nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Default)
There is a disappointing lack of fanart for such Cdramas as I have seen done in the style of Chinese and Japanese woodblock painting, or classical Chinese art. There are some 'inspired by' mountain/cherry blossom (or both) backgrounds, but that seems to be about it. Though quite likely this also indicates my lack of much knowledge of fanart other than that which turns up in a Google search.

Fortunately, there is existing art that can be turned to such purposes, including a surprising amount rabbit-themed that is clearly inspired (via time-travel) by
The Untamed.

This is definitely my favourite, and couldn't be better characterised if the artist had done it deliberately. Lan Wangji, Wei Wuxian, and Jiang Cheng:

Woodblock of three rabbits, black, white, and brindle

The stand-offish side-eye, the back turned in the other direction, and the caught in the act of snaffling grass. Perfect.

More rabbits )
nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Default)
I'm still waiting for the Nirvana in Fire ice skating routine, but all due respect to Wang Shiyue and Liu Xinyu, multiple Chinese national champions in ice dance, for following in the proud footsteps of Evgenia Medvedeva and no doubt many other professional skating cosplayers and doing their last season's gala exhibition programme to the soundtrack for The Untamed.

Here at the GPF Cup of China:



(The above is geoblocked in some regions, this is the same performance.)

Also at Four Continents, at both of which competitions they came fourth. Tragically, I can't find it on British Eurosport last year, and so can only imagine what John and Megan made of it.
nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Harriet)
Last week I finished The Untamed, Nirvana in Fire, and Hilary Mantel's The Mirror and the Light. That's 50 episodes, 54 episodes (for the third time), and 872 pages. I find myself not quite knowing what to do with myself - it's almost a good thing the US election results took so long.

If you've not come across it, The Untamed is a lengthy Chinese fantasy drama in the xianxia tradition, a genre I'd really like to read an introductory article on by an actual academic specialising in popular Chinese fiction/media, because it is clearly drawing on a hell of a lot of established themes and cultural concepts that its original audience is familiar with. The protagonists are 'cultivators', essentially sort of Taoist wizards attempting to study and practice arcane arts in order to attain immortality and slay monsters in the meantime. They aren't very good at this, given that their average life expectancy appears to be significantly below that of the average peasant on account of their constant inter-clan warfare, not helped by an apparent psychological weakness for fantasy Chinese fascism. This particular series is based on the novel Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation( 魔道祖师 ) by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (墨香铜臭)*, which has had multiple adaptations in various media.

Short version of novel's plot: after a rather rowdy stint as a visiting student at a strict magical finishing school, the protagonist Wei Wuxian (m) invents a new kind of magic that is kind of based on necromancy, is very good at it, other people don't like this, he does some bad stuff and gets blamed for worse bad stuff he didn't do, he gets killed, brought back from the dead thirteen years later, oh yes and has an epic romance with a seemingly starchy and massively repressed figure from a rival clan, Lan Wangji (m), including lots of explicit sex with various rape fantasies. Every single character is in need of therapy, with the possible exception of the symbolic rabbits. There are vast quantities of flashbacks.

You can see that this presented some adaptation challenges.

The explicit sex had to go, replaced with a fairly similar storyline without the sex scenes and making sure that they don't actually say anything more explicit than "soulmate", but leaving in enough familiar tropes that the audience would have to have never seen a single star-crossed lover narrative ever to miss what is going on by the time they're half-way through and that's even without being Chinese and able to appreciate the Symbolism of the Chickens. I mean, "our mystic hairbands can only be touched by our immediate family or significant other", followed same episode by "I will tie my mystic hairband round your wrist so the magic cave full of creepy rabbits** recognises you as a member of my family and won't kill you" is not exactly difficult. I haven't read more than a few bits of the book, so no doubt the themes also change a bit, but it's pretty good job considering the constraints they're working with, with the exception Spoiler )

I can't straightforwardly recommend it, and yet I watched 50 episodes. It is addictive in a sort of popcorn way, at least once you hit ep 15ish, and that addictive quality only ramps up through the rest, but I spent a goodly part of the first quarter simply boggling at terrible wigs, more polyester robes than you can imagine, some decidedly mixed quality acting***, and the phrase "tortoise of slaughter"****. What saved me from giving up was the sudden realisation about six episodes in that I was watching a school story - or possibly, if I were American and more familiar with the genre than through the works of Paula Danziger and Addams Family Values - a summer camp story. At which point, suddenly everything made sense as a story of rival posh boarding schools filled with characters you've met before, and a goodly dose of "they fuck you up, your mum and dad".

I shall cut for length. Flashman and the Slut, and other archetypes )

*Also responsible for The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System, which is definitely the most post-modern concept of a storyline I've come across for some time. Say it three times backwards and Mephistopheles probably appears to complain about people slashing him with Faust.

**I must apologise to the production team, who I initially blamed for the fact that the rabbits look like a job lot of laboratory escapees. Having looked at various traditional Chinese paintings and prints, white rabbits appear to be a thing.

***Though the cute child is pretty good as young child actors go.

****Some concepts are better just transliterated.
nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Default)
There are films/books/TV series in which the heroes decide not to listen to the villain talk interminably about their evil plan. At least I think there are. But I am drawing a complete blank for examples of shows in which the villain, asked the question "But why are you doing this to us, you evil monster!"* responds "Nope, time for you to die and me to run away." Surely someone, somewhere has done this and I've simply not seen it?

(This thought brought to you by episode 48 of The Untamed, to which my main response was "will you just SHUT UP? Oh, finally Wei Wuxian has said what it was obvious needed to be said a lot earlier.**" That said, the fact I'm on episode 48 shows its strangely addictive qualities.)

*I'm now hearing that in the voice of Spike narrating Angel from the rooftop.

**Spoiler )

Profile

nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Default)
nineveh_uk

June 2025

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags