Ugh these shows...why are the wronged made to apologise? Pha literally ruined a bunch of people's lives for what. Kit made the choice to rush to enable Pha, and Yu is like make up with Kit...um exsqueeze me. Is my translation wrong? Yes Mark took a risk, and it is Kits choice, but instead of being like hey Pha called he's just like nah fam, we gotta bounce this is more important than your proclamation of love...yet next episode kit is like i hurt too...and Yu is forcing his emotional vunerable friend onto this guy like that didn't just happen? Make it make sense. And I'm already tired of Pha and he isn't even here. Like i hate they have these characters doing a bunch of shady crap and then be like, oh it's ok cause here's the situation. That's not good writing. Maybe i have it the wrong way round, and you know what that's fine. This is why I rarely watch Thai BL, cause it is just ludacris after a while . Not to mention the side characters stories /relationships that are just all over the place
He was dreaming right? I'm assuming that was the case
Thanks for the reply. Yeah i ended up bingeing several unfinished BL's so I'm just like what is even happening. I'm just wondering why even do the dream sequence at the end, of your your final episode?
Overall the series isn't bad, i just felt like I was missing so much at the same. Time. Maybe that was the point that not everything is clear and gray. Or that everyone can be of actual help, because all the queer adults in Andi's life just seem to not give any real guidance and seemed to accept societies views instead of being their own person. Again, that's what it felt like to me, so those heavy moments just left me going...'huh?' and i felt like i understood Ando less and less as the narrative moved forward.
I rarely say this, but this definitely deserves a second season. They did it right, because this felt complete and could endhere, but there is so much story to be told a second season would just flesh out the world more and the narrative. Also no violence was had, and the conflicts felt natural and not over dramatic. Choi Yen Woo, having actual internal conflict was something different, for me, because felt more visceral and not this villainous other person. So his internal struggle to understand his emotions and feelings just worked. And nothing was vague in this story, it was simple but coherent and just felt good. The effects felt over used at one point, but this is someone who's world is changing so I get why the effect needed to be there and that is a minor issue. Overall i actually like this one alot. The characters felt genuine and real not archetypes that you usually get from BL's. Such a great show.
I guess the biggest problem with Mame is how she thinks that all the audience are nothing but Thirsty girls for…
Again not saying that isn't the case. The genre BL is intended for women, that's just facts. Most is written by women. Philippines are more truthful to the queer experience. This is the last time I'm engaging in this. Not saying your wrong and any sense. The fact is BL, in essence, was written by women for women fetishizing/romanticising usually none queer men together.
I guess the biggest problem with Mame is how she thinks that all the audience are nothing but Thirsty girls for…
I'm a gay man and i find the skins ship as a mean to just fill in what the writers where too lazy to create. Remember gay people are not the audience here. That said. It's fine every now and then but if their love/intimacy can't be conveyed outside of sex/skinship, it's a failing of the writers, directors, producers.
Just once I'd like to see a show where the mains don't end up. Like Na ending up with Chon because he is positive,…
I felt that way towards the end, especially with the cliché introduce the "needy ex" near the end, because it was a realisation that Tine/Wat chemistry was almost non-existent
That showed a very japanese way of making dramas. Very often there's an unrealistic scene that is over-directed…
I didn't get the point of the kiss either, it just felt out of place/wish fulfilment. Also, the guy who was antagonising Jun, what was his deal? At first I ? gut he might be gay, but then his remark at the ceremony just made me go 'what?'. You explaintion help clear some things up, but it still felt... disconnected, like people were more apathetic and lacked any real emotional connection, if that makes sense like they were all just distant from each other. For Jun and Saw that made sense, but all the other cast it was oddly alienating, and not in an intentional way via director choice
And I'm already tired of Pha and he isn't even here. Like i hate they have these characters doing a bunch of shady crap and then be like, oh it's ok cause here's the situation. That's not good writing.
Maybe i have it the wrong way round, and you know what that's fine. This is why I rarely watch Thai BL, cause it is just ludacris after a while .
Not to mention the side characters stories /relationships that are just all over the place
Yeah i ended up bingeing several unfinished BL's so I'm just like what is even happening. I'm just wondering why even do the dream sequence at the end, of your your final episode?
Again, that's what it felt like to me, so those heavy moments just left me going...'huh?' and i felt like i understood Ando less and less as the narrative moved forward.
Also no violence was had, and the conflicts felt natural and not over dramatic. Choi Yen Woo, having actual internal conflict was something different, for me, because felt more visceral and not this villainous other person. So his internal struggle to understand his emotions and feelings just worked. And nothing was vague in this story, it was simple but coherent and just felt good. The effects felt over used at one point, but this is someone who's world is changing so I get why the effect needed to be there and that is a minor issue.
Overall i actually like this one alot. The characters felt genuine and real not archetypes that you usually get from BL's. Such a great show.
Also, the guy who was antagonising Jun, what was his deal? At first I ? gut he might be gay, but then his remark at the ceremony just made me go 'what?'.
You explaintion help clear some things up, but it still felt... disconnected, like people were more apathetic and lacked any real emotional connection, if that makes sense like they were all just distant from each other. For Jun and Saw that made sense, but all the other cast it was oddly alienating, and not in an intentional way via director choice