rogueslayer452: (Daisy Johnson. Origin story.)
[personal profile] rogueslayer452
++ I'm still accepting questions/prompts for the fandom meme, which I'll be answering shortly. :)

++ I've been thinking about the kinds of narratives that I like seeing in fiction, ones that aren't as used as frequently, at least from the things that I consume. And I kind of want to talk about them briefly.

01. Friendship breakups / fall-outs. Fiction will almost always focus on the breakup of a romantic relationship, but it's rare when it comes to how equally heartbreaking and tragic friendship breakups are. Whether it's from a specific incident or gradually drifting apart, friendship breakups can be just as painful as anything. I feel like we've been fed this "romance comes and goes, but friendships are forever" mentality which, yes, friendships are important to have, but even they can have expiration dates and seeing those fall-outs played out in fiction can be rather cathartic, especially if it's open-ended. Will they reconcile in the future? Will they just learn to accept that things can never go back to the way it was? Will they forever stay bitter and hold a grudge? I like that. It's bittersweet and angsty, but it's something that I really like because it's so meaty since there are a lot of factors that can go into it.

(Additionally to that, the fact that we get to see the slowly falling out of love with said friend or even a romantic partner, that we see the gradual shift of how these people, who were once so close, are just not on the same page anymore. It hurts, it's painful, it can get messy, but it's necessary.)

02. Reformed bully. Having characters who were former bullies, usually kids and teenagers, turning over a new leaf and spending the rest of their lives atoning for those mistakes and misdeeds is something so juicy to me. I like seeing their continued struggles, of attempting to better themselves, of figuring out how to unlearn the things that they had hurt people with before in the past, of them going through those motions of people not believing in them, not forgiving them, that past relationships/friendships might never be restored, etc, and seeing them still fighting regardless because of their guilt, of feeling remorse, and wanting to do better, be better. I've seen people recoil from this narrative because sometimes redemption arcs aren't that well-handled in fiction since there's a lot of those steps I just mentioned that are skipped, or aren't explored enough.

03. Character regression. When a character is going on a journey, and we see them progressing throughout the story, throughout their arc, only for them to go through some shit, and suddenly they start circling back around to where they first started out just in a completely different place, that's also juicy and meaty. When done well, that is. Sadly, a lot of times it's done without rhyme or reason or simply for shock value, which sucks, because I do believe that it is still character development even when it's going down a negative road, it just has to have a narrative reason for why that happened.


++ So....I watched the first episode of Guardian. I honestly didn't know what I expected, but it wasn't that. None of the gifsets or the few things I learned via fandom osmosis prepared me for that kind of an opening to the series. I'm actually surprised I managed to remain as spoiler-free as I did, considering how much I see of it everywhere. I do have a little bit more on my plate right now (still winding down from my other shows, and just mentally in generally), and I mainly just wanted to test out the first episode to see if it was going to be a drama I'd be interested in down the road, and I'm not gonna lie, it has gotten me curious. It'll be on my "to watch later" list.

Date: 2022-04-11 10:39 pm (UTC)
grayswandir: The Black-Cloaked Envoy in his mask. (Guardian: Black-Cloaked Envoy)
From: [personal profile] grayswandir
Yeah -- from what I understand, they don't allow "magic" or anything not explainable by science in shows/movies that take place later than... I think the Republican Era? So magical ancient history is okay, but not magical modern settings. (Supposedly the argument is that showing magic in fictional media promotes superstition. :P ) I haven't read the Guardian novel, but I believe it has ghosts/spirits rather than aliens. (The Lost Tomb books also feature supernatural stuff like zombies, which the shows had to make up hazy "scientific" explanations for. But apparently as long as you can say "it's a genetic mutation that makes them have these magic powers," it's fine...)

Date: 2022-04-12 11:32 am (UTC)
profiterole_reads: (HOB - Hua Cheng and Xie Lian)
From: [personal profile] profiterole_reads
Thanks for the confirmation! I did wonder about wuxia being allowed. As for DMBJ, I had noticed that they were playing with "is this magic or is this real (via science and a lot of very specific hallucinations)?" lol

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