and Omar and they finally don't just feel like the comic relief characters, but actual people with layers.
Ludde: Iâm going to quit hockey. Adam: Are you serious? Omar: What the hell are you saying? Ludde: Itâs not the same anymore. Iâm not passionate about it. I⊠Yes, it sucks, but⊠Iâve thought about it for a while now. Omar: We make jokes about it and all, but⊠Yeah. It wouldnât be the same without you. Kingelikingen. Adam: I get that itâs a tough choice. But yeah⊠Youâll work things out. You and Felicia. You always do. Ludde: You guys are pretty awesome sometimes, actually.
This scene was really sweet, and I wish we could've had moments like this between the guys in season 1. Just one scene to show that they're not just the "typical hockey guys". It feels like Ludde was the only person on the team in season 1 who wasn't just a background character. Even Elias, who you would assume should be at the forefront, isn't properly developed until 1x05 where we see him defending his sister and starting a fight with Ludde. Otherwise, it very much felt like Elias was kept in the background.
There are also guys on the team called Herman, Simon, NĂ€slund, EkbĂ€ck, Hoffmann, Berglund (even Montell, which was a fun nod to the show's director)... But who are they, actually? Do you even remember their names? To be honest with you, I don't. Because they're just namesânot actual characters.
None of the other guys on the team get any depth. They're just sort of there as extras and to give the audience a sense of comedy with their "hockey team shenanigans". This was illustrated in 1x08, where Adam and Omar make their teammate Liam do a "sexy dance" on a table because he lost his virginity. Or a more extreme exampleâJönsson, who only exists to be the comic relief and the unlucky guy who just can't catch a break.
In 2x04, Jönsson is told by Jack to do extra time in the gym and gets told off when he only spends a few minutes on the exercise bike. Later, Jack also makes a joke about how he should get Jönsson a defibrillator. In 2x09 Jönsson invites Ludde, Adam, and Omar to come to his mom's place to hang out. After he's left, Adam makes a comment about how there's no way he's going to "rot" in Jönsson's apartment that doesn't even have a balcony.
Don't get me wrong, these scenes aren't bad and I don't mean they should've been scrapped. Comedy can absolutely have its place in a show like this. Let's take the scene where Ludde flashes a couple of unfortunate old ladies on his first date with Felicia as an example. It feels like something a teenage boy would do to try to make a girl he likes laugh. It's a brief scene and it's nice to see Ludde being able to goof off only moments after talking about Andreas. We know that's a touchy subject for him.
However, it feels slightly overdone sometimes with how almost everybody on the hockey team is only there for comedic purposes and to fill space. It's more refreshing when they're shown to be multi-dimensional. I wish this is something that the writers would've considered when the show is literally titled after the hockey team, yet most of the hockey players are hardly in the story.
To add to this, it felt like Sara and Tobbe completely disappeared from the story in season 2. With Sara we understand that she probably didn't want to hang out with Klara anymore after knowing she filmed the Halloween video and posted it on Instagram, so that's fair. But it would've been nice to see Tobbe stick around in season 2, and I'll get back to why I think that.
The potential of season 1
When I look back on season 1 I feel really nostalgic. No matter how many small details that irked me, I can't deny that the setting of the show is beautiful and I really appreciate the depiction of it. Instead of showing Oskarshamn as a boring small town, we're shown the beauty of it which is incorporated into the storylines.
Some examples would be Ludde and Felicia's first date at Gunnarsö and walk through HavslÀtt, the gorgeous view of the Oskarshamn harbor from Klara's house Villa Högklint, and Badholmen where the school band performs and we later see Elias and Amie walking by in season 3. All these places are listed on the Eagles Oskarshamn site and I feel like they did a great job tying the storylines in with the locations.
Another aspect of season 1 and its writing that I really enjoyed was Elias and Amie's budding relationship. They just have a natural chemistry together and the dialogue between them also felt authentic and sweet.
Season 1 is just a very polished teen drama overall compared to some of SVT's previous series.
Back in 2007-2010, SVT used to air a soap opera-style show focusing on a few teenagers living in Gothenburg that was called Andra Avenyn (translation: Second Avenue). I was only seven at the time but I watched this show religiously as it aired three times a week. Just mentioning the show brings a lot of nostalgia.
Andra Avenyn amassed around 500 000 viewers per episode and was, just like Eagles, nominated for a Kristallen television award. But how good was it, really? If I take off my rose-colored glasses for a second and actually consider the show's highly dramatized storylines and unlikely scenarios, it had a tendency to drag on (which usually happens with soap operas). It didn't offer a realistic view of teenage life and on IMDb it currently sits at a rating score of 5.6 stars out of 10.
Comparing this old teen series to SVT's newer one, Eagles season 1 was a huge improvement and continues to be the most popular teen series that SVT has aired so far.
This idea and all the characters have lived in Stefan H. Lindéns mind since 2008, while Andra Avenyn was still on the air. It's actually amazing how high the quality of most TV shows has risen since then. Eagles has a rating score of 7.4 out of 10 stars on IMDb and has become internationally known in a way that Andra Avenyn never was.
Eagles season 1 laid the groundwork for SVT's most successful teen series of all time, and that's a huge achievement.
Season 2: "Subverting expectations"
When Eagles came back for season 2, the script made it kind of obvious that the writers had listened to the critique of season 1 being predictable.
I did find season 2 a huge step up from season 1âthe directing was so much better and when it came to the script we got a deeper look into all the characters that they hadn't really scratched the surface of in the first season. My main disappointment however was that it felt like they threw in a bunch of weird plot twists just for the sake of "subverting expectations".
The core idea of subverting expectations can be great if done correctly. You lead the audience to believe they know what's going to happen, but then you surprise them with an unexpected and clever twist.
A post in Cinematography written by Mason Leaver defines the phrase of "subverting expectations" as:
[...] a method of surprising the audience with some element of a story, be it the plot, themes, characters, etc. This goes beyond a âtwistâ in a film. Expectation subversion actively works within the genre of a story, and attempts to reinterpret or subvert the conventions of that genre, breaking patterns in surprising and interesting ways. However, this method of surprising the audience is not always well received- it can sometimes be the source of heavy criticism from fans of the tropes which have been subverted.
This included "unexpected" relationships such as Elias/Klara and Amie/Ludde. The former actually worked, but the latter? Not so much.
Amie's crush on Luddeâmake it make sense!
Amie and Ludde were my biggest issue with season 2, and it felt so out of character of Amie to be head over heels for Ludde. They work great as friends but romantically they're a huge mismatch.
But they have music in common, I hear you say. Yes, they do. But having a shared interest doesn't mean people are automatically a good match. You have to consider their chemistry and overall compatibility.
Before actors are cast in a show or movie where their characters will be romantically involved with each other, it's common to do what's called a chemistry read. Here's a neat description from an article in Backstage written by Caroline Liem:
Chemistry is the complex emotional or psychological interaction between two people. If this were a romantic article, it would be about love. Instead, we are discussing the astonishing rapport between two actors, and how that connection is achieved in order to book [...] the role. A chemistry read is an opportunity to read with actors being considered for a role opposite yours, usually lead roles. The main purpose is to see how you instinctively connect and work with the other actor.
This obviously wasn't done for the actors playing Amie and Ludde, since there didn't seem to be any intention of having their characters be involved in a romantic relationship.
That was even confirmed by Stefan H. Lindén in his Q&A of season 2, where he said that a love triangle between Ludde/Felicia/Amie was planned but later scrapped.
I can confirm that from the beginning of development of the series and the first version of the storyline a triangle drama was at some point intended for season 1 but later removed â however when creating the characters, Ludvigs skill in music and arts was always there from the beginning so by knowing that, we always knew that interactions would appear between them. When looking back at Season 1, in the first scene by the lockers when Amie tells Felicia who Ludvig is, she does know exactly who he is and she is well aware of that his friend Tobias is a music guy that Amie wants to get to know. Also when looking at it, when I was the same age as Ludvig and Amie I, and I am sure a lot of people can relate to it, fact is that we never really knew if it was love or friendship in the beginning.
Knowing that the triangle drama was scrapped for season 1, it makes sense why it seems so arbitrary. There was no groundwork laid down for this pairing before it was hastily thrown together in 1x06 for a cheap plot twist. This continues in season 2, where Amie and Ludde start spending more time together. Yet it's hard to see Ludde as a potential love interest for Amie in the way the writers want us to. They still come off as friends despite having hooked up at a party.
I mentioned that Tobbe should've stuck around for season 2 and here's why. Tobbe was written to be the leader of the school band that Amie later joins, and he was friends with Ludde before the video was posted. He would've been a perfect fit for the Amie/Ludde music storyline but he's completely absent. He had the potential to be the person who could've helped them with the song a little and then later picked up on whatever there was going on between them.
I think the Amie/Ludde storyline could've hugely benefitted from a scene between Amie and Tobbe, where Tobbe asks if she actually has feelings for Ludde and we get to hear exactly what Amie is feeling. Maybe she's torn, not wanting to get together with Ludde because of how much they hurt Felicia, but at the same time finds it hard to suppress her feelings. A scene like that would've allowed us to get into Amie's head and make the Amie/Ludde storyline much clearer.
To add, this storyline was in desperate need of more interest from Ludde's side. There needed to be some indication from him that would make Amie believe he liked him back, even if that wasn't the case. All we get is Ludde complimenting Amie's song and then a hug in 2x05 when Amie says the record label in Stockholm wanted a meeting. And apparently, that was enough for Amie to think Ludde was interested in her despite him blowing off the Stockholm meeting and Amie hearing Ludde say that the Halloween incident was a mistake.
Ludde and Amie don't really mesh as well as Elias/Amie do or even as well as Ludde/Felicia do. Elias and Amie had sparks flying from the very first scene they shared. That pairing is one of the main reasons why the show became popular internationally, and why is that? Because of the actors' chemistry.
Amie and Ludde are a clumsy attempt at throwing together two people who don't really work together with the intention of "subverting expectations". And I suppose that's what the writers wanted to depictâan awkward crush that doesn't really make sense, which I'm sure many people have experienced as a teenager. That part is fine. But what I didn't like about this storyline is that Amie had no good reason to believe Ludde would be interested in anything with her beyond a platonic friendship.
While season 2 was airing, I was convinced that Amie wasn't actually in love with Ludde. She was just lonely after the aftermath of the Halloween video and mistook her feelings for Ludde as love when she just appreciated his company. Here's what I wrote:
So as we know, Amie kissed Ludde in episode 6 when he was in the hospital after having been injured during the hockey game against Karlskrona. She immediately seemed to regret having done that and ran out without an explanation, leaving Ludde alone and confused. I honestly donât think Amie has any romantic feelings towards Ludde. I think she might mistake her feelings for a crush or something, when in reality sheâs just lonely and appreciates Ludde always being there for her and giving her compliments on her musical ability. Ludde was complimenting Amie at the hospital, saying she was amazing, and I think Amie was just really touched by that and maybe wanted to thank him somehow, and ended up kissing him. And then she freaked out and left because oh my god did she really just kiss Ludde. It was an uncomfortable and awkward situation and thatâs probably why she ran out. However, I really believe that if she had just stayed to explain and apologize, Ludde would understand and they couldâve just laughed it off. But this is a drama show so of course that wouldnât happen! Do I think the writers are making them into a couple? No, definitely not. They know that season 1 was sort of predictable and clichĂ©, so theyâre making season 2 as different as possible by including these unexpected pairings such as Klara & Elias and Amie & Ludde. But Amie and Ludde wonât ever be a couple, because Ludde is still very much hung up on Felicia. I donât see them as a couple either - yes, they have music in common, but they work way better as friends than in a relationship.
In Edvins SkĂ„disdrömmar, which is a behind-the-scenes documentary of Eagles season 2, writers Fanny Ekstrand and Michaela Hamilton discuss the writing of the show in the documentary's third episode. The third episode is mostly focused on the lead-up to the scene where Amie kisses Ludde at the hospital. Adrian Ăjvindsson, who plays Ludde, says:
Filming the kissing scene was [...] awkward and weird, actually. And that's how it ended up. Yandeh and I haven't really had any intimate scenes. In this case you could take in that it was weird, because that's also what the scene wanted to depict.
When Edvin reads the script, he describes the scene as a "nightmare" scenario. I agree. And the lazy build-up to this Awkward Kiss trope doesn't make it any better, because just like the Halloween incident this doesn't make a lot of sense.
It's supposed to be awkward and weird, just like Adrian said. But he also mentioned one of the most important details: Yandeh and I haven't really had any intimate scenes.
Before this kiss scene, there was nothing that indicated any chemistry between them. No accidental hand-touching, no longing stares, no nothing. Just a friendly hug. A proper build-up to the kiss scene would've made it feel less out of place.
The love confession from Amie to Ludde in 2x10 really threw me off as well. The confession to me made no sense and honestly felt like a prank call. There was no feeling behind it and zero reason for Amie to believe that there was a chance Ludde liked her back.
At the end of 2x08, Felicia goes to Ludde's house after he's confessed the truth to the police about the Andreas situation. Amie happens to overhear the conversation and she hears Ludde very clearly say that he's not interested in Amie.
Ludde: Felicia, thereâs nothing between us. Between me and Amie. It was really the biggest mistake of my life. Felicia: Goodbye, Ludde. Ludde: Felicia, please!
Amie, now having her heart broken, crosses Ludde's name off the contract while crying. She knows he doesn't feel the same. So why would Amie even bother to call Ludde up to tell him she's "in love with him"?
Amie: [...] Hey, Ludde⊠Ludde: Yeah? Amie: It feels really weird to hear our song now. Because I know who the lyrics are about. And⊠And I⊠I really like you. Or, well⊠Iâm in love with you. I just need to know how you feel. Or if you feel anything. Just tell me. Ludde: Iâll always want to be your friend, Amie, but⊠Itâs Felicia Iâm in love with.
This moment is on par with the awkwardness from the hospital kiss between them in 2x06. The second-hand embarrassment with this one was really rough, and what I don't understand is why this was even added to the script when Amie had already gotten the confirmation that Ludde didn't think of her in a romantic way. This storyline could've ended in 2x08 after Amie overheard the conversation between Ludde and Felicia.
It really didn't need to drag on for the whole season, essentially making Amie's whole storyline in season 2 about a guy. Her moment of finally getting signed to the record label was ruined when it could've been regarded as a fresh start if the storyline had just ended where it should have.
What this storyline did instead was ruining my favorite friendship of season 1, which was Amie/Felicia. This mess made it so hard for them to reconcile and they didn't end up properly addressing it until 3x09, spending almost two whole seasons mad at each other. It sucks that the writers decided to drag out their fighting and disagreements for this long when they could've instead shown two girls in solidarity who don't let a guy get between them and their friendship.
Amie apologized in 3x03 for how she hurt Felicia, but Felicia made it clear in 3x06 that she still harbored ill will towards Amie for what happened at Halloween (which in the timeline of this show was more than a year ago).
Felicia (to Amie): Are you going to start slobbering with [Elias] now too? Just give me back that sweater first, I donât want slobber on that. Thanks.
I talked about how much I disliked the Amie/Ludde storyline in this post, with my main reason being that it really messed up the character dynamics that were established in season 1.
This storyline [of Ludde and Amie hooking up]âalong with Amie falling in love with Luddeâis by far my least favorite one because it messed up the whole character dynamic. I feel like Amie and Felicia wonât ever go back to the kind of friendship they had in season 1 before the Halloween incident because the trust was so broken, and Amie really shouldâve tried harder to apologize to Felicia like Ludde did instead of going after her best friendâs ex in season 2.
If there's just one thing I could change about this show, I would 100% get rid of the Amie/Ludde storylines. There is nothing that annoyed me as much as those storylines did.
Amie's musical ambitions
I've talked about this a bit before in another post because this was something that really bugged me about Amie's character in season 2. Here's what I wrote:
I honestly still feel like Amieâs whole storyline with sending in a rather basic demo written by two teenagers with little to no experience and then getting praised on it [by the Stockholm music producers] with comments such as âitâs going to be a real summer hitâ felt so unrealistic to me. Maybe they only said that so Amie would accept their offer or something, but thatâs still very strange because she would have still said yes without a doubt. I can understand that they thought Amie was marketable as a person and there was this bonus with her having gone viral before on Feliciaâs Instagram, but that demo did not seem good enough for me to be immediately released as a single and then have them decide on the spot that Amie would be given a contract. I mean, come on. It never felt earned because we never really saw Amie struggling with her songwriting journey to achieve this dream. Sending in one demo to one record label and having them immediately want to make a whole album with you just doesnât happen in real life unless the song is extremely good or you have a very unique voice. Amie is really talented but there are hundreds of people just like her, if not thousands. I was never convinced by her getting signed so quickly in season 2. I understand that they wanted to establish her as a successful artist [at the beginning of season 3], but that felt so rushed. I was so sure that the record label would screw her over and steal the song rights to record it with another artist who was already established, and that weâd have to see Amie work even harder to achieve her dreams. But we didnât get that at all. Where was the struggle? [...] Of course I wanted to see Amie achieve success (and I was happy when she did), but the journey there was so bizarrely easy. She didnât start to seriously work on making her music career become a reality until season 2. Amie had dabbled in music prior to that, like when she auditioned for the school band and did that performance of Follow, but she didnât truly start to work towards it until season 2 when she decided to have her work sent to professionals in the business. And then, just five episodes later, she gets contacted by the record label in Stockholm. To put this into contextâseason 2 took place somewhere around March, and episode 5 around three weeks into April. So when Ludde first started helping Amie it took less than two months for her to get signed. You could argue that the song was just that good or that Amie is just that talented, but it never felt like a realistic storyline to me.
It's tricky to write a storyline like this when you only have ten 20 minute episodes in the season and a limited amount of screentime for every character. All that is understandable. But it's strange that they didn't opt for a time jump to really sell this storyline and make it believable.
Eagles uses time jumps a lot, but somehow this particular plot point was omitted from that and kind of glossed over. I don't really understand how they expected us to buy this storyline. The viewers aren't stupid, and more effort should've been put into this storyline.
In the post where I wrote this, @gajana18 also had an interesting thing to add:
[...] it's equally unrealistic that this huge record company would be hounding Amie, a teenage onehit wonder essentially to come back to the label- donât they have other bigger artists?
This is a very strong point. Considering how Amie kept expressing that she wanted to finish school and then proceeded to ignore their calls, it's weird that they didn't just decide to discard her contract when Amie clearly wasn't taking her singing career as seriously as they wanted her to.
So, back to season 2. Maybe they could've gone with the record label stealing the rights to Amie's first song and screwing her over. This fuels her to try again and after a time jump of a few months we see Amie having worked really hard on a new and better song. Maybe even a whole album. And this time, she's learned from her past mistakes and improved her songwriting. This time, she's successful in her endeavor and it feels so much more earned after knowing the struggles she's been through to get there.
I also feel like a storyline like that would've made people sympathize with Amie more in season 2. It was really hard to root for her when she had nearly screwed Ludde over by not giving credit to his songwriting and saying "fuck him" when he didn't return Amie's feelings.
Klara's character development
When we're introduced to Klara in season 1, she's a stereotypical mean girl with wealthy parents who is the popular girl at school and has her own followers.
In season 2, the writers decided to develop the character. We find out Klara has issues at home and her mom is barely there. When she is, her parents will start fighting. Klara is feeling really lonely and doesn't really hang out with her friend Sara as much as she used to.
I appreciated the added depth, but it seemed like a drastic shift. The changed perspective could attribute to that but when you step back and really look at s1 Klara and s2 Klara, they're like two completely different people.
Maybe Klara's reputation suffered after she posted the Halloween video? Maybe she had a change of heart after Felicia finally confronted her during Lucia? I mean, I guess.
But what most fans (including me) didn't like about Klara in season 2 was that there were no clear consequences for her after she posted the Halloween video. Klara still hangs out with what seems to be the popular crowd and she has people to go out with. In a post I wrote last year about my thoughts on season 2, I wrote this:
I actually wish that Klara wouldâve become more ostracized from her school friends to emphasize how alone she is, but she seems to still be pretty popular so that was kind of disappointing. I thought the fall-out of her posting the video would be worse, but I guess not. Anyway, I like that theyâre taking a disliked character and making her into a better person. Feels like itâs been done a few times before, but I still appreciate them doing it. I hated s1 Klara for being so one-dimensional, but s2 Klara is well on her way to being a pretty good and nuanced character.
Her character development sort of comes a little out of nowhere, though. Her reputation wasn't ruined by posting that video and she didn't really lose any friends besides Sara (she had already lost Amie prior to posting that video considering what Amie said to her after Lucia in 1x08).
So what prompted Klara to become this whole new person who actually considers other people's feelings in a relatively short amount of time? Here's a conversation between Felicia and Klara in 2x07.
Felicia: Was there anything in particular you wanted to talk about? I understand that weâre not best friends just because you and Elias are together. Weâre not here without a reason, right? Klara: No, I get that this feels weird for you. And if you donât trust me after everything thatâs happened - or that Iâve done. Felicia: Klara⊠Klara: I know that I havenât acted like the worldâs best person. And I regret that. Sorry.
But why does Klara regret her past behavior? What made her realize she hadn't acted like the "world's best person" if the ramifications from posting the Halloween video were so minimal?
Was it the relationship with Elias that made Klara change? No, I don't think so. When they first start talking at the bar in 2x03, Elias tells Klara that he doesn't always agree with Felicia and that he has his own viewpoints. In 2x07, he says Klara wasn't the one who messed up, but rather Amie and Ludde. And in 2x09, the script tells us that the Elias/Klara relationship seemed to bring more change to Elias rather than Klara.
Felicia: What did you do to him? Klara: What? Felicia: Heâs smiling. Elias is like a whole new person since he met you. Klara: Stop. Felicia: I mean it!
So what made Klara change? In 1x08 she's mocking Felicia's drug problems and posts a video that will for sure ruin Amie's reputation. But at the start of season 2, she's suddenly become more withdrawn and considerate of people's feelings.
I can only name one factor that actually makes sense, and that's the fighting between her parents. Klara seems to turn into this quiet child when she has to listen to her mom and dad yelling at each other. This is something that didn't really begin until season 2, when Ola's company GECED started going under. This storyline was very well done.
But the other things, like Klara's reputation and friend group which you would assume would be affected, remain as they were in season 1.
Jack's sudden character change
Jack came into season 2 as a charming and charismatic character, seemingly fooling everybody into thinking he was a good guy. He knew the Kroon family from before and both Felicia and Elias were none the wiser when it came to the eventual reveal of his true colors.
Here's what Stefan H. Lindén had to say about the Jack character in his season 2 Q&A:
Bringing Jack in was actually originally not my idea, it came from my writer colleagues after that they revised my storyline notes for Season 2, while I was still down in Oskarshamn shooting Season 1. We had always intended for a character to come in and raise the stakes but I never imagined it to be Jack. When we started to develop the character, we all started liking him so he was kept in the story. Like with any new character we never really know who they are and what [the] point of them for coming in is [...]
Personally, I feel like the point of Jack's character is pretty obvious. When he first comes to Oskarshamn he is very much the embodiment of the new love interest coming in to date the girl who has broken up with her previous lover, while the previous lover still loves her and does anything he can to get her back although she's dating someone new. Jack is the Romantic False Lead trope who later becomes an alpha-dog Jerkass.
What I found interesting about Jack compared to Klara (in season 1) is that Jack isn't just a bad guy. He's very clever with his manipulation tactics and can easily charm people with his good looks and charisma.
When Felicia accuses Jack of cheating in 2x07, he manages to spin the whole thing around and make Felicia apologize to him and say it was stupid of her to believe he would cheat on her. I talked about this in a post while the season still aired, before Jack's true colors were revealed. Here's what I wrote:
I still donât know if Jack really is cheating on Felicia with Olivia (the girl that texted him) but I would say he is. Jack is incredibly confident and charming, which makes him able to easily lie and manipulate people. We know heâs not an entirely good person since heâs already lied to Elias about not knowing that Mats would bring him back to Eagles. I wouldnât be surprised if he really did hook up with Olivia and ended up being a really good liar. The fact is that not only did he deny it but he then shamed Felicia for blaming him and causing a scene, ultimately shifting the focus in the argument to her and making Felicia feel bad that she even confronted him in the first place. Jack says that maybe they shouldnât even be together, which causes Felicia to backtrack and apologize. Itâs actually pretty impressive how Jack was able to spin that around to blame Felicia and make her apologize.
Jack is able to take a small detail and use it as ammunition to get what he wants. In this situation, he brings up the girl in the Stockholm club that Felicia partied with and also kissed.
Jack: You shouldnât accuse me, either. Felicia: What? Jack: I saw on Instagram, you and some girl in Stockholm. Have I whined about that? Coming here and blaming me for things, it feels really immature. Felicia: Fuck. Sorry, Jack.
Jack wasn't bothered by that at all. It happened before Felicia and Jack were even an official couple, and all they had done was hooking up at a party while Felicia was high. Jack, having cheated on Felicia, couldn't care less about the random girl Felicia kissed. That was just something he used to manipulate her.
When we discover that Jack is actually cheating on Felicia, he immediately reverts to a one-dimensional "evil" character. He's become the 2.0 version of Klara in season 1âwritten in just to stir up drama.
This "master manipulator" version of him just goes down the drain and Jack turns into a manchild who starts petty fights, files a police report because Ludde pushed him, and says to Felicia "I'm gonna tell on you!". Alright, maybe those weren't his exact words, but you know what I mean. It's a sudden shift and you start wondering how Jack was able to hide this version of himself so well before.
In 3x05, Jack sees Ludde and Andreas after a hockey game and fumbles trying to find any insult he can to hurl at Ludde. Everything he says from that point on is just line after line to really solidify that Jack is the bad guy. You didn't forget that, right? Here, let's have Jack call Felicia a druggie so you know just how shitty he is. And have him call Andreas a junkie later for good measureâthere, that should be enough for people to understand that Jack is the villain here.
Jack: Johansson! Ludde: What the hell are you doing here? Jack: What does it look like? Ludde: I guess itâs you I should thank for the victory. Nice work. Jack: What is Felicia doing these days, then? Does she miss me? Ludde: Hey, youâre shutting up now, do you get it?! Jack: Jesus Christ. Do you think you can save her? What do you think she even sees in you? You two play in different leagues, Ludde. Ludde: You have no idea what weâre like. Jack: Come on! You should leave her. While you can. Sheâll just pull you down into the dirt with her. Youâre no hero, Ludde. Isnât she still doing drugs? Once a druggie, always a druggie, right?
Jack is a horrible person, but at least he was able to pretend to be a good guy in season 2. And that was actually really fascinating. I wish we could've seen more of Jack's manipulative side that he showed in season 2 instead of making everything coming out of his mouth be a half-assed attempt at insulting the other person. That's a pretty boring villain, in my opinion.
Jack's backstory of his father being an alcoholic and him starting to resent the whole Kroon family because they had everything growing up while he didn't is interesting. It would've also made more sense if his anger was only directed towards the Kroon family since they're the ones he grew up with. They're the ones he was after the whole time.
His anger towards them feels cheapened when Jack also starts insulting Andreas (who he's probably never met before) for no good reason. It's like Jack's human qualities are just gone and all that's left is this empty shell made to start fights. His backstory didn't really make anybody sympathize with him, either.
The improvements of season 2
What I liked about the writing in season 2 was that they explored new ideas and had some solid storylines (besides the mess that was Amie and Ludde). Elias and Klara actually worked pretty well as a couple, even if they were pretty much the 2.0 version of Felicia/Ludde as the "wealthy, popular pretty girl starts dating the star player on the sports team".
Felicia finally gets some more depth. The scene at the end of 2x02, where Felicia and Leila park their car near the harbor and just start crying, is so powerful.
2x05 is also one of my favorite episodes of the show, as well as the ending montage of the 2x10 season finale. In Gameday, we had a very touching scene between Felicia and Mats where they finally communicate. It's not the most understanding conversation but it's a start. It's an interesting contrast between their talk in 1x06 where Felicia revealed she saw Mats cheating on Leila versus the talk they're having now.
Another one of my favorite scenes is when Felicia and Ludde meet up at their bench in 2x10 after Ludde has called her up asking Felicia to come if there's any chance of them getting back together.
The dialogue is simple and to the point. There's no long-winded love confession for the sake of drama. It's a moment that the whole season has been building up for, and when we finally get there we realize that this is how love should be.
Easy and simple.
Ludde: You came back. Felicia: Yeah, I did. Ludde: Do you remember our first date here? Felicia: No. Iâve forgotten. Ludde: I was so freaking nervous. Felicia: Everything you said⊠Did you mean it? Because you hurt me, Ludvig. And I⊠Iâve really tried to hurt you back, but⊠Itâs not possible. I canât⊠Not love you. Do you think⊠Do you think it can be us again? Ludde: What do you think? Felicia: I donât want anything else.
Ludde admitting how nervous he was on their first date is sweet and shows us how much they've been through. Felicia is struggling to find the words to say and she's acknowledging how hurt she was, but still can't seem to find it in her heart to hate Ludde. It's honest.
Another plotline that I think was a little underrated in season 2 is the GECED company going bankrupt and Ola, Klara's dad, is under investigation for financial crime. This isn't a storyline you would usually see in a teen series. It's much more serious. It also gave us a really touching and poignant scene in 2x08 between Ola and Klara sitting on the floor of his office, where Klara has to comfort her father who starts crying.
Ola: When you were little you used to sit like this. On the floor, while I was working. You had your own room, but you wanted to sit with me. âHelp daddy workâ. Momâs doing the right thing by leaving for a while, donât blame her for that. Klara: What, you canât just leave because things get a little tough. Ola: Maybe you should get away for a while too. You know, I never wanted you two to⊠That you⊠Everythingâs gone. Klara: It will be fine. It will be fine. Ola: Sorry. Iâm sorry.
In 2x09, Klara is at a party when she notices a bunch of missed calls from her dad. She immediately senses something is wrong and rushes home to find her dad having attempted suicide. It's executed very well and I really liked the more serious tone they went for in season 2.
It set up season 3 perfectly, which continued with the darker themes but balanced them very well with the more light-hearted moments.
Season 3: Finding one's footing
Season 3 was a highly anticipated season. I thought the season 2 finale was masterfully done and it left me wanting more. When season 1 finished on its cliffhanger of the video leaking, the focus only seemed to be on that.
But with season 2 there's Felicia/Ludde getting back together and Ludde having been sued by Jack, Jack threatening that he would leak all of the Kroon's family secrets, Klara's dad passing away, Elias deciding to get on the train and go to the draft combine anyway, Amie having finally become a recording artist but being isolated and heartbroken... There's so much to unpack, and it's a lot more interesting than the ending of season 1.
Where's Jack?
Jack is supposed to be the main villain but he's gone for most of the season, failing to show up until 3x05. In the season 2 finale Jack makes a huge deal about how he's going to destroy Felicia's life. He's threatening her in a very violent and abusive way.
Jack: [...] I know a lot about you, Felicia. And your nice family. Itâs enough for me to leak to one news site. I can destroy you. Do you get it? Iâll tell them everything. The drugs, the cheating, your abortion! Felicia: Shut up! Jack: Hey. Huh? Did you seriously think I wanted to be with you? The little Kroon princess, who has gotten everything for free her whole fucking life! You and Elias! Like spoiled brats! You donât understand what it means to fight for something!
In 2x10, Jack decides to report Ludde for assault but he doesn't follow through on destroying this family that he hates. If there's anything Jack seems to despise above all, it should be the Kroon family, right? So why did he fight back with Ludde but not the Kroon family?
I expected Jack to leak all the Kroon secrets at the beginning of season 3, but Felicia seems strangely calm at the funeral which I'm assuming only takes place two weeks or so after Ola's passing in the season 2 finale.
Then, a whole year passes with no indication that Jack is ever going to leak anything. As season 3 was airing, I commented on how strange this felt in an ask I received:
One of my main questions about the time jump is the whole thing with Jack saying he was going to ruin Feliciaâs and the Kroon familyâs reputation in the press. It seemed like nothing really came of that? Iâm pretty sure that detail hasnât been abandoned entirely and that Jack will come back (weâve already seen a glimpse of him in the third episode), but it feels strange that Jack threatened to leak all her secrets and then just never did. I got the impression that Jack was a person who, when having his pride wounded, would do pretty much anything to get back at the person who insulted him. And yet thereâs no mention of where Jack has been during that time or what heâs been doing. I feel like I would be pretty paranoid about this if I was Felicia, but we donât see this haunting her until episode 3 when she sees a flash of Jack before realizing it was just some random guy. It seems strange that Felicia was relatively at ease during the funeral (which I assume took place not long after Jack first threatened her) and after the time jump. We donât really know whatâs been going on during that year, but Felicia seems to be fine and like she hasnât had any thoughts of Jack at all. Maybe she assumed that his threats were empty and that he wouldnât actually leak anything to the press, which is reasonable but at the same time I donât understand why Jack has yet to do anything after a year. He was really pissed off in the season 2 finale, after all.
Going to repeat one of the things I wrote here because it deserves to be mentioned twice, and this point is one of my biggest issues.
I got the impression that Jack was a person who, when having his pride wounded, would do pretty much anything to get back at the person who insulted him.
I feel like this was kind of a plot hole that wasn't explained. Jack is ruthless and doesn't hold back at all when his true colors come out. He has no problem talking about the sexual relationship he had with Felicia in front of her father. Jack is just that horrible.
So what prevented him from ruining the Kroon family's lives earlier, when it seems to be the thing he's wanted for years?
Michael's predictable predicament
Michael first appears at the end of 3x04, where he calls Amie up to tell her he's her father.
Man: Hey! Sorry for calling so late. Is it Amie? Amie CondĂ©? Amie: Yeah. Man: I saw you on TV the other day. Iâm Michael CondĂ©. Iâm your father.
In the next episode, we get a voice-over of the continued conversation between him and Amie.
Michael: [...] I understand if itâs shocking. Iâm in Oskarshamn for work for a few weeks andâ Could we meet up someday?
So, it's clear what the writers are going for here. It's the estranged father who returns into the child's life when they've become successful. We're made to believe it's a Daddy Had a Good Reason for Abandoning You trope when Michael meets up with Amie and tells her why he left.
Michael: So Petra, sheâ Has she said anything about me? Amie: Well⊠That you moved from Sweden before I was born⊠That youâre working as a lawyer. That you didnât want to see me. Michael: I was⊠I was young when we met. Your mom and I. And everything went really fast. I was in love, but she had feelings for somebody else. And when she found out that sheâ That she was expecting you, then⊠She didnât want me there. She said I wasnât father material. To some degree she mightâve been right, but⊠I wasnât much older than you are now. I had just gotten into a law school in Berlin. When I finally came back to Sweden, then⊠She didnât let me see you. I had already lost you by then, but I want you to know that Iâ Iâve thought of you. And about a week ago, I⊠Iâm seeing you. On TV. There you are. With my last name. Iâm so proud.
However, it's pretty easy to identify the holes in Michael's story. To be honest this whole storyline was predictable from the very start. Before Michael even came into the story, I made this post which pretty much summed up Michael's whole character when we didn't even know he existed yet (this was when 3x03 was the latest episode that had aired).
I donât think weâve heard any mention of Amieâs dad in the whole series except for 3x02 when Amie was being interviewed and was asked about the CondĂ© name where she said that while Samuelsson was from her motherâs side, and CondĂ© was from âthe other sideâ. I found her word choice a little interesting. I donât think Amieâs dad has passedâbut rather that heâs alive and just chosen to not be a part of her life, which is why Petra seemed to be a little offended when asking Amie why she didnât want her last name anymore. This might also be why Amie said âthe other sideâ rather than âmy dadâs sideâ because they have an estranged relationship. [...] Iâm not really sure if theyâll do anything with Amieâs dad (maybe theyâll go for that trope where the parent who previously abandoned their child returns after the child has accomplished something big/something major happened and the parent wants something from them for personal gain?).
When we actually get to meet Michael and hear his explanation of why he left, I wrote this post pointing out some of the holes in this storyline.
Michael meeting Amie only after sheâs become famous is a little suspicious, but itâs understandable if he previously thought she didnât want to meet him and then sees her with his last name on national television. Obviously he would contact her after that. I feel like there were some question marks with Michaelâs whole story though, and the fact that his work just conveniently happened to send him to Oskarshamn after heâd just seen Amie on TV. Maybe Iâm missing something here, but how did he know Amie had gone back to Oskarshamn if he saw her living as a pop star in Stockholm? Was this information about Amie quitting the tour and going back to her hometown even online? If Elias (who actually witnessed Amie saying she was done and quitting) seemed taken aback when he saw Amie in Oskarshamn, then how did Michael know?
I do think Michael will return for season 4 though, so hopefully this storyline will be straightened out a little. We don't really know what Michael has been up for the past few years and if he has a family of his own. Maybe he'll contact Amie again to tell her she has some younger half-siblings?
They ended on sour terms, but if Michael does have his own family it's something Amie deserves to know and she can decide whatever she wants to do. I'd also like to see a Michael/Petra reunion, but I'm getting a little ahead of myself.
This storyline wasn't bad, and I do appreciate we got to find out what the situation with Amie's dad was. I also liked how I was able to sympathize with Michael. He's not entirely awful, even if he did put a lot of blame on Petra. It's one of those situations where you don't really know what it's like to be in Michael's position unless you've experienced it, and it's very realistic.
Plot holes
Some of the plot holes of season 3 that I've already mentioned are how Jack waited a whole year before leaking the Kroon family's secrets and how Michael conveniently knew Amie was in Oskarshamn when nobody seemed to know she was coming except her mom.
I actually don't mind that it was never explained how Michael got Amie's phone number either, because that's usually pretty easy to find with a Google search. Things like addresses, economic status, and even your criminal history are easily accessible in Sweden when googling someone's name. So finding someone's phone number is probably fairly easy as well.
On the other hand, one of the most glaring plot holes appeared in 3x08. In this episode entitled Lost, the Kroon family is frantically searching for Felicia who has gone missing. Leila and Elias knock on Petra's door to see if Amie is there and might know something about Felicia's whereabouts. Petra tells them Amie isn't there and they leave.
Someone left me an anonymous ask which I answered in this post, pointing out how it was strange that Elias didn't just call Amie to ask her when she wasn't at home. We know Elias has her number because they've been talking on the phone and texting each other several times before in the season.
In 3x08, when Elias and his mom go to Amie's house and ask Petra if Amie has seen or spoken to Felicia or whether she's home, I couldn't help but wonder, uh Elias why not just call Amie and ask her if she has seen or spoken to Felicia? [...] if Elias had called her and she heard how frightened him and his family were and police being involved she would have told him and then there would be no point in the 3x09 episode really.
This is a very strong point. You could argue that maybe Elias just didn't think of that but if they went out of their way to visit Amie's house only to not find her there, it would seem like calling her instead would just be a logical next step in the situation? Here's what I wrote in response to this ask.
This is an issue I had with 3x08 and 3x09 as well. I had a hard time actually enjoying the moment between Felicia, Klara, and Amie knowing that her family was getting increasingly worried for her and even thought for a short moment that Felicia was lying dead at the bottom of the ocean. All that couldâve been avoided. To add, it didnât make a lot of sense to me that when Klara finally decided to call someone she called Amie instead of Elias. An ex-friend of Feliciaâs instead of her brother who couldâve helped a lot more. What was Amie supposed to do when she showed up at the hotel, exactly? I know there was the thing with Klara only knowing Amieâs number off the top of her head, but there is no reason why she couldnât have gone down to the reception while Felicia was sleeping and asked to use a computer just to get a quick message to Elias. Like, âhey, Felicia attempted something bad but sheâs safe with me, weâre at this hotel in this room but she didnât want me to call anybody, I donât know what to doâ. That wouldâve been so much better than keeping quiet about the situation for nearly 24 hours. I know that Klara probably has trauma from leaving her dad at the hospital after his suicide attempt and that she probably didnât want to go against Feliciaâs wishes. I understand the first part 100%. But Felicia was in a very bad place emotionally and was thinking that her whole family hated her when that wasnât the case. I feel like in a situation like that you kind of have to be the bad guy just to ensure the family that Felicia was safe. Even if everything turned out alright in the end, it couldâve gone so much worse if Felicia had wanted to be kept hidden for longer. [...] Elias calling Amie wouldâve been an easy solution to this whole debacle but we wouldâve lost the drama. Itâs still somewhat of a plot hole though, like you said.
I understand it was done this way for dramatic effect, but that doesn't really patch up the plot hole.
I also found it strange how many people turned on Felicia after Jack ruined her reputation in the press. I talked about this in an ask I received.
I donât understand why the public turned on Felicia so harshly. And Leila too, for that matter. The way Jack told the story about how these two women had things done to them should indicate that theyâre not the ones to be blamed. If I read this article and found out an 18-year-old girl got pregnant by a âviolent criminalâ who forced her to abort and then abused her I would not be angry with the girl. I would be angry that she was physically abused and also outed on her sexuality for being bi. If I read this article and found out Leila had been cheated on by her husband repeatedly with her best friends, I wouldnât be angry at her. I would not agree with the decision to turn to alcohol (same as Felicia turning to drugs), but I wouldnât blame them. And I feel like a lot of people shouldâve been on Leilaâs side after finding out the reason why they divorced. I donât understand why people are saying theyâre disappointed in Felicia and calling her fake when sheâs been through so much trauma in her life. I feel like if this actually happened in real life, all the blame would be shifted to the men because theyâre the ones whoâin this storyâare painted as the bad guys (with the exception of Jack, considering he was anonymous).
I got another anonymous ask sent in after this, pointing out how the anger directed towards Felicia was considerably more about her drug use rather than the abuse she endured. Here was my response to that:
[...] the drug use shouldâve been understandable considering the stuff Felicia had been through was also written in that article. I donât know. I can understand people unfollowing her if they didnât want their young children to be exposed to all the controversy, but itâs still strange that everything Felicia received was hate messages. Did everybody just skip over the part where the anonymous source stated that Felicia was violently forced to have an abortion by an ex-criminal and probably did so out of fear for her life? Yes, we know this is fake, but why didnât anybody seem to mention this? [...] they seem to have written this storyline with the idea in mind that the public was against the whole Kroon family. Felicia got comments such as âSo fucking disappointed in you and your familyâ, âWhat a nasty fucking familyâ, âYou and your family are so fucking disgustingâ. So I think Leila received plenty of hate for drinking instead of divorcing her husband sooner and basically turning a blind eye to all the problems her family went through. Thatâs what Jack told the press, at least. The anger seemed to be directed towards every member of the Kroon family and that didnât make a lot of sense to me.
Again, this is something the writers did to dramatize the situation and they kind of forgot to consider that what Jack actually told the journalist wasn't as incriminating for Felicia and Leila as it were for Mats and Elias.
The magic of season 3
What season 3 really excelled in, to me, was delving into some more serious topics as well as showing the gradual development of Amie and Elias' relationship. Amie and Elias are the prime example of how a slow burn is so much better than having a couple get together too fast, like Felicia and Ludde did back in season 1.
While season 3 was still airing, I wrote a post dedicated to questions I had received about Elias and Amie. Here's one of the things I said about them:
I think Eliasâ interest in her really started to grow after he saw how caring Amie was to Felicia, and later on connecting with her on how they both ended up back in Oskarshamn after following their dreams which didnât exactly turn out the way they expected. Yes, Elias has always sort of been watching and admiring Amie from afar, but that interest didnât start growing until he actually got to know her. The experiences they had in the US and Stockholm, respectively, probably changed their mindsets and in my opinion it makes so much more sense for them to get together now than it wouldâve in season 1 or season 2.
I still believe that Elias and Amie are the best-written couple of the whole show (at least so far), because they just make sense. We'll see what season 4 has in store for them because we have yet to actually see them in a romantic relationship, but I feel like their personalities and characters just fit together really well.
Another thing I really appreciated was the depiction of Felicia and Ludde's declining relationship. Things like that happen so easily, and I liked how we see Felicia do this huge gesture of planning a picnic for Ludde in 3x04 but there were still underlying problems between them. It's like that in real life tooâno matter how big of a romantic gesture you make, communication will always be the number one priority in any relationship and that's where Felicia and Ludde fall short.
The obvious disconnect between them when it comes to money is also important. It's been like this from the beginning, but season 3 gave us an actual conversation about it.
Felicia: Please, I canât talk about this. Seriously. It was stupid of me to bring this up from the beginning. Fuck, I get such anxiety talking about the futureâ Ludde: You get anxiety? Iâm the one walking around with no money in my account. Mom and dad had to get a loan to pay off mine and Andreasâ fines. Iâm playing on a shitty old synth, and living off you like some leech. Thatâs anxiety. Felicia: Everything isnât about money. Ludde: Says the one who has money. Felicia: Move out then, if itâs so fucking hard to feel like a leech.
This felt very realistic. Of course a person like Felicia wouldn't think money is everything when she's never experienced financial issues. She's able to move out into her own one-bedroom apartment as soon as she's turned 18, it seems, and doesn't worry at all about the cost of furnishing and decorating it. She didn't even pay for it herself, because Mats mentions he's the one on the mortgage loan. It seems like Felicia has never had an actual job either, and that's starting to worry her because she has no idea what she should be doing.
Felicia: [...] I donât know what Iâll be or what Iâll do in the future. I donât know that. Ludde: Youâre still an influencerâ Felicia: Donât say Iâm an influencer, please. Do you think I want to be that my whole life? Itâs not even a career. I'mâ Iâm graduating next year, and I⊠My grades suck, andâ I have no plan. I only have you. Not like thatâI have you. Thatâs what I have. I want to be here, in Oskarshamn. I donât want to go to the US and chase some dream and be a hockey wife. Thatâs not a life. Sometimes I wish neither of us had a plan, just us together here.
Felicia's character finally offers something interesting here, which I've waited for since season 1. She's not just a party girl anymore who has issues with drugs. She's a privileged teenager who is co-dependent on the guys she meets and who has anxiety about the future, to the point where she wishes she could stay in Oskarshamn in her little apartment forever stuck in limbo.
She has to face a harsh reality when Ludde decides to break up with her, and later on when her name is slandered in the press and people all over the country are sending her hate messages. Her own family is furious with her and Felicia has nobody. She's pushed away a lot of people and her mental state is just crumbling in front of our eyes.
It's a strong storyline and actually very well executed. Almost everything gets taken away from her, and at the end of 3x07 you can almost feel what Felicia is feeling. We've been with her through this whole journey, almost, and we understand why she feels like suicide is the only answer.
It's tough to watch that final scene of 3x07. It's greatly amplified by Alva Bratt's superb acting, but the writing of the journey there is also amazing. It's very difficult to write a sensitive storyline like this.
Overall, I don't have a lot of critique towards season 3. I loved most of the episodes. I elaborated on this further in a separate post:
[Episodes 3x04 and 3x05] showcased what Eagles should be all about so well, which is relationships plus the struggles you go through as a teenager in a small town, and then of course hockey. The hockey game episodes are really good, even if I donât think 3x05 topped 2x05 (the game where Ludde got tackled and knocked out). I loved the contrast in Date night of the budding relationship between Elias and Amie and then that fight between Felicia and Ludde on the cliff. [...] It was interesting to see how this sweet gesture from Felicia turned into a fight between the two of them. I thought that was very realistic, because no matter how big of a gesture Felicia made to apologize there were still underlying problems that they needed to talk about. I also loved the ânon-dateâ between Elias and Amie in this episode. It was cute to see them goofing off before the movie started and then talking about it on the way home. I liked how Elias could connect to her on how they had both returned to Oskarshamn. The recent episodes that dropped last week (3x08 and 3x09) were very strong and discussed some important subject matters [...] They were dark, but not necessarily bad because they needed to happen. However, I have to say that I prefer Eagles when itâs about hockey and teenage relationships. 3x04 and 3x05 made me kind of nostalgic for season 1 and I liked the vibe they both had.
Eagles season 3 is in my opinion the best season of the show so far, and we haven't seen any signs suggesting that there is any reason for season 4 to not be even better.
Season 4: Hopes and wishes
Considering how each season has been increasing in quality bit by bit, I have pretty high hopes for the writing in season 4. I'm excited to see how the transition from teenager to young adult will be portrayed in the main characters, and what their future will hold for them after they've graduated.
My main questions are if Felicia and Ludde will find their way back to each other or if they'll remain broken up (that would be realistic as well), if Klara will reconcile with her mom, what's in store for Elias's hockey career, and if Amie will leave her label and maybe opt for something more independent.
I also want to see how Felicia deals with the new home she's checked in to, and if Ludde will in fact go to the school now that it seems Andreas will be getting into trouble again.
Amie and Klara are kind of wild cards here, because it somewhat feels like they've already reached their happy endings. Amie is famous and successful in her pop music career, and Klara has found her place as a businesswoman following in her father's footsteps. Maybe these developments should've come in season 4 instead of rushing them.
Nonetheless, I have faith in the writers. The writing suffered a little in seasons 1 and 2 but it has gotten better. Most of the things I pointed out about season 3 were just small details in an otherwise stellar season.
In conclusion...
This post was critical, but I tend to be critical of every show I watch. Eagles is still a very special show for me and having grown up in a Swedish small town myself I'm very fond of the show and its characters.
So huge thanks to the creator, Stefan H. Lindén, for making this show a reality and also to the director Carl-Petter Montell for contributing to the writing in season 3. And of course the writers of the show which include Michaela Hamilton, Fanny Ekstrand, and Anton Nyberg (plus Amanda Adolfsson who helped write 1x02 and 1x05 and Simon EkbÀck Nordström who is credited for helping with the hockey scenes in 3x05).
I hope you guys enjoyed this long, long post and major kudos to you if you read this far!
#eagles svt#svt eagles#eaglesspoilers#young royals#beartown#björnstad#been working on this post for a few days so i really hope you enjoy it!
18 notes
·
View notes
Text
To answer some Fanfic Questions...
So, this is my response to @broxklynnâs post... I decided to make this its own post... So that It can be properly answered.
1. How and why did you start to write? Is there some kind of story behind it?
I started writing in general when I was in elementary school... Back when I just had a Platform 9 3/4 journal, not many friends, recess, and a desire to immerse myself in the world of Harry Potter. I enjoyed writing, and even joined the Writerâs Club in High School (but I eventually left to join Anime Club and Divergent Thinking Society). As for writing MCL fanfiction, I began writing Samâs and Alanaâs stories as early as when I first got into the fandom, back in 2013. Alanaâs story started out as âA Fresh Startâ, had a one shot called âWhen I Wakeâ, then turned into âLet The Dawn Be Brokenâ, and is now âThe Melancholy Of Melody Alana Rosterâ. The final product barely has any hints of the first 3... In fact, Samâs story, âFighting Darknessâ, has been completely debunked due to what Iâve decided to canonize in âThe Melancholy Of Melody Alana Rosterâ. Writing MCL fanfiction has been a major help in distracting me from the depression that was caused by family issues, severe abuse, Stockholm Syndrome, my momâs disease and her death, as well as working at several shitty jobs. Writing has helped me escape reality and keep myself sane enough to not be a black hole of hate, anger, and sadness to my friends and boyfriend.
2. What do you struggle the most with your writing?
There are 2 major things I struggle with... 1 is Timing. I often set deadlines for myself that I never meet and it makes me so frustrated that I miss them... There are currently things in my drafts that were meant to be âHoliday Specialsâ for Valentineâs Day and Halloween 2020 that are still unfinished... It makes me feel like Iâm letting my readers down, when its more of me letting myself down... The other thing is Inspiration. Because I hate my job, I often think about Alanaâs story in an effort to not be completely consumed by the fact that I do hate my work... Due to that, I often come up with ideas for my story that I think are FANTASTIC for my story... But, by the time I get home, Iâm either in too much pain or too tired to write, or Iâve forgotten the ideas...
3. What is your favorite genre to write?
I love writing Romance with a bit of Slice of Life and a hint of Action/Adventure...Â
4. Slowburn or âFlameâ/PWP?
Slow burn any day.
5. How do you overcome writerâs block?
If I absolutely canât write... I work on other stuff I need to do... Typically, something around the house, or something online I need to do... I also look for cool stuff to add to wish lists... Iâll occasionally play videogames or read comic books... In an effort to subvert writerâs block, I like having multiple chapters in my drafts at once. If Iâm not in the mood to work on one chapter, I can work on a different one.
6. What kind of thing you dislike the most, when reading a fanfiction? (for example: particular plot, grammar mistakes)
One thing that makes me upset (and it makes me madder when I do this) is misspelling... Especially when it looks like its almost blatant... You have autocorrect, USE IT! Or when a fanfic is so awful, yet the author acts like their work is a gift from god... I donât mind a âbadâ fanfiction... Hell, the concept of âMy Immortalâ is so bad that its hilarious... But Fifty Shades did a lot of damage and E.L. James acts like sheâs bigger than Jesus... Seriously, she wrote Twilight fanfiction, changed some minor details and names, people who have no knowledge of BDSM ate it up, and she acts like sheâs a âSex and Relationship Guruâ...
7. Whatâs the biggest issue for you, when writing a Beemoov fanfiction?
The biggest issue for me is finding out when to allow for Beemoovâs writing and placement to take place in my story. I donât like a lot of the events of UL and LL, so Iâm often finding myself in a position where I have to watch video playthroughs and go âOkay, how can I omit this character, but keep this scene?â. Iâve had to do that A LOT with Alexy and Rosalaya.... Although, to a certain extent, Iâll often cut their scenes out altogether. I really hate what Beemoov did to them. They were great characters in HSL, but became utter shit in UL and stayed shit in LL. To make up for Beemoovâs writing style, Iâve created my own characters, added in old characters (like Kentin and Armin), added in bits from the manga (like Viktor, Severina and their fathers), and gone off on my own storyline. The Melancholy Of Melody Alana Roster is close to MCL at times, but often veers off onto its own road.
8. Have you ever created a character based on person in real life? (celebrity, someone that you know, etc)
YES!!! A LOT of characters in my story are based on real people! Alanaâs step-father, Nate Films, is closely based on Nathan Fillion. A lot of her family members are based on members of my own family, just changed a bit to fit the story. Lynne Roster, Alanaâs mom, is what I had always dreamed my own mom would be... Hell, Alanaâs cat, Sylvester, is based on my own childhood cat, Luna.
9. How do you feel about your own characters? Do you think of them as your babies or have rather love-hate relationship with them? (And, do you have favorite one?)
I love most of my characters. I do hate 3 in particular... But, youâre supposed to hate, or at least not respect, them... Thatâs why I poured my hatred into them... Those 3 are Carol, Kai and Azrael. Carol has aspects of my abuser in her. Youâll see more of her when I finally post the HSL related chapters... And understand what I mean... Kai is based on one of my real life cousins that Iâve not been happy with for years (the one who my bf has deemed âthe family failureâ). You mainly see him in the Cousin Mels chapters, and in the Christmas Special... Azrael is the one who is seen the most in the UL chapters, and she is a main adversary for Alana. She is the one who broke her the most, the one who ended Alanaâs relationship with Nathaniel, the one who truly traumatized her. As for ones I love... The one I love the most is Alana... I know, sheâs a reflection of me, so thatâs kind of vain... But, sheâs a part of me. When I do finish her story and am at the point where I need to say âGoodbyeâ, it will hurt....
10. Enemies-to-lovers or friends/bestfriends-to lovers?
Definitely friends/best friends to lovers. I also like toying with what happens when best friends turn to lovers, but circumstance parts them and one moves on...
11. Is it easy for you to get inside your characterâs head? Can you empathize with them? Is thereâs some similarities between you and your main character?
It is VERY easy for me to get into Alanaâs head... Like I said in #9, she is a reflection of me. She looks and acts like how Iâd like to in a lot of situations... Her life is more interesting, traumatized, and more well off than mine... But, she is still me in major ways...
12. Who has been the biggest supporter of your writing?
Definitely my boyfriend. He doesnât really understand the game itself... But, he likes how happy it makes me and he respects how much of my heart, soul, blood, sweat and tears that Iâve poured into writing my story. He loves listening to me read passages from it to him while Iâm working. He gives me advice and his opinion is highly valued... My family knows Iâm writing a large story, and have seen some of the images that Iâve gotten commissioned, but they donât really know or care about the game. They do respect the fact that I am writing. They love the fact that Iâm slightly following in my momâs footsteps in that regard (she wrote 3 books and several poems). My online friends have been very supportive as well! Iâm constantly updating them on what Iâve worked on each day in my Discord Server and the words of encouragement always help.
13. How do you handle criticism?
Not well. Due to the abuse and family issues mentioned in #1, for a good amount of my life, Iâve gotten nothing but harsh criticism... So, now that Iâm away from all that, at 26 years old, Iâm just now getting to a point where Iâm starting to take it better... But, Iâve got a long way to go.
14. Do you like giving your characters trauma? Why/why not?
I hate sounding like a sadist... But, Iâm going to anyway, so fuck it... Yes. I have done awful things to Alana over the years. In A Fresh Start, she got sexually assaulted and ostracized. In When I Wake, she gets into a car crash, put into a coma, and in her dream state murdered by Francis in front of Nathaniel. In Let The Dawn Be Broken, the plan was for her to end a war. In âThe Melancholy of Melody Alana Rosterâ, her childhood cat dies, her mom gets sick, she gets abused by Carol, her best friends get ripped away from her for a bit, she gets sent to a country halfway around the world alone, she gets assaulted and ultimately turned into a weapon of mass destruction.... Iâve even thought of killing her mom off at one point... But decided against it...
Now, granted, A Fresh Start and Let The Dawn Be Broken never saw completion, but happy endings were planned for them...
I do this, all while giving Alana happy endings in each story because âIf Alana can go through utter hell and make it through, then so can I.â... I know, Iâm âgodâ in that regard and I can control how Alanaâs life is.... But, the fact that in my writing, she ends up standing tall, happy, with everything she wants, after everything she goes through does make me feel better....Â
15. Are you proud of yourself? When you look at first piece you wrote and compare it to the latest one?
Yes. If you look at A Fresh Start, you can tell it was written by someone fresh out of High School. Thereâs no real depth to it. Let The Dawn Be Broken isnât much better... But, The Melancholy of Melody Alana Roster has become my magnum opus. It is the largest piece I have EVER written, and will probably remain the largest piece I write. I am very proud of what I have created... And when its last word is written, and I am ready to get it made for itâs place on my shelf, I will feel very bittersweet about it... That being said, my original plan for a sequel involving Nathanielâs and Alanaâs daughter, Aurora, has been discarded. I donât believe Aurora could ever have as much of my heart that her parents do...
And there you have it! Some insight into my world, writing, and history!
#my candy love#my candy love fanfiction#mcl fanfic#mcl fanfiction#fanfic#mcl#mcl alana#mcl alana roster#alana roster#melody alana roster#melodyalanaroster#the melancholy of melody alana roster#mclhsl#mclul#mclll#amor doce#amour sucre#sweet amoris#Sweet kiss#sweet love#Sweet flirt#sweet crush#cdm#cdmu#Corazon de Melon#corazon de bombon#slodki flirt#dolce flirt#writing#fan fiction
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
TerraMythos 2021 Reading Challenge - Book 9 of 26
Title: The Priory of the Orange Tree (2019)Â
Author: Samantha Shannon
Genre/Tags: Fantasy, Epic Fantasy, Third-Person, Female Protagonists, LGBT Protagonists
Rating: 10/10
Date Began: 3/12/2021
Date Finished: 4/12/2021
1000 years ago, the world burned. Draconic creatures terrorized the land, led by a horrific evil known as the Nameless One. But then something happened that sent the monsters into a seemingly endless sleep, and the world has rebuilt in the centuries since.
But the Draconic evil begins to stir in its slumber, and the divided nations of the world have little chance to stop it. Eadaz is a mage from the Priory of the Orange Tree, sent to spy on the northern queendom of Inys. Legend has it that as long as the royal line continues, the world will be free from the Nameless One. While it's a long shot, Ead guards the young Queen Sabran closely to preserve the peace. However, as she and the queen grow closer to each other, Ead has to decide where her loyalties lie. Meanwhile, her close friend Loth is secretly sent into exile by the royal spymaster due to his controversial friendship with the queen. Supposedly sent as an ambassador to the newly Draconic kingdom of Yscalin, he soon finds himself out of his depth, entrusted with a deadly secret.
In the isolationist Eastern country of Seiiki, TanĂ© wants nothing more than to become a dragon rider. The dragons of the East are old, wise, and revered as gods-- eternally opposed to the Draconic legions of the West. However, the night before the choosing ceremony that will decide her fate, she breaks isolation and discovers a young man from the West on the shore. Rather than report him to the authorities, she and her friend smuggle him to the island of Orisima, the only place Westerners are permitted. Niclays Roos, an old man exiled to Orisima by Queen Sabran, soon finds himself caught in the conflict. He believes if he finds an elixir for eternal life, he will finally be able to return home. When he's forced to shelter the forbidden Westerner, Niclays' entire way of life is upended-- but he is soon granted the opportunity to escape his exile. Â
'My grandmother once said that when a wolf comes to the village, a shepherd looks first to her own flock. The wolf bloods his teeth on other sheep, and the shepherd knows it will one day come for hers, but she clings to the hope that she might be able to keep him out. Until the wolf is at her door.â
Full review, minor spoilers, and content warnings under the cut.
Content warnings for the book:Â Some sexual content. Blood, gore, violence, traumatic injury, suicide, and death. Torture and execution. Miscarriage. Body horror (kinda). Drug use.
Clocking in at just over 800 pages, The Priory of the Orange Tree is a long, detailed story. I tend to label things Epic Fantasy when they have world-changing stakes. While Priory certainly fits that criteria, it's the first fantasy book I've read in a while that really does feel like an epic. It stars a huge cast of interesting characters from many walks of life, all of whom find themselves caught up in a world-spanning conflict. It captures the sense of a standalone, grand adventure that shorter fantasy novels of today don't typically reach.
With a book this long, it would be easy to ramble on forever about everything I liked. However, I'm going to try to keep it short and simple.
One of my favorite things about this story was the sheer depth of the world. Lots of people compare this to The Lord of the Rings not for its tropes, but the attention to detail regarding the countries, politics, history, religion, and so on. I'm inclined to agree with this assessment. The world felt alive and multi-dimensional. I could pinpoint many parallels to our own mythologies and histories-- particularly drawn from Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. There's also a clear love of language in the story via its beautiful prose. I like to think I know English pretty well, but this book taught me quite a few new words! Might fuck around and call sunsets "rutilant" from now on.
I thought all four leads were interesting. Ead is kinda the "main" lead of the novel, although Tané overtakes her in the latter half. Everyone had different personalities and backstories, and I genuinely enjoyed all of their arcs. Niclays in particular would be an easy character to hate; of the four, he's the most selfish and does some real questionable shit. At the same time, it's hard not to sympathize with him. He's a sad, unjustly exiled elder who's lost the one man he cared about, and finds himself in a desperate situation. These types of characters are interesting to me; a glimpse of what anyone can become given the wrong circumstances and cruel treatment.
With stories like this, one of the most satisfying payoffs is how the different characters and stories come together. It was interesting to see how their paths converged and diverged over time, and ultimately how everything tied together in the end. I also appreciated the character relationships. I liked that Loth's close friendships with both Sabran and Ead were intimate yet platonic without some awkward love triangle.
From some story specifics... I'm a sucker for the bodyguard romance trope, and seeing it done with women in a mainstream novel gave me life. I thought the romance between Ead and Sabran was really sweet; I didn't see how it would work early on since Sabran was a little insufferable, but she had hidden depths (oh god, another weakness of mine). I also really liked the idea of traditional European and Asian dragons being diametrically opposed, and that being a core theme of the story. Intelligent and/or talking animals are another thing I adore in spec fic, so I dug characters like Aralaq. Kalyba's ongoing relevance and gradual exposition was also neat; I love minor world details that turn out super relevant later.
Also, the entire final battle/ending sequence was SO good. Really creative and action packed. Action scenes often blend together for me (and can be logistical nightmares) but Priory's climactic ending was just awesome. I don't want to spoil specifics, but it reminded me of many beloved epic battles in modern fantasy. Avatar the Last Airbender, How To Train Your Dragon, and Pirates of the Caribbean all came to mind.Â
My main criticism with Priory is that often, the plot relied on convenient coincidence to get the characters out of a jam or otherwise advance the story. I can excuse a minor contrivance or two for the sake of a smooth story, and the scope of this book is big enough that it'd be hard to avoid. But some are nuts. For example, Loth gets rescued from certain death by a giant ichneumon while traveling through the mountains. We later learn the ichneumon is Aralaq, a friend of Ead's, and he just happened to be in the middle of nowhere, far from his home, and stumbled upon Loth. Loth, who ALSO happens to be Ead's best friend... which Aralaq presumably doesn't know?
Another is the MAJOR SPOILER regarding the rising jewel's location. I didn't hate the twist itself, but there was so little build up to it. I wish there were more early hints to justify it, because with setup it would be a pretty cool development. These things didn't ruin my enjoyment of the story, but the borderline deus ex machina (machinae? machinas?) did take me out of it a bit. Itâs possible I missed stuff so Iâll give some benefit of the doubt.Â
Overall, though, The Priory of the Orange Tree is a fun, world-spanning adventure. Like any long book, it's an investment to get into. However, if you're looking for a standalone, feminist fantasy epic, this is certainly a good place to start. Â
#10/10#taylor reads#2021 reading challenge#bro this took exactly a month to read but in my defense it's long and i also powered through Pillars of Eternity lmfao
16 notes
·
View notes
Text
đ unsuspecting sunday afternoon đ
by me, xyzcekaden! a pokemon fanfic about when the one you hate to love is made for you
How capable is the human heart now?
fandom: pokemon, gen 3, advanced generation characters: ash, may, steven stone in a âsupportingâ role ship: advanceshipping genre: romance, angst themes: friendship, pre-relationship, slowburn, 6+1 if you squint setting: modern, hoenn, pokemon universe lite word count: 4.6k rating: T
read it below, on ffnet, or on ao3!
A/N (9.7.201): So this has been in my drafts since about April 2020 đ
Sure, I'm happy to finally share something new with the small yet strong advanceshipping fandom; but more than that, I'm relieved this document can no longer taunt me with its incompletion, hahaha. Do let me know what you think! Especially with this opening formatting; I'm trying something new. :)
Nothing sensitive in the fic, but the characters are all adults so it felt fitting to rate it T. Title taken from the song of the same name by the Backstreet Boys, and its lyrics/sentiments are interwoven throughout. The narrative is inspired and framed by monstaxnight's anonymous ask. If you recognise it, it doesn't belong to me. Thanks for reading!
~~~
fall for someone whose body would start fires
On a Saturday, May asked Ash to come over the next day. âI need a second opinion on something,â she had said. âItâll be super quick.â
Of course, âsuper quickâ means Ash has enough time to set his switch up on Mayâs gigantic living room tv and play a few rounds of his favourite fighting video game while she gets ready for something or another in her room. He always acts like he has better things to do than help her with her sundry weekly ventures, but they both know heâd rather do ânothingâ with her than âsomethingâ on his own somewhere else.
âOkay, Ash, are you ready?â Mayâs voice rings out. âYeah,â he answers distractedly, strategically button smashing.
âSo I kept the jeans from this last outfit, but this top I just got two weekends ago and havenât had a chance to wear yet,â May narrates as she exits her room. âI had the, frankly, brilliant idea of using the jacket from Outfit 1 and pairing it with those heels you paid for for my birthday, et voila!â
The clacking of heels stops at the entrance of the hallway. âWhat do you think?â
Ash redirects his attention to May. His avatar dies on screen, just like his voice dies in his throat.
âYou, um, you look great.â
In actuality, May looks smoking hot, but thatâs not new for either of them. His best friend is supremely attractive, and he knew it and had no problem acknowledging it normally. This time, however, May doesnât just look physically great, she also looks like she feels like she looks great. He doesnât know how much sense that makes; but there is decidedly something different, and Ash feels a strange sense of dread in his chest.
May beams, taking the inarticulate response in stride. âWell thatâs a winning endorsement if I ever heard one! Now letâs just hope Steven has as great of a reaction.â She turns to one of the many full-length mirrors stationed around her condo and reviews the outfit with a critical eye.
This brings Ash out from his stupor. ââStevenâ?â he repeats as he sits up on the couch. âYouâre going on a date?â
âItâs not a date,â May replies in a tone that clearly conveys that she would not be opposed to it turning into a date. âMy dad is having dinner with an old business partner, and the guyâs bringing his son along, so me and Max were invited, too. We were kinda friends back when we were young, but itâs not like weâve kept in touch or anything. I just figured I should make a good second first-impression⊠You know, for my dadâs sake.â
Ash can tell the last bit was just something sheâs telling herself to rationalise why sheâs trying so hard, and it doesnât sit right with him. He slinks back down on the couch dejectedly and halfheartedly starts a new game.
He finds himself wondering how often they hung out and how much whatever-that-number-was-teenth impressions were worth. He hopes itâs a lot.
~~~
fall for someone who always runs from his kiss
â⊠And I was right! They were roommates!â May boisterously ends her story, almost losing her ice cream to physics as she wildly gesticulates.
Theyâre just strolling around the park thatâs honestly nowhere near either of their apartments; but over the years, it became their park anyway. They didnât even set plans to hang out today, but it kinda just happenedâa recurring theme in their friendship, admittedly.
For his part, Ash hides a smirk with a lick to his own ice cream, not bothering to say or do anything to protect her treat. If she hasnât learned by now, she never would. âOh my god, they were roommates,â he deadpans instead.
May sends him an unimpressed smirk and lightly smacks Ashâs shoulder. He yelps. She yanks her hand back as soon as she realises, but the damage is done.
He blinks down at the cold, vanilla, rainbow-sprinkled stain before raising his gaze to meet Mayâs equally stunned one.
They stare in silence for a moment, then May cracks a conciliatory grin. âFor what itâs worth, Iâm sorry?â
He shrugs it off easily. âI probably deserved it,â he says, making peace with the knowledge that his previous unwillingness to protect her ice cream from any accidents is the undoubted origin for his current poor luck. He nods toward the path. âShall we?â
âWe passed by a restroom a little bit ago. We can clean you up,â May disagrees, tugging on his arm in the opposite direction.
ââS fine,â he argues as he tries to continue walking forward.
âAsh, itâll stain!â She tugs harder.
âItâll be an improvement!â Heâs overpowering her, but not as easily as heâd like.
âWhy are you being such a butthead about this!?â Sheâs pulling with all her strength now, this being a matter of pride to her at this point.
âCome on, May!â Ash heaves one last time.
They tumble head over feet onto the ground, but thatâs not the reason Ash feels like his world has turned upside down.
Mayâs body weighs comfortably on his, his hands naturally settle on her waist with hers on his chest, and his brown eyes bore into her blues. Their ice cream has fallen⊠somewhere, but Ash doesnât concern himself with that considering this is the closest theyâve been since they first met.
Theyâve been toeing this line since then, too.
Iâm gonna do it, he thinks to himself.
He closes his eyes.
He leans in.
May scrambles away.
Ash sits up and blinks at the sight of Mayâs confused, furious eyes. âAsh, what are you doing?â Her voice croaks like her throat is dry. It makes him clear his own before dumbly responding, âI was trying to kiss you.â
âWhy??â she asks, her voice strangled. He pushes himself off the ground warily as he watches her hold herself, bite her lip, shake her head in a panic; and somehow in all of that, he understands.
âI thought it wasnât a date.â Ash tries so hard not to sound accusatory, but her wince in response proves it didnât work. It also proves his fear correct.
He turns, hiding as if the people walking by could discern his transgression and shame by the sight of his face alone. Besides, his mind can conjure up an image of her running away just fine on its own.
Ash notices the remnants of their impromptu outing splattered on the ground near his feet. He picks up what he can and stomps over to the nearest trash bin, throwing it in as hard as he can to let out some of his frustration.
He hopes he hasnât gone and screwed everything up.
~~~
fall for someone whose lips belong to someone else
They donât talk about it, and then itâs too late.
âAsh, this is Steven,â she tells him softly, as if it could make up for how it feels like the sight of her arms wrapped around the guyâs torso and his arm casually thrown over her shoulder assaults him every time he blinks.
âSteven Stone. Itâs great to finally meet you. May speaks of you highly,â Steven introduces with a dignified air. Not pompous, no; he is just someone who was raised being told that he was going to do important things and who happened to believe it.
They shake hands, and Ashâs fingers feel cold, a marked contrast to how thereâs something in his chest thatâs burning.
Inside the restaurant, the waitress asks if a table is okay, and no one asks for a booth instead. In his seat, Ash is neither directly in between nor directly across from the newly-established couple, and he wonders if this is where all his luck went into.
Lunch goes better than expected.
Ash was prepared to hate the guy, but what is there to hate? Steven has a decent sense of humour, loves pokemon but loves rocks even more, and is COO of the biggest enterprise in Hoenn. He is a safe, sensible choice. This guy isnât going to break Mayâs heart.
As the meal winds down, Steven offers to pay for everyone; but Ash still has his pride. In the end, he manages to negotiate paying for just his own plate and drink, knowing he has no right to battle for the privilege of paying for Mayâs.
He wouldnât even do so on a typical occasion anyway; but as far as Ash is concerned, Stevenâs presence throws all of the friendsâ typical rules of engagement out the window.
They say goodbye and part ways in front of the restaurant.
A few steps later, Ash snaps his fingers as he recalls something. He turns around to remind May of their movie plans in a few days, and he is met with the sight of the couple sharing a sweet kiss on the corner while waiting for the light to change.
Steven could never break Mayâs heart, but he sure can break Ashâs.
Ash turns back and continues walking. He hopes May can remember on her own.
~~~
fall for someone whose touch is way too much
May insists that nothing has changed between them, but clearly something has because Ash doesnât remember ever being so anxious about her proximity before.
He had always been aware of her, though. Always. When your first meeting is saving the other from getting run over by a tour bus, you quickly develop the habit of keeping track of where the person is at all times.
Between his athleticism and her natural proclivity towards tactileness, casual physical exchanges quickly became their norm: hugs and high fives, friendly elbows in the rib after a good joke and sharing a blanket as they watch a movie, (lingering touches on the shoulder and holding hands even after theyâve escaped a crowd⊠or did he make those up?).
They were controlled yet unmistakably affectionate markers of their relationship.
But now?
When she shifts one centimetre closer to him in line at the mall food court, he accidentally overpays by fifty pokeyen out of distraction. When she grabs his fork out of his hand to try a piece of his takoyaki, he jerks so hard at the contact that he spills his soft drink all over the table. When she pats him dry using flimsy food court napkins with a joke about ice cream in her voice and fondness in her eyes, he needs to claim a rapid-onset fever in order to give himself an excuse to cut their lunch short immediately.
These innocent touches have been an ever-present facet of their friendship since basically the beginning; and even when he realised he was in love, they hadnât affected him like this.
Things are different now, despite what she says.
Well, maybe not things; maybe just him.
He had allowed himself to revel in their familiar touches when she was single because he could, because there was no one else that she was supposed to be able to make feel like this. Even if the feeling wasnât meant for him, it wasnât meant for anyone else either.
But now.
He canât, in good conscience, allow his heart to rush and his smile to form and his hand to squeeze back. It wouldnât be fair to May, not when sheâs trusting him with her friendship and heâs taking more from her than that.
Even though heâd like nothing else than to keep that closeness, to go back to how it was between them before, this is the way it has to be now. He just hopes she can understand.
~~~
fall for someone he doesnât want to feel for
On sleepless nights, he wonders when.
He knows the who, what, why, and how; but the when eludes him.
...
They were both breathing heavy, attention focused on the spot of the road where the girl would have flattened like a pancake if it werenât for his quick reflexes and hero complex.
The clapping of a few passers-by snapped them out of their shock and into the realisation that he still had her protectively cradled to his chest.
They quickly broke apart, and he took the time to wave off the praise from the gathered crowd while she checked her purse to see if everything was inside.
âYou got everything?â he asked after peopleâs attentions finally turned back towards their own lives.
âYeah, I do,â the girl replied, and her voice was rather cheery considering the ordeal she just survived. (He would later learn that was her default.)
âGreat,â he said, genuine yet awkward.
They continued staring at each other. The adrenaline from their brush with danger hadnât worn off yet; his heart was still beating very fast.
âSo, um, have a good day,â he bade after it was clear neither of them had anything more to say. He made to return to his errands, but a hand on his arm stopped him.
âYou saved my life, and youâre just gonna walk away?â she asked incredulously.
He blinked at her. âIâll be honest; I wasnât aware there was an after-action protocol for this sort of situation.â
She was incredulous for only a second before she giggled at him. âThe least I can do is buy you lunch to say âthank you.ââ
âWell, Iâve never turned down a free meal,â he accepts with a grin.
She giggled again then stuck out her hand. âMy nameâs May.â
âAsh.â
...
No, it wasnât then. Nor was it during the meal they shared, nor at the bar where they happened to see each other that weekend, nor while they were escaping from the bar fight that she accidentally instigated that night.
...
âIs this going to become a running gag? Will I have to constantly be saving you from trouble you unintentionally get yourself into?â Ash panted after he directed her to duck into a nearby alley.
âHey, as far as Iâm concerned, this automatically makes me the most interesting friend youâve got,â May countered.
He took one extra second to check no one was following them then cut a glance at her. âI donât know about you, but most of my friends have my number.â
She rolled her eyes with a smile. âSmooth.â They switched phones and exchanged numbers.
âBetter memorize that by heart,â he jested as he handed her her phone back. âDonât wanna waste your one phone call at the station just because you mixed up the last two digits by accident.â
âIf the next time you hear from me is because I went and got myself arrested, just leave me to rot. I must have earned it,â she smirked.
...
Luckily, the next time one of them reached out to the other wasnât to bail the former out of jail. May invited him to a pool party for her birthday, where he handily won a water balloon fight and impressed everyone by fixing the grill for their barbeque. Their friendship continued to progress naturally: movie nights that turned into impromptu sleepovers, brunches that turned into walks around town. Several shopping trips and video games and hikes later, they were each otherâs best friends. It was basically inevitable.
So when? When would he have had the chance to fall in love with her?
...
âHello?â
âAsh, you picked up!â she sounded surprisedâhappy, but surprisedâand he winced. He knew heâd been blowing her off a little more often lately, but making her think heâd turn down her phone call?
âHeh, yeah, sorry about that,â he said, betting on the hope that she somehow implicitly understood everything he was apologising for. âIs everything okay?â
For an extended second, she was quiet, then she said, âI need to tell you something.â
His hackles rose, and he started grabbing his keys and putting on his shoes. Maybe she finally ended up in jail. âWhere are you? I can be there in ten minutes, maybe twenty with trafficââ
She giggled, and he paused. That was her nervous giggle. âMay?â he asked, still wary but not about to race out of his house with only his boxers on.
âNo! No, itâs nothing like that. Itâs just⊠Steven told me he loves me.â
His breath left his lungs.
âAnd I told him I love him back,â she continued.
All the adrenaline that had surged through his body only moments before completely left him at her words, and his limbs locked up instead. He felt cold.
âHello?â
He didnât even realise he had sunk to his knees until he meant to take a step back towards the couch. He just slumped onto his butt. âThatâsââ He had to clear his throat. âThatâs gotta be recent.â
He could slap himself. He sounded as dead as he felt. He tried again: âI mean, thatâs great news, May! Heâs a lucky guy. Yeah.â
She sighed with relief. Could Steven tell what her sighs meant over the phone? âIâm the lucky one, I think,â she said happily, and that was his last straw.
âHeh, yeah, well,â he sputtered out, just to have something to say. âListen, since youâre not in danger or anything, uh, you actually caught me at a bad time, so I gotta go. Iâll catch you later, yeah?â
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
âWait, Ash! Before you go!â
He held back a sigh. âWhatâs up, May?â
âItâs just⊠Youâre right; it is recent. Youâre actually the first person I told.â
âIâm honoured.â He couldnât help the sarcasm that spilled out, but he backtracked quickly. âI mean it. Thank you for telling me.â
âOf course, Ash; I tell you everything. At this point, itâs like I have to; nothing would ever feel real otherwise.â
He shut his eyes. He really couldnât take this anymore. âI know what you mean. Same here.â
She made a cute sound, a quiet little âhmm,â and that was when the first tear spilled out. âAlright, Iâve taken up enough of your time. Iâll text you later!!â she promised.
âLater,â he repeated, both an echo and a goodbye; and finally, blissfully, he ended the call.
...
When, when, when?!
That was supposed to be one of the sweetest moments of her young adult life, and she called on himâtrusted him, evenâto be happy for her. When did he get to the point where he couldnât even do that? Instead, he recalls it now as he struggles to fall asleep, playing the memory at half-speed over and over again in his imagination, and all he does is hope.
He desperately hopes itâll stop hurting so much.
~~~
fall for someone with the sweetest rebel heart
When he finds out he didnât get the promotion he was vying for at work, thereâs no one elseâs comfort he sought but Mayâs.
âIâm sorry that happened, Ash,â May soothes as she rubs rhythmic circles into Ashâs back. Theyâre in her condo, noticeably nicer maintained than Ashâs flat, side by side on the sofa. It is the first time heâs let her touch him in weeks, and he really needs it. âAt least now they know youâre interested? It might be your turn next time.â
Ash snorts but nods anyway. Heâs usually the type to look at the bright side, but it would be an understatement to say that he is simply disappointed. After all the Lâs heâs been taking in his personal life, he had been hoping at least something would go his way professionally.
May continues, âJust make sure not to let this setback actually set you back. Keep putting your best foot forward, and I know youâll win those guys over⊠just like you did with me!â She ends with a wink, trying her hardest to inject some levity into the situation.
Just like that, Ashâs mood sours even more. âYou canât say that to me, May,â he angrily replies as he shuffles out of her hold.
âWhat are you talking about?â she pouts as she feebly tries to get him to lay back against the couch so that the cold air canât get under the blanket they are sharing.
âI didnât âwin you over,â clearly.â He shrugs off her touch and scoots away. He has spent so long trying to keep his bitterness inside, but he doesnât have the emotional wherewithal to regulate himself right now. Heâs tired of trying to get over things that make him upset.
May frowns, the furrow between her brow getting deeper as she sits up straight on the sofa. âAsh, why are you talking like that? I meant, like, how we became friends, obviously. I didnât grow to love you by accident.â
Ash stands then, balling the blanket up and throwing it back on the couch. âI bet Steven wouldnât be too happy to hear you say that.â
She follows suit, her voice elevating in volume as if to match. âI bet Steven wouldnât appreciate being judged by someone whoâs only met him onceâdespite my efforts otherwise, might I add.â
âI bet Steven would love to hear his girlfriend say she loves another guy.â
âI bet Steven isnât dumb enough to think I canât love you both.â
âYou donât love me, May!â Ash finally explodes.
He has never raised his voice like this, not to her, but heâs tired. Heâs tired of loving someone he canât have, heâs tired of hating himself for it, and heâs tired of the guilt when he takes it out on her despite all his attempts not to.
She looks like sheâs torn between yelling right back or kicking him out; and before she could make up her mind, he collects himself enough so he could bring his voice down. He states simply, âNot the way you love Steven.â Not the way I love you.
He doesnât say it, but he can tell she hears it anyway. He clears his throat and turns around, trying to hide without running away. âHearts donât work like that,â he murmurs into the room.
He makes to leave, but Mayâs hand on his shoulder stops him. She forcibly turns him back to face her, and Ash is shocked at the determined set to her face. Her eyes, bluer than a water stone and twice as powerful, hold him as captive as they always have. âYou listen to me, Ash Ketchum.â Her tone brokers no argument. âIf you thought for a second that I stopped loving you because I fell in love with Steven, you clearly underestimated what my heart is capable of.â
Her grip on him tightens, as if making sure he is still with her in the moment. âItâs big enough for the both of you; and if thatâs not the way hearts are supposed to work, then Iâll just be the exception that proves the rule.â
She pulls him into a hug then, like locking that promise between them, and he dares let himself hope she means that.
~~~
fall for someone whose heart needs sewing up
Ash wasnât expecting a knock on his door this late at night, and he definitely wasnât expecting to see a beautifully made up May Maple standing in the hallway, mascara-tinged tears and runny nose notwithstanding.
"Steven is moving to Alola to support Devon Corpâs expansion," is all she said, but even that much is hard to make out through her watery voice.
The news sinks in, and Ashâs heart feels like someone moved it three centimetres to the left: still there, still functional, but not at all where he needs it to be.
"Youâve always talked about going to Alola," is the only way he could respond, thinking of all the times theyâve imagined taking a week off and vacationing in the tropical region. He wonât, canât let himself think about anything else or else heâd break down.
In his heartbreak, he cannot recognise May's tears, which are too raw and too loud to be that of someone bearing regrettable news. These are the tears of a confused, broken heart.
"Ash, I'm not going," she sniffles, still stiffly standing outside his door. "He asked me not to."
Finally understanding that he misunderstood, Ash is even more disoriented than he was before. "Why would he do that?" he asks, obviously still trying to wrap his mind around what the hell was happening.
"I donât know!" May yells while clenching her fists and stomping a high-heeled foot. It is the most movement she's made since he opened the door. "I demanded a reason, and he spewed nonsense at me! He saidâ" and she stops. Her whole body slumps back into stillness but without the stiffness of before. She continues quietly, "He said he didnât want to see what Iâd look like with my heart so far outside of my chest," like a guilty confession. Ash is at once reminded of their almost-fight a month ago, and he still isnât sure what this all means.
He almost asks, Why wouldnât he believe your heart was right where you were? or How capable is the human heart now? but he doesnât.
Instead, he finally welcomes May inside. He sits her on the couch and helps her take off her heels before she wraps herself up in the blanket he keeps thereâa blanket he only has, he remembers, because when she first visited his apartment, she insisted his couch needed one. She doesnât just hold the blanket around her shoulders; she hides her entire frame within its folds. He merely sits on the couch next to the lump and places a solitary hand on top, unsure where it was resting yet hoping it is providing comfort nevertheless.
He wonders if May ever let Steven see her like this, the way she needs to shut out all stimuli as if to physically recreate her darkest moments. He wonders why he loves that she does that, even though it causes him so much selfish pain to be close enough to see her like this but shut out from her healing.
"I donât think I have a boyfriend anymore," May says at length, voice dampened by the space and fabric between them.
It would have been the happiest news of Ashâs adult life if it werenât for the extreme melancholy that laced her tone as she said it out loud.
He squeezes his hand into a fist on top of the blanket, his signal that heâd like to hug her if he could.
"I would have missed you if you left." Ash gives a nonsequitur-confession in response. May burrows deeper into the blankets and says nothing.
Instead, she reaches a hand out from a heretofore unseen opening in the fabric and holds on to his other hand tightly.
Ash stares at her slender knuckles, made paler from her firm grasp, and stops hoping.
He gently plies her fingers from his palm and tries not to feel guilty about the shocked, embarrassed way the hand pulls back into the blanket as he leaves her there.
The love of his life needs compassion right now. This is not his opportunity to sweep her off her feet; this is not his second chance.
He returns from the bedroom, settles back into his place on the couch, and forces May out of the blanket.
~~~
May jerks her head up, shocked and angry and still embarrassed from her rejected attempt to seek Ashâs comfort, but she is quickly mollified into confusion. The expected sight of Ashâs lit up form in his lit up living room ends up being no different from the blackness from which she thought she was rudely taken.
It is so dark under the extra, larger blanket that she canât even see Ashâs nose even though she can sense his head is mere inches from hers.
His hands find hers in the darkness and squeeze. Relief flashes through her as she finally surrenders to the deep, thick slice of heartbreak.
May wants to see his face, but she settles for a hug.
#pokemon#pokemon fanfiction#advshipping#advanceshipping#ash ketchum#may maple#aamaylove#satoharu#unsuspecting#xyzc*
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
SnK Episode 64 Poll Results (for Manga Readers)
The poll closed with 227 responses. Thank you to everyone who participated!
Please note that these are the results for the Manga Readersâ poll. If you wish to see the results for the Anime Only Watchersâ poll, click here.
---
RATE THE EPISODE 218 Responses
As has been the trend, the episode received mostly positive reviews, with over 90% of respondents giving the episode a score of 4 or 5. Not too shabby for one of the most anticipated episodes of the season!
Absolutely loved it!
MAPPA's winning streak continues with a near perfect adaptation.
Epic as hell wonderful adaptation.Â
I was on the edge of my Seat the whole time, even tho I read the Manga. It was amazing.Â
Best cliffhanger yet
PHENOMENAL!! THE TENSION DIDN'T LET UP FOR A SECOND
I really liked the episode. People can criticize, but Mappa couldn't have done the episode in another way. They're doing an amazing job, the animation is beautiful, the musics are amazingÂ
Fairly good 8/10
It was ok, would've preferred a better climax.
Almost perfect episode
I thought this episode was adapted incredibly well; I enjoyed it more than I did previous episodes. The opening theme still isn't working entirely for me, though.
Best episode of season 4 so far. Also, Rage Mode is backâŠ
Most anticipated episode and Mappa 100% delivered. MAPPA GOAT
WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING MOMENTS WAS YOUR FAVORITE? 220 Responses
As expected, the cliffhanger of the episode was the most favored moment (with 40.5% of the vote) with Eren transforming during the declaration of war was finally brought to life. The subsequent favored moments all contained various partts of Eren and Reinerâs basement reunion.Â
Reiner ready to protect Falco over himself made me love him even more, this moment needs more spotlight
Eren and Reiner's voice actors really went out of their way this episode. Their performance was âšphenomenalâš
Reiner is really well-done in this episode. They were really able to capture his inner torment, not to mention the voice acting is amazing.
WHICH INTERPRETATION (BY RBA) OF THE OLD MANâS STORY DO YOU THINK IS CLOSEST TO WHAT THE MAN ACTUALLY THOUGHT? 217 Responses
At 56.7%, the majority believe Bertolt was correct in that the old man RBA spoke with wanted to be judged before his death. 23.5% agree with Reiner that thereâs no way theyâll ever know, and only 19.8% agreed with Annie in that he wanted to be forgiven.
IN THE SAME VEIN, WHICH OF THE AFOREMENTIONED INTERPRETATION FITS REINERâS STATE OF MIND IN THE BASEMENT SCENE? 217 Responses
In that same vein, the majority (52.1%) also believes that Reiner wanted to receive judgement, perhaps from Eren. Just a little under 31% believe that in addition to receiving judgement, Reiner also wants to receive forgiveness. Few believe Reiner solely wants forgiveness. Finally, a little under 9% simply arenât sure what Reiner wants.
He knows what he's done and he knows it's unforgivable so I think he just wants a release from it all
He is depressed, has PTSD, and feels tremendously guilty.
He wants to die for his sins, I don't think it's either for for forgiveness or judgement, but his own internal quilt..
He wants to be free (of this world) da guilt too much
He wants to be judged and killedÂ
He wants to die
WOULD YOU LIKE TO GET A HUG FROM PIECK? 219 Responses
An incredibly serious question with a lopsided result. Just under 84% would like to receive a hug from Pieck, in contrast to a miniscule percentage whoâd rather not. 12.3% donât really care about stuff like this.
DO YOU THINK HELOS ACTUALLY EXISTED? 217 Responses
The plurality (little under 42%) believe Helos was a complete fabrication, down to his very existence. Some others (26.7%) think he existed, but wasnât anybody special or (17.5%) think he existed and was actually involved with ending the Great Titan War. A bit under 14% just donât care.
âIâM THE SAME AS YOU.â EREN SAID THIS TO REINER A FEW TIMES IN THE EPISODE. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THAT? DO YOU THINK EITHER OF THEM HARBOR A GRUDGE AGAINST THE OTHER? 108 Responses
One of the episodeâs (and the adapted chaptersâ) focuses is the meeting between Eren and Reiner, in addition to their general relationship. Many people seemed to give their thoughts on the central motif of the meeting, and whether either of them bear a grudge against the other:
yes and no- theyâre both broken by what theyâve done (and will continue to do) to each other, and those feelings are as mixed as can be.Â
No, they understand each other, and the horrible acts they do is the result of seeking the best for the ones they love, in an unbearably cruel world they were born into
Probably not, from Reiner i think it's just a lot of remorse for what he did, as for Eren, he's probably beyond all of that.
They were forced to do what they had to do and both were ignorant as kids.
No grudges. And I think Eren believes he and Reiner are the same, and therefore that Reiner can understand what he is about to do and why. Eren didn't need to have this conversation with Reiner, and yet, he risked Reiner possibly interfering in his plan to talk to the one person he believes understands what he is about to do. Eren no longer believes his friends will understand his actions, which is why he did not confide in them, but he clings to the idea that Reiner will. However, I personally do not believe they are the same. Reiner's actions, while horrible, were those of a brainwashed child. Eren is an adult, about to set in motion genocide on a much larger scale. There is just no comparing it.Â
There's definitely animosity between them/they genuinely dislike each other from this point on. Last battle of Shiganshina Made it clear imo.
No, if circumstances were different, they would be best friends.
They share a lot of similarities, but it all comes down to the path they take by the end of the story. While Eren decided to commit mass genocide, Reiner is regreting his past actions and trying to save the world. I don't think they absolutely despise each other, they understand their struggles but both are ready to stop one another even if it means killing them in the process
Not sure. Reiner took Eren's family so not completely same-same trauma
Yes and no, feelings aren't particularly concrete between any two people ever. There are parts of Eren that still hate Reiner, and parts of Reiner that still hate Eren, but the same can be said of their comradery. Their relationship is pretty complex
No. Reiner doesn't hold a grudge for Eren because he is guilty. Eren doesn't hold a grudge towards Reiner because he also sees himself as a mass murderer.Â
Yes, Eren still wants to inflict pain on Reiner. He just claims that Reiner didn't care about his/his family's suffering either.
No, there are no hard feelings between them. Eren has forgiven Reiner since he has understood the current state of the Eldians and how Marleyans are ( they are humans just like him). But still, Eren will keep 'moving forward' and suffer from his actions like Reiner did (him talking Bertolt and Annie into breaking the outer wall and carrying the burden).
They both know it's inevitable. There is no other option.
Not consciously, at least: both of them came to understand the larger systems and powers at play, and both of them were manipulated as children by them
DO YOU THINK THAT EREN AND REINER ARE EFFECTIVE FOILS TO EACH OTHER? 215 Responses
The vast majority (88.4%) seem to agree with the notion of Reiner being a foil to Eren, be it a complete or partial foil. Some others dissent and argue that thereâs no comparison.Â
They mirror each other, they have different reasons but they did the same things and had I believe very similar baseline motivationsÂ
I had learned that a foil is defined as a character who brings light to another character's traits or motivations through the contrast between the two. So if Eren and Reiner were foils to each other, then they would have had opposite personalities, as how foils are used. But Eren said 'I'm the same as you' and they do indeed share a lot of similarities. The only significant difference is that Reiner is at the point of giving up whereas Eren still keeps moving forward. So, no, they are not foils I believe.Â
I think they're more like tragic, star crossed lovers (minus any romance)Â
arenât they parallels of each other? can they be foils and parallels of each other simultaneously? or i guess just donât be know what either term means
SO, WAS THE DECLARATION OF WAR EVERYTHING YOU HOPED FOR? 219 Responses
Overall reception of the execution of the Declaration of War was positive, with 47% stating they were âquite pleasedâ with it, and another 33.8% barely being able to contain their hype at all. There are some who felt a little overwhelmed by it for one reason or another, stating it could have been better but also wasnât bad. Others think MAPPA did the animation well but didnât pair it with the right kind of music. A small percentage were just disappointed in it, period.
It was pretty much a 1:1 from the manga, so it was great.
Absolutely incredible, while the last music choice wasn't the best (it isn't a huge deal tho, it still fits), the rest of the episode was marvelous (direction, lighting, voice acting, music for most of it, animation) and managed to make justice to the manga chapters
i really don't care about the declaration so i wasn't hyped for it either way
It was great though music was a bit too triumphant for me (though ruined is way too strong)
I feel like such high expectations were held upon this chapter, so we're really critic about it. I would've liked a more intense music build up and manga-like animation of crushing the stage.Â
I loved the music choice throughout the episode, but for the declaration itself it could have been a bit more horrorish. Still loving it. No hate for the studio, they are doing great!Â
I wasnât too happy about it at first but itâs grown on me so quickly that I think itâs well on its way to being my favorite episode out of the entire series.
The build up was amazing. Sure we hoped for more actions, but Mappa couldn't have organized the episode in another way. It was really well executed and the final scene simply left me breathlessÂ
It was perfect, but I'd have preferred having either the coordinate/attack on titan/S4 trailer theme playing but music choice didn't ruin at all the experience
BACK WHEN WILLY ACCUSED EREN OF WANTING TO INITIATE THE RUMBLING, DID YOU ACTUALLY BELIEVE THAT WAS ERENâS GOAL WHEN YOU READ THIS CHAPTER FOR THE FIRST TIME? 212 Responses
Are we still allowed to say âhindsight is 20/20?â The majority of the fandom had more faith in Eren back when these chapters were first published, with 25.5% saying they had a suspicion that he might, but didnât want to accept that possibility and believed in the better of him. 19.3% felt that Willy was genuinely full of crap just for the sake of demonizing Paradis, and 14.6% felt that though the Rumbling would happen, Eren wouldnât be the one at fault. On the flipside, a smaller amount of voters fully saw this coming, with 14.6% believing this to have been Erenâs goal, but with the hope that he wouldnât make it a reality, and 11.8% now having the pleasure of saying, âI told you so.âÂ
At the time i just thought it was willy's assumption he used to get the other nations to side with his agenda
I cannot even remember what I thought... too long ago
I didnât think the rumbling was gonna happen at all, actually.
When I read the chapter the rumbling had happened
I already knew the Rumbling would happen before I read the chapter, so I don't have an opinion on this other than Willy ended up being right, even if it's only because it's a self-fulfilling prophecy.
I sadly had that plot point spoiled :(
At this point, I genuinely did not think the Rumbling would happen at all.Â
I thought that Willy and Eren were playing along for the sake of "common enemy - unites the world". With sacrifice on both ends.
WEâVE GOTTEN A SNEAK PEAK OF YELENA IN THIS EPISODE. NOT SO MUCH THE DESIGN, BUT MORE SO THE VOICE. ITâS QUITE LOW. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT IT? 217 Responses
When it comes to Yelenaâa introduction, itâs about as mysterious as it was in the manga. The difference however is the inclusion of a voice. The reception came out to be overwhelmingly positive, with people deeming it fitting, sexy and cool (in that order). Some others (24%) thought that it was as low as it was now only because she was imitating a soldier. Just a little over 10% simply didnât care.Â
I assume it's low right now because she knows Pieck will recognize her, but also Yelena could sound like a literal elephant and I'd still want her crazy beautiful ass to step on me
I didn't hear it well.
Reminds me of the voice actors in Claymore. It was perfect.
ANNIE STILL HASNâT REUNITED WITH HER FATHER, DO YOU THINK SHE EVER WILL? 217 Responses
In spite of both Annie and her father coming back to the forefront in recent manga chapters, they still havenât been reunited. A plurality believes that they will. Just under a third thinks that itâs a possibility. Finally, a little over 20% donât think that the meeting will happen.
THE NOTABLY IMPORTANT SCENE BETWEEN WILLY AND MAGATH RIDING IN THE CARRIAGE AT THE BEGINNING OF CHAPTER 100 IS MISSING IN THIS EPISODE. WHAT DO YOU THINK HAPPENED TO IT? 214 Responses
When it comes to the rather important scene between Willy and Magath and its lack of inclusion in this episode, most people (57.9%) came out thinking that the next episode will open up on that exact scene before transitioning into Willyâs death. Some others believe that itâll instead be shown either sometime in the next episode or just before the arc ends. On the flip side, 20.6% believe that the scene was simply cut and thatâs that.Â
Either it's completely cut or will appear in a flashback again
Has to be shown at the start of episode 6 otherwise that's a colossal fuck up on Mappa's part and will affect how I view this episode
Much of it was implied through the fear on Willyâs face the whole episode.
THE ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM - THE MUSIC. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE CHOICE AT THE END OF THE EPISODE? 218 Responses
The music choice for the climax of the episode wound up being very controversial, as many had different expectations than what MAPPAâs final product delivered to us. Though, it seems that overall the majority werenât bothered at all by the music direction. 28% felt that it worked well with the scene, 22.9% very much enjoyed the music direction. 17% didnât even notice the music much, being more immersed in the animation and overall development. Some felt let down, but realized in hindsight that maybe they expected too much for certain tracks (new and old) to be utilized. The rest either donât care about the music or were massively let down by the execution overall.
It felt like Tyburs orchestra was playing them throughout the episode. It felt immersive.Â
Dude it was bloody brilliant, what's everyone on about?
Not a let down, but I found it kinda funny that they chose that one. It seemed too... intense, upbeat, I'd say. Though if I was an anime-only I probably wouldn't care, because I wouldn't know what Eren was really gonna do.
I imagined *that track* behind this scene since reading ch 100 years ago so it was weird to hear different music, but as I rewatched the ep a couple of times I changed my opinion: the music they used fits just as well.
What I cared about most was proper execution of the scene, not the music. They could have used no music at all for all I care. I seriously can't believe some "fans" were so bitter about them not using YouSeeBigGirl for the declaration of war that they personally attacked the director and made him feel bad. Have we already forgotten that if it wasn't for MAPPA, we wouldn't be getting a season 4 at all?! The ungratefulness and toxic criticism is something else, man.
I was waiting for intense music, I didn't care which, but I was let down by the lack of intensivity build-up for me.
My month is ruined
It could've been better, but fuck the assholes who harassed the director over it.Â
During the whole speech it was just perfect, you can really feel that growing tension. End music could be better thoughÂ
If they had just synced up 2volts explosive chorus right as Eren busts through the building in his titan form, then I think it would've worked out so much better. But yeah, I think I just over anticipated a different OST for the scene. Overall, it's okay.Â
It was ok, an 8/10 choice of music
While watching I was so focused on what was happening that I didn't even notice the music so when I saw the complaints I was shocked. Keeping that moment low key until the very end with no musical signals of what was to come was perfect! Anime audiences (you know, the people this is actually for) were completely caught off guard by Eren's transformation. They legit thought Eren was befriending Reiner in that moment by lending him a hand. Having musical cues would've ruined it.
WHEN WILLY TYBUR NOTED THAT HE WISHED FOR THE EXTINCTION OF ALL ELDIANS, THE MANGA SHOWCASED A PANEL OF ZEKE, FORESHADOWING HIS ULTIMATE PLAN FOR THE FUTURE. IN THE ANIME, THIS IS JUXTAPOSED WITH REINERâS SUICIDAL PLEAS. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE CHANGE? 213 Responses
MAPPA seems to be keeping the audience even more in the dark about Zekeâs motivations than Isayama himself did in the manga⊠by excluding just about everything hinting at him having any motivations other than pure loyalty to Marley. In episode 64, the opted to juxtapose Willyâs speech with Reiner and Eren, leaving Zeke out of the equation. 43.2% overall were disappointed in this decision, with 24.9% feeling let down by the lack of foreshadowing of Zekeâs plan, and the other 18.3% feeling saddened by the lack of narrative contrast between the Yeager Brothers. 17.4% are hopeful for some anime-only foreshadowing.
i donât really care about the juxtapositioning because i think the average anime only would not pick it up. but i am disappointed that the scenes that made zeke more enigmatic and suspicious were cut
Didn't even notice
I never noticed this detail in the manga, but i feel like it was better being left out to keep it as a secret.
I found it to be an effective way to make Zeke's motives even more mysterious. I also didn't mind the scene being juxtaposed with Reiner's scene because it serves as a reminder of Reiner's guilt and brainwashing from the past. Both of these things have torn him apart mentally.
It works either way for different reasons
WHICH SCENE FROM THE PREVIEW ARE YOU MOST LOOKING FORWARD TO? 218 Responses
The majority (52.3%) were most looking forward to Erenâs fight with the War Hammer Titan. 19.3% were hyped for Erenâs initial emergence from his titan form during the fight. 9.6% were looking forward to the Survey Corps throwing Pieck and Porco off guard, 8.3% were looking forward to Erenâs assault on the military and the remainder were looking forward to seeing Udo and Zofia die. Magath got a very tiny sliver of the pie.
Can't wait to watch Eren giving them the deaths they deserve again
ADDITIONAL THOUGHTS ON THE EPISODE?
I felt tense most of the time, just like when I was watching most episodes of s3 pt. 2 :')
The suspense truly killed me!!! Even tho I knew what was to come!
....I just want to know if miss tybur gets a goddamn given name already... but considering how long it took for us to get âPieck Fingerâ? Dx
I likes the addition of the marley soilders approaching where eren and reiner were talking, it gave it an extra bit of intensity.
Was on the edge of my seat for the entire episode despite knowing what would happen. The VA's also delivered some of the best performances of the entire series so far.Â
I absolutely loved the whole episode, the overall atmosphere, the tension building during the speech, and of course the soundtrack was excellent imo, I was not even expecting YSBG myself as I don't watch SoulMadness' videos, so in my mind that scene played out to some botched mental version of Counter Attack Mankind instead... :P
I may have known what was happening... But the music made it so much better and intense.
Also I wholeheartedly believe those professional and experienced directors know better than randoms on the internet who never directed anything. I never thought such a thing could be so controversial. :) - Ryuuhime (I lurk on reddit but almost never post)
Amazing aside from the ost at the end and the lack of direction for the transformationÂ
We should thank Mappa for the amazing job thus far!
Intense. Somehow even more intense than the manga at times.Â
People really need to shut the fuck up and just be grateful that such an amazing studio is giving us what we never thought weâd see in a thousand years. Mappa has been going above and beyond to give us a great season and so far itâs taken the top spot of my favorite season, knocking Season 2 down to my second favorite. The voice acting, the added scenes, the directing, the animation, the character designs, Iâm just grateful weâre finally seeing all of these things in the quality we havenât gotten since Season 2. Bless Mappa đđđ
Okay I'm kind of hoping we'll get the big panel of Eren emerging in the next episode cause that was pretty sick, but s4 is looking awesome so far and I think MAPPA is doing as well as they can- and exceeding expectations IMO considering WIT did so well and we all thought whoever took up SnK was gonna flop.
Fantastic adaptation. There was a lot to love. People need to calm down about the ost.Â
It was rushed and lost some of its impact from the manga, but it was an otherwise excellent piece of anime storytelling when detached from the manga experience.
Isayama probably got a say in the play's direction. It was amazing.
I genuinely enjoyed watching this episode! I don't really understand all the hate towards it.
Overall, phenomenal and everything I had wanted it to be. Â
AMAZING Episode. Wished for a better ost at the end but the current anime version is growing on me Â
Very well done, the next one's gonna be fire! đ„đ
talented, brilliant, incredible, amazing, show stopping, spectacular, never the same, totally unique, completely not ever been done before, unafraid to reference or not reference, put it in a blender, shit on it, vomit on it, eat it, give birth to it.
Not as strong of an adaption as other episodes, but great because the source is great.
I was so hyped for the declaration of war that I forgot that most of the episode would be dialogue. A LOT of it. Uyy. Next episode will be better.
The songs are very important on a scene, but i don't think that justifies hating on the anime just for that, the episode was great, and Mappa is doing just fine.
It pisses me off how ungrateful this fandom can be. I'm not saying we cant criticise, because that's important and valid. But seeing a vocal minority, harass the director over a song choice (which had been well made, 2Volt was great for the moment as well as the OST throughout the episode) to the point where he locked his twitter account just takes it too far. People should remember that the Anime is made for anime onlies in the first place, and I have seen VERY few anime watchers complain about the episode, next to none, actually. It's always some of the Manga readers. We literally got a perfect episode, what else do you demand? Without Mappa we wouldn't have AOT. I'm just happy we finally get the story animated.
Pretty good overall. It felt really well paced compared to the previous episodes that seemed hella rushed to me. I understand the music complaints, but otherwise a good episode :)
WHERE DO YOU PRIMARILY DISCUSS THE SERIES? 199 Responses
Thanks again to everyone who participated! Weâll see you again next episode!
18 notes
·
View notes
Text
Star Trek: Genre and Themes
Considering the fact that Star Trek was pitched as âWagon Train in spaceâ, it seems almost redundant to discuss the genre of such a show. Â
Since the beginning, Gene Roddenberryâs showâs genre seemed pretty obvious: science fiction-western. Â And really, itâs hard to argue with that. Â Kirkâs style has been outright referred to as âcowboy diplomacyâ by future installations of Star Trek. Â The adventures and âexplorationâ of the new territory is very reminiscent of the western television shows of the time, and the setting of outer space would seem to place it pretty firmly in the âscience fictionâ genre as well.
But, like always, thereâs a little more to it than that.
As Iâve mentioned many times before, very few pieces of media can be categorized as only one genre. Â Even the most seemingly obvious and one-dimensional examples have elements of other genres. Â No show is designed to fit into only one genre, with any individual television program carrying many characteristics of one specific genre, while sharing many elements of other genres.
And while it may be easy to look at the setting of a film or television show and use that to determine a genre (space = sci-fi, medieval = fantasy), that doesnât mean itâs terribly accurate.
Such is the case of Star Trek.
As a matter of fact, despite Roddenberryâs initial pitch to the studios, Star Trek actually doesnât have a whole lot in common with the westerns of the day (Besides Spectre of the Gun). Â Kirkâs âcowboyâ nature actually doesnât come into play nearly as much as one would think. Â Captain Kirkâs decision making isnât quite the same as a traditional western lead, weighing more factors than just âfrontier justiceâ. Â For another, the setup is totally different. Â The Enterprise is a military exploration ship, full of people on a mission, not just of exploration, but of diplomacy. Â Kirkâs job is not only to defeat âbad guysâ, but to find the best solutions for problems of other cultures.
So while Kirkâs âgood old fisticuffsâ solutions may seem a bit more of the âWild Wild Westâ than later incarnations of the show would resort to, it doesnât make it a western. Â In fact, Star Trek has far more in common with future versions of science fiction shows than one might think.
Star Trek, at its core, is a show about an optimistic utopia, a future where humanity has learned to straighten itself out. Â A future where there is no oppression, no prejudice, no poverty, but of a unified, educated, compassionate Earth, reaching out into the galaxy to explore, extending a hand of friendship. Â This is Kirkâs job: being the hand of friendship. Â Set in a distant future, a twenty-third century where Earthâs problems are solved, as such, there is no need to examine humanityâs flaws as they are.
At least, not directly.
As is done with many examples of the soft science fiction (or speculative fiction) genre, Star Trek uses its setting and set-up to examine the problems with our own society through the disguise of another. Â Routinely, Kirk and the gang land on a planet or meet a people that represent a part of humanity that is less than pleasant to look at. Â Episodes like Let That Be Your Last Battlefield take a scathing look at racism, a huge social issue in the late 1960s. Â Other episodes examined topics like the Vietnam war, labor, and, a science-fiction favorite, the dangers of technology. Â
Add this onto the âtraveling through the starsâ plotline of Star Trek, and youâve got yourself a pretty good argument for a solid science fiction show, with or without the western elements to it. Â With that said, that doesnât mean thereâs more to the show than just sci-fi.
Star Trekâs storylines typically fell into the category of action or adventure. Â There were gunfights (or phaserfights), fistfights, chases, daring escapes, and space-battles galore. Â There was typically at least one hair-raising action scene per episode (with a few exceptions, such as The Trouble with Tribbles or The Way to Eden). Â Even the episodes without âactionâ per say as it would later be solidified in shows like The A-Team or Magnum P.I. turned out a decent âadventureâ story, with emphasis on the journey and adventure as a whole, rather than action-packed sequences that kept audiences on the edge of their seat.
Star Trek was all about the adventure, as even the opening credits will make clear. Â The voyage of the Enterprise is aimed at discovery and exploration. Â The setup of the show is, at its core, the greatest adventure: exploring the unknown. Â Every episode is aimed at the exploration of the human experience and curiosity. Â By definition, an adventure is a risky undertaking, and the exploration of deep space and discovering new civilizations and planets is nothing if not risky.
Itâs pretty easy to say that Star Trek fits pretty neatly into the âsci-fi/adventureâ category, although it does have shades of other genres. Â Episodes like Shore Leave, The Trouble with Tribbles, I Mudd, and A Piece of the Action have a distinct comedic slant to them, whereas episodes like Catspaw, The Enemy Within, Wolf in the Fold, and The Man Trap have a rather sinister, horror/thriller edge. Â Other episodes have dabbled into courtroom dramas, tragedies, westerns, and even war, giving all three seasons a wide range of types of stories that they tell. Â However, one genre that Star Trek has always been the absolute master of, even more than science-fiction or adventure, has been the genre of drama.
At the heart of every Star Trek episode, no matter how cerebral or action-packed, is an overarching sense of drama. Â Not drama in the âsoap operaâ sense, mind you, but drama as in real character interaction and growth. Â The drama in Star Trek is in McCoy and Spockâs argument in Bread and Circuses, in the death of a recently married lieutenant in Balance of Terror, in the death of Kirkâs brother in Operation: Annihilate. Star Trekâs dramatic moments are rooted in character, from Spockâs admittance and sharing of Vulcan rituals in Amok Time and his muted desperation at thinking that heâs killed his Captain in a burst of uncontrollable rage to the doomed romance between Kirk and Edith Keeler in City On the Edge of Forever. The drama in Star Trek is in people, whether human or not.
The examples of Star Trekâs use of characters, be they regular or not, is truly groundbreaking. Â From Spockâs mind-meld with the Horta in Devil in the Dark to Kirkâs terrifying identity crisis in The Enemy Within, Star Trekâs strength is in the people, in the personal dynamics between the characters, most notably between the main trio of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy. Â Even the other, more minor characters on the show received levels of characterization unheard of for the time: Suluâs love of botany and retro weaponry, Uhuraâs musical ability, Scottyâs intelligence and romantic troubles, and Chekovâs obsession with spouting totally innaccurate Russian history, possibly just to annoy the rest of the crew. Â Even Nurse Chapelâs flashes of snark helped her stand apart from the many nameless crew members who came and went throughout the series.
In short, Star Trekâs characters were people. Â Nowhere was this more evident than in Mr. Spock.
By the 1960s, most âalienâ characters on television were either jokes or monsters, cast as gimmicks in My Favorite Martian or as evil conquerors in shows like The Twilight Zone or The Invaders. Â But in Star Trek, the âalienâ was as âhumanâ as the rest of us, if youâll pardon the phrase.
A Mr. Spock type character was unheard of in 1966. Â A half-human, half-alien, treated as a respected equal of the rest of the crew, was a completely foreign concept at the time. Â Spockâs development as a character, and indeed, his criticism of the human condition proved to be one of Star Trekâs best elements of its use of character and drama. Â Spock as a character was constantly at war with himself, torn between the outwardly emotionless Vulcan half, and his emotional, illogical human half. Â Spockâs internal struggle proved to be one of the most gripping elements of the show, and as his interactions with Kirk and McCoy proved, although Spock did not like to be compared to humans, in many ways, he was more âhumanâ than we are. Â His subtle flashes of emotion and occasional bursts of illogical behavior proved repeatedly that there was a lot more to Spock than what he tried to let on. Â He, along with the other members of the cast, had layers.
And Star Trek was very good at exploring those layers.
No science-fiction show would introduce characters with layers to explore if they hadnât had every intention of making the show hang on the relationships of the characters. Â And the relationships of characters is the absolute core of drama.
In the end, Star Trek is a science-fiction adventure drama, a speculative look at the nature of humanity and people in general. Â Star Trek is a look at a better future, an improved society turned to exploration. Â Itâs about the new frontier, about the best and worst of humanity, about friendship, adventure, and morality, full of good and memorable stories and characters. Â It paved the way for even more complex shows to follow, and remains one of the most thought-provoking and earnest shows of all time.
Even now, audiences remember those characters, those stories, those little moments with these people that they grew to know. Â They hold up, remaining just as genuine and heartfelt as they were in 1966.
And they owe that, in no small part, to those wonderful characters.
But thatâs a discussion for next time.
Thank you guys so much for reading! Â Donât forget that my ask box is always open for conversation, suggestions, or questions. Â Stay tuned for the next article, where weâll be looking at the crew of the Enterprise and their roles in Star Trek. Â I hope to see you there!
#Star Trek: The Original Series#Star Trek#Television#TV#TV-PG#60s#Drama#Action#Adventure#Sci-Fi#Science Fiction#William Shatner#Leonard Nimoy#DeForest Kelley#Nichelle Nichols#James Doohan#George Takei#Walter Koenig#Majel Barrett#Gene Roddenberry
28 notes
·
View notes
Text
round up // NOVEMBER 20
Hi, Iâm tired. Actually, my friend Celeste created a piece of art that puts the emphasis needed on that sentiment:
Iâm very tired. November felt like it was three years and also felt like it went by in a blink and also Iâm not sure where October ended and November beganâhow does time work like that? (Iâve yet to see Tenet, but maybe that will explain it.) But like Michael Scott, somehow I manage, and lately itâs been like this:
Late-night Etsy scrolling. Browsing beautiful, non-big-box-store artwork is very calming just before I go to bed. Iâd recommend Etsy stores like Celesteâs chr paperie shop, which I know from experience is full of great Christmas gift ideas.Â
Taking a day off of work to do laundry. Iâm not sure if itâs more #adulting that I did that or that I was excited to do that.
Eating Ghiradelli chocolate chips straight from the bag. I actually donât recommend this as a healthy option, but this is also not a health blog.
Watching lots and lots of â80s movies. One day Iâll ask a therapist why this decade of films is so comforting for me despite its many flaws, but for now Iâm just rolling with it.
Reading. Have you heard of this? Itâs a form of entertainment but doesnât require screensâwild!
Memes. All good Pippin âFool of aâ Took jokes are welcome here.
Leaning into the Christmas spirit by ordering that Starbucks peppermint mocha, making plans to watch everything in that TCM Christmas book I havenât seen, and keeping the lights on my hot pink tinsel tree on all day as I work from home.
This monthâs Round Up is full of stuff that made me smile and stuff that sucked me into its worldâI think theyâll do the same for you, too.
November Crowd-Pleasers
Sister Act (1992)
If in four years you arenât in an emotional state to watch election results roll in, I recommend watching Whoopi Goldberg pretend to be a nun for 100 minutes. (Though, incidentally, if you want to watch that clip edited to specifically depict how the results came in this year, youâll need to watch Sister Act 2.) This musical-comedy is about as feel-good as it gets, meaning thereâs no reason you should wait four more years to watch it. Crowd: 9/10 // Critic: 7.5/10
Nevada Memes
Speaking of election results, Nevada memes. Thatâs itâthatâs the tweet. Vulture has a round up of some of the best.
youtube
SNL Round Up
Laugh and enjoy!
âCinema Classics: The Birdsâ (4605 with John Mulaney)
âUncle Benâ (4606 with Dave Chappelle)
RoboCop (1987)
Iâm not surprised I liked RoboCop, but I am surprised at why I liked RoboCop. Not only is this a boss action blockbuster, itâs an investigation into consumerism and the commodification of the human body. Itâs also a critique of institutions that treat crime like statistics instead of actions done by people that impact people. That said, itâs also movie about a guy whoâs fused with a robot and melts another guyâs face off with toxic sludge, so thereâs a reason Iâm not listing this under the Critic section. Crowd: 9/10 // Critic: 8/10
Double Feature â â80s Comedies: National Lampoonâs Vacation (1983) + Major League (1989)
The â80s-palooza is in full swing! In Vacation (Crowd: 9.5/10 // Critic: 8/10), Chevy Chase just wants to spend time with his family on a vacation to Wally World, but wouldnât you know it, Murphyâs Law kicks into gear as soon as the Griswold family shifts from out of Park. The brilliance of the movie is that every one of these terrible things is plausible, but the Griswolds create the biggest problems themselves. In Major League (Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 6.5/10), Tom Berenger, Charlie Sheen, and Wesley Snipes are Clevelandâs last hope for a winning baseball team. Like the Griswolds, mishaps and hijinks ensue in their attempt to prevent their greedy owner from moving the Indians to Miami, but the real win is this movie totally gets baseball fans. Like most â80s movies, not everything in this pair has aged well, but they brought some laughs when I needed them most.
This Time Next Year by Sophie Cousens (2020)
Theyâre born a minute apart in the same hospital, but they donât meet until their 30th birthday on New Yearâs Day. So, yes, itâs a little bit Serendipity, and itâs a little bit sappy, but those are both marks in this bookâs favor. This Time Next Year is a time-hopping rom-com with lots of almost-meet-cutes that will have you laughing, believing in romantic twists of fate, and finding hope for the new year.
Double Feature â â80s Angsty Teens: Teen Wolf (1985) + Uncle Buck (1989)
In the â80s, Hollywood finally understood the angsty teen, and this pair of comedies isnât interested in the melodrama earlier movies like Rebel Without a Cause were depicting. (Iâd recommend Rebel, but not if you want to look back on your teen years with any sense of humor.) In Teen Wolf (Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 5/10), Michael J. Fox discovers heâs a werewolf.one that looks more like the kid in Jumanji than any other portrayal of a werewolf youâve seen. Itâs a plot so â80s and so bizarre you wonât believe this movie was greenlit.
In Uncle Buck (Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 7.5/10), John Candy is attempting to connect with the nieces and nephew he hasnât seen in years, including one moody high schooler. (Plus, baby Gaby Hoffman and pre-Home Alone Macauley Culkin!) This is my second pick from one of my all-time fave filmmakers, John Hughes (along with National Lampoonâs Vacation, above), and itâs one more entry that balances heart and humor in a way only he could do. You can see where I rank this movie in Hughesâs pantheon on Letterboxd.
Lord of the Rings memes
This month on SO ITâS A SHOW?, Kyla and I revisited The Lord of the Rings, a trilogy we love almost as much as we love Gilmore Girls. You can listen to our episode about the series on your fave podcast app, and you can laugh through hundreds of memes like I did for âresearchâ on Twitter.
Nothing to See Here by Kevin Wilson (2019)
Most adults are afraid of childrenâs temper tantrums, but can you imagine how terrified youâd be if they caught on fire in their fits of rage? Thatâs the premise of this novel, which begins when an aimless twentysomething becomes the nanny of a Tennessee politicianâs twins who burst into flames when they get emotional. The book is filled with laugh-out-loud moments but never leaves behind the human emotion you need to make a magical realistic story.
An Officer and a Gentlemen (1982)
Speaking of aimless twentysomethings and emotion, feel free to laugh, cry, and swoon through this melodrama in the â80s canon. Richard Gere meanders his way into the Navy when he has nowhere else to go, and he tries to survive basic training, work through his family issues, and figure out his future as he also falls in love with Debra Winger. So, yeah, itâs a schamltzier version of Top Gun, but itâs schmaltz at its finest. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 7.5/10
November Critic Picks
Double Feature â â40s Amensia Romances: Random Harvest (1942) + The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)
Speaking of schmaltz at its finest, let me share a few more titles fitting that description. In Random Harvest (Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 8.5/10), Greer Garson falls in love with a veteran who canât remember his life before he left for war. In The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 8.5/10), Gene Tierney discovers a ghost played by a crotchety Rex Harrison in her new home. Mild spoiler: Both feature amnesiac plot developments, and while amnesia has become a clichĂ© in the long history of romance films, Harvest is moving enough and Mr. Muir is charming enough that you wonât roll your eyes. You can see these and more romances complicated by forced forgetfulness in this Letterboxd round up.
The African Queen (1951)
Itâs Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn directed by John HustonâI mean, I donât feel like I need to explain why this is a winner. Bogart (in his Oscar-winning role) and Hepburn star in a two-hander script, dominating the screen time except for a select few scenes with supporting cast. The pair fight for survival while cruising on a small boat called The African Queen during World War I (in Africa, natch), and the two make this small story feel grand and epic. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 9/10
Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949)
A young manâs (Dennis Price) mother is disowned from their wealthy family because she marries for love. After her death, he seeks vengeance by killing all of the family members ahead of him in line to be the Duke D'Ascoyne. The twist? All of his victims are played by Sir Alec Guinness! Almost every character in this black comedy is a terrible person, so you wonât be too sorry to see them goâyou can just enjoy the creative âaccidentsâ he stages and stay in suspense on whether our âheroâ gets his comeuppance. Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 8.5/10
Bluebeardâs Eighth Wife (1937)
What would you do if you found out you were to be someoneâs eighth wife? Well, itâs probably not what Claudette Colbert does in this screwball comedy that reminds me a bit of Love Crazy. This isnât the first time Iâve recommended Colbert, Gary Cooper, or Ernst Lubitsch films, so itâs no surprise these stars and this director can make magic together in this hilarious battle of the wills. Crowd: 9/10 // Critic: 8.5/10
The Red Shoes (1948)
I love stories about the competition between your life and your art, and The Red Shoes makes that competition literal. Moira Shearer plays a ballerina who feels life is meaningless without dancingâthen she falls in love. Thatâs an oversimplification of a rich character study and some of the most beautiful ballet on film, but I canât do it justice in a short paragraph. Just watch (perhaps while youâre putting up your hot pink tinsel tree?) and soak in all the goodness. Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 10/10
The Third Man (1949)
Everybody loves to talk about Citizen Kane, and with the release of Mank on Netflix, itâs newsworthy again. But donât miss this other â40s team up of Joseph Cotten and Orson Welles. Cotten is a writer digging for the truth of his friendâs (Welles) death in a mysterious car accident. Eyewitness accounts differ on what happened, and who was the third man at the scene only one witness remembers? 71 years later, this movie is still tense, and this actor pairing is still electric. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 9/10
The Untouchables (1987)
At the end of October, we lost Sean Connery. I looked back on his career first by writing a remembrance for ZekeFilm and then by watching The Untouchables. (In a perfect world I wouldâve reversed that order, but câest la vie.) In my last selection from the â80s, Connery and Kevin Costner attempt to convict Robert De Niroâs Al Capone of anything that will stick and end his reign of crime in Chicago. Directed by Brian De Palma and set to an Ennio Morricone soundtrack, this film is both an exciting action flick and an artistic achievement that we literally discussed in one of my college film classes. Connery won his Oscar, and K. Cos is giving one of the best of his career, too. Crowd: 9/10 // Critic: 9.5/10
Remember the Night (1940)
Fred MacMurray and Barbara Stanwyck in my favorite team up yet! Double Indemnity may be the bona fide classic in the canon, but this Christmas storyâwith MacMurray as a district attorney prosecuting shoplifter Stanwyckâ is a charmer. Iâve added it to my list of must-watch Christmas moviesâwatch for some holiday cheer and rom-com feels. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 8.5/10
Photo credits: chr paperie. Books my own. All others IMDb.com.
#The Untouchables#The Third Man#The African Queen#The Red Shoes#Kind Hearts and Coronets#Bluebeard's Eighth Wife#The Ghost and Mrs. Muir#Random Harvest#An Officer and a Gentlemen#Nothing to See Here#Kevin Wilson#This Time in Next Year#Sophie Cousens#The Lord of the Rings#Teen Wolf#Uncle Buck#National Lampoon's Vacation#Major League#SNL#Sister Act#RoboCop#Remember the Night#Round Up
20 notes
·
View notes
Text
A Bleach Retrospective: In defense of Bleach
These are opinions, please respect that.
_______________________________
My Journey with Bleach (please skip if you want to go straight to the analysis):
On September the 8th, 2006 YTVâs weekend evening anime programming block (Bionix) aired the first episode of Bleach. I, unfortunately, did not catch this episode, instead, I caught the second episode on September 15th the following week. I was ten and from then on, Bleach fascinated me. It had an interesting concept, tight pacing, catchy music, a good story, and unique character designs. I also really enjoyed how Bleach lacked the same kind of emotional labour that Naruto demanded (as child who survived off of constantly seeking validation from others because of absentee parents, Naruto is way too much work).
My fascination with Bleach got me started in the fandom communities of yesteryear, for I was a child with zero internet supervision. My introduction to fanfiction was because I loved Hitsugaya Toshiro.
Bleach was my entry into poetry (poem at the start of every volume).
But alas, all good things were not meant to last and by the summer of 2009, I was officially done with Bleach. It had felt stilted for some time before then. Over the years, I would gradually revisit bits and pieces of Bleach, but I would not read it in its entirety until months after its finish, about a decade after I had first saw Bleach on my TV. Between the time I stopped reading and the series ended, I became friends with people who didnât think highly of Bleach and I also started seeing criticism I had made about Bleach in 2011 being repeated by fans on the internet, I started to think that maybe Bleach was bad, but I knew what bad writing looked like âI started reading fanfiction through Bleach fanfiction AMVs on YouTube â and somehow Bleach didnât sit right with me in the âbad writing categoryâ.Â
I sit back now, a decade and ahalf later from when I first started and ask, âwas Bleach really that bad, and if so, why do I keep coming back to it?â
-----------------------------------------------
What Made Bleach So Good?
Unique story and aesthetics: When Bleach first started in 2001, it was one of the first manga series to talk about souls and death in a poetic way and with such coherence. Bleach clearly knew what it wanted to say about life and death. It also had a very unique aesthetic, very similar to that of âThe World Ends With Youâ or âPersona 5âł â an urban Japanese take on R&B kind of vibe. Also, Bleach had the most ârealisticâ and minimalist art style amongst the Big 3.
Cool Music: Bleach had cool music, from very solid rockânâroll and R&B style songs in its OPs and EDs to very funky OST music with lots of pizzazz. Many singers feature by Bleach ended up successful (to varying degrees) outside of anime, eg: Orange Range, UVERworld, YUI, sid, etc.
Versatile tone: Bleach was edgy, thereâs no doubt about that. It was willing to show a lot of blood and bodily violence, especially in the manga (eg half of people blowing up and bits of bone still attached). Despite this though, it was not pretentious about its edginess â it didnât revel in it. To contrast the edginess, there is a lot of humour in Bleach with character interactions. It was able to be laid back enough with its strong characters that it would rely on the charactersâ relationships for comedic relief. The post-credit skits and the fillers really helped to add to this overall feel as well.
Maturity of the Story: Bleach was very willing to handle topics that made people think. For example, the Ulquiorra - Orihime subarc was treated with a sense of carefulness about it, as if to reflect Ulquiorraâs own cautious curiosity about the heart. A less emotionally mature story wouldâve gone for the cheap rape/torture porn, but instead we are treated to determined strong Orihime, who has found strength through the heart after the death of her brother, clashing with the nihilistic hollow who wants to know if there is happiness outside of emptiness. Itâs a very loaded question and one that requires both perspective and life experience to fully understand both parties. As well, Bleach always knew what it wanted to say about life and death as the final conflict of Bleach is between Ichigo, who has accepted his transient life and Yhwach, who is scared of death. And ultimately, underneath all that action, Bleach produced takes on its themes that were hard to relate to unless the reader themselves had a certain level of emotional maturity (eg: 12 year old me got nothing out of the Ulqui-Ori arc, but 20 year old me spent a good 10 mins crying after)
Strong characters: Contrary to popular belief, Bleach does have quite solid characterization. In fact, Bleach is the journey of Ichigo as a character, from grappling with his weakness and pain to finally accepting all the parts of himself and his history in order to defeat Yhwach and protect those he cares about. Even the secondary characters of Bleach receive a sizable amount of backstory and/or development. Bleach also managed to have more proactive female characters. Even the damsel in distress Orihime stands up to Ulquiorra and slaps him. As a result of these strong characters, Bleach was able to rely on them and their relationships to drive aspects of the story (eg Ichigo crying in the Fullbringer arc).
Willingness to Deal with Emotion: Given that Ichigo is an internally motivated character, it was obvious Bleach would deal with emotion at some point in time. Making Ichigo just a normal high school boy also relives the previous edginess. Bleach also clearly too the time to make its readers feel in its early years. We are treated to beautiful panelling and very real displays of strong negative emotions. Bleach is also very good at giving its characters room to breathe and be sad. Eg: moping Orihime, moping Ichigo, etc. As well, Kubo went to extraordinary lengths to break Ichigo down during the Fullbringers Arc.
Interesting Character Designs: Every character in Bleach feels vibrant and unique with their personality showing through in their designs. For example: Shunshiâs sloppily tied up hair, visible stubble, and overcoat-hidden-haori show that he is both easy going and not looking for a fight; meanwhile Byakuyaâs neatly pulled back hair and neck covered by scarf show that he is both someone who likes structure and is conservative.
Poetry and Symbolism: Kubo manages to weave poetry into Bleach in the beginning of each volume. The poem was said by the character on the volume. It gave the reader insight to this character and it gave Kubo a chance to flex his poetic chops. Further proof of this is the fact that many people donât realize that the name âBleachâ refers to the bleaching of soul that is key to the story. Kubo loves to use rain to set sad scenes. It rains when Ichigo fights Grand Fisher, Zangetsu tells Ichigo that he hates the rain, etc. Kubo also specifies that he wishes for the reader to read certain volumes on stormy, rainy nights.
Panelling: Many people like to criticize Kubo for the lack of effort with the Bleach manga, but Kubo has stated that he uses negative space (i.e., foregoing backgrounds) to focus more on his characterâs expressions. This not only further proves that Bleach cares a lot about its characters, but itâs done well enough that the average reader likely doesnât notice the lack of background on the first read through. As well, Bleach has very cinematic panelling. Kubo uses the format of manga well, utilizing the human mindâs ability to fill blanks in with clever panelling to create tone and build tension and the feeling of movement through a scene.
In fact, in finding pages for this analysis, I found myself noticing that Bleach panels very similarly to slice-of-life shoujo but with a boy MC manga like "Horimiya": focus on expression through intimate angles and use of panels and breaks to create mood and the feeling of cinema; whereas something like DBZ panels like a shounen action manga with many hard lines and action shots, instead of a focus on subtle details and emotions.
Some Examples:
Notice now in Chapter 197: The approaching danger, Kubo uses a gradual zoom to build tension and the black background to add intensity and signal to the reader that Hitsugaya is relaying important information.
Here in Chapter 234: Not Negotiation, the immediate close up to Ulquiorraâs eye from the full body shots creates a sense of intimidation and unease with its sudden intimacy. As well, the immediate zoom in from Ulquiorraâs side full body shot to his facial profile creates tension and the change from the dark background to the white face with Orihime releases this tension (very fitting with considering the line for this panel is âbut not youâ). (This scene also ties into Ulquiorraâs central dogma of âthat which is not reflected in my eyes does not existâ.)
Again in the same chapter, this gradual zoom in on the two creates tension that is then release in the next panel and summarily cements Ulquiorra as a terrifying BAMF.
In Chapter 262: Unblendable, Kubo uses the negative space to create a feeling of isolation, similar to how Orihime is supposed to be feeling.
In the same chapter, notice how Kubo creates a sense of intimacy (not in the romance sense) with the relationship of Ulquiorra and Orihime. He creates tension gradually with the zooming into Orihimeâs eye and releases it with the zoom out to Ulquiorra. Through this scene, Kubo has shown us that Ulquiorra and Orihime have a tense relationship and with the implication of eye contact through the shots and panel breaks creating both the intimacy and showing Orihimeâs defiance.
(Interestingly, Iâve noticed that Ulquiorra and Orihime have a lot of these intimate zoom shot-reverse-shot eye panels)
___________________
What are the Bad Parts of Bleach?
Okay, so by now, youâre probably thinking that Iâm ignoring the massive amounts of critique that Bleach gets and donât get me wrong, while Bleach does have a very special place in my heart, Iâm also not maudlin enough to pretend that Bleach was all good.
Pacing:
Pacing in the First Half of Bleach (Karakura Town - Arrancar)
When Bleach first started out the pacing was excellent. Kubo showed great mastery of pace to control the tone and highlight the emotions throughout the first two arcs. Mid-way through the Arrancar arc, the fatigue sets in and it was hard to keep up with, especially since Kubo would interrupt one exciting fight set up to go set up more plot elsewhere (eg Fake Karakura town right as Ichigo and Ulquiorra were about to battle). Whilst looking back and reading it all at once does help with the pacing, it was frustrating if you were reading/watching on a weekly basis.
Pacing in the Anime:
I donât ascribe to a simplistic belief of âfillers badâ simply because I think that sometimes fillers can be a good thing, for example, since every chapter is ~15-20pp, some character interactions have to be cut for the sake for space, so filler is a great opportunity to add those moments back into your story. For example, a lot of early Bleach fillers are just the people of Karakura town just hanging out. That being said, Bleach does have an unfortunate amount of fillers, with some of them even interrupting tense fights (eg the Beast Sword Arc interrupts Ichigoâs battle with Ulquiorra). However, the padding that the fillers provided did wonders for the transition between Soul Society to Arrancar Arc in the anime. Ultimately, the Bleach anime adaption was a long-running anime made for syndication and thatâs okay.
******* Brief Aside: many people like(d?) to point out that Bleach has a very cyclical plot structure. I used to think this way too; however, this is not the case. There are many other long running stories that repeat similar goals. The problem lies not in the idea, but the execution. The main complaint about the Orihime rescue was not that it was uninteresting, but instead that it felt a rehash of the plot of the previous arc. This is largely because the story was not given enough time to breath between similar character arcs. For example, in One Piece, Luffy and Co have to save Nami and by extension, her home village so she can join them; however, the next time a Straw Hat needs to be saved is 227 chapters (2 whole story arcs) later. In between saving Rukia and Orihime, there is only a really an arrancar encounter, a bit of training, cheering up Ichigo, and a Grimmjow encounter before Orihime goes with Ulquiorra, thus making the goal of this arc âsave Orihimeâ in only ~59 chapters vs 227. These two similar arc goals so close to each other does indeed create the sense of repetition.
Pacing from Fullbringer to End:
This is where Bleach really lost a lot of people. If you werenât gone after the Ulquiorra fight, you probably were by this arc.This arc went at breakneck speed, and ngl, during my first full read through I almost gave up here too. I mention earlier that Ichigo had been broken down in this arc, but it was hard to feel his despair and the weight on his shoulders because there wasnât enough for the reader to take a beat and breathe. The Thousand Year Blood War, similarly suffered from sloppy pacing, with many readers feeling like story lines of Squad 0 and the Soul King were anti-climactic. As well, this arc started with a massacre and feature the deaths of many fan-favourite characters, and unfortunately due to the pacing, their deaths were not given a sense of gravity.
Missed Opportunities and Forgotten Story lines: Many people felt that Kubo forgot about a lot of his characters after the Aizen arc. Many thought the Fullbringer Arc was going to be a Chad/Orihime Arc. Whatever happened to Uryuu lolol? We all just collectively forgot about him for a large portion of the last half of Bleach. At one point in time, there was a rumour going around that Kubo had written out the story for Bleach and lost it. Idk if there is any credibility to it. However, in a 2017 interview, Kubo did say that he did end the series exactly the way he wanted to.
(If anyone wants to see me write an entire ass text post about Orihime and her treatment in Bleach, please let me know because I will do it)
Too mature:Even though above, I praised Bleach's mature handle on its themes, an unfortunate side effect of this is forgetting that the characters are only 15 at the beginning and for the first half of Bleach. This unfortunately, leads to some readers feeling disconnected from Bleach.
Epilogue: THE DESTROYER OF SHIPS!!! A lot of people hated this ending. Many people felt like the romance was shoe-horned in, others didnât like the pairings, and there were some people who actually liked it. Personally, I didnât like it too much, but it was a cute conclusion nonetheless. Since it didn't add anything to the story except for a "where are they now" look and because of that, I low-key felt like it was unnecessary, but w/e.
------------------------
Perspective
Making a long-running weekly serialized story is hard and doing it for 15 years is gruelling (obligatory âfuck capitalismâ here). Like many artists of long-running manga, Kubo destroyed his health for the sake of publishing Bleach weekly. Kubo on his health after Bleach (photo from AshitanoGin on Twitter):
Given this insight, I think itâs only fair to be respectful and grateful for Kuboâs contribution to the anime-sphere. Also, through his work, Kubo seems to be a very understanding person and artist. Iâm sure he knows better than anyone where Bleach went wrong, but thereâs nothing that can be done now. Despite him having a twitter, he is not Joanne and doesnât feel the need to constantly hemorrhage out word of god info about Bleach (and thank god for that).
------------------
Final Thoughts
Itâs hard to forget my happy memories when I think about Bleach. It had my first adolescent crush and first OTP. As a result, I think the best way to enjoy Bleach is to take what you want out of it. People always think that something has to be 100% without flaw for it to be good, but that is not true at all. It is totally okay to just like the parts that you like without engaging with anything else. Itâs special to you for a reason, you know?Â
Thereâs no use in fretting over what Bleach couldâve been, besides, very rarely is the reality better than the fantasy in your head.
I do think though that a lot of Kuboâs issues couldâve been fixed if he planned the story better but not all of us can be âI've been planning One Piece since elementary schoolâ Oda Eiichiro.
Other voices on this issue: here
----------------------------
Wow. I canât believe you made it this far down. Congratulations! Thanks for reading my 2:30am non-sober take on Bleach (it only took me 7 hours to write). Here's a cookie <3
#bleach#pro bleach#analysis#writing#characters#ramblings#pro orihime#orihime#ichigo#ulquiorra cifer#hot take#quarantine thoughts#late night#weebshit#criticism#critique#anime review#manga#i'm still bleach
54 notes
·
View notes