cashew: dude with sunglasses looking confused (Misc // Haa?)
[personal profile] cashew

One of the frustrating things about looking for fic in CN is the overwhelming amount of unequal relationships. Maybe this is just as bad in the EN fic-sphere and I didn't notice because I just wasn't really paying attention to the meta stuff because I was too busy being annoyed at OOC writing. But in CN writing, after looking through the archives for three different completely unrelated fandoms, the glaring trope of an unequal relationship is really starting to bug me.

This problem is this unequal relationship is also painfully blatant in the canon material, too. So maybe I'm just getting sensitized. But man I hate it.

I'm really tired of writers romanticizing the dynamic where one person does all the emotional labor while the other person just gets to be brainless and do whatever they want, trusting their friend/romantic-interest to pick up the pieces and wipe up after them.

In HSR, 景元 is doing all the cleaning up after 丹枫/丹恒. (This is kind of especially bad given how 丹恒 is supposed to be part of the Main Character Party and should be doing heroics, yet somehow the narrative steadfastly refuses to acknowledge just how much effort 景元 put into saving the guy's ass from prison. Like would it kill the guy to say "thanks for getting me out of jail, I owe you my life"?) In 《御赐小仵作》, 景翊 is doing all the social elbow greasing for 萧瑾瑜, despite the latter being higher ranked than the former. In 《君子盟》, 王砚 is constantly putting himself into politically dangerous (aka life threatening) situations to help 兰珏 out of whatever mess he got himself into. Simultaneously, 兰珏 is putting himself constantly in danger to cover 张屏's social incompetence.

And it's not just friends that get shafted. In 《御赐小仵作》, 楚楚 is a socially incompetent airhead who just walks into danger like an idiot while 萧瑾瑜 has to make plan after plan to keep her safe. Which then results in his friends & older brother (that's three separate people!) having to chase after the idiot to keep him safe. Because all must sacrifice in the name of romance.

But honestly I'm just frickin' tired of main characters who are socially incompetent idiots. Can we for once have a politically suave and socially well adjusted main character? I swear we (C-dramas) use to write this type of story. Where the main character is intelligent, both politically and emotionally, and the main obstacles comes from the antagonist setting up (social/political) traps while the main character has to figure out how to disarm or avoid said traps and the drama comes from the main character maneuvering to outsmart the enemy rather than having them dig the hole deeper and deeper themselves.

Like what happened to the smart and socially competent main character? I'd like to be able to like a main character for once. Gah.


Edit to add: I've noticed that shows with homely actors tend to write more likable main characters whereas every "pretty" series (where eye candy is clearly a priority) inevitably falls down in this aspect. Sadly, modern C-dramas are lacking in homely actors. I desperately need a show where the average age of actors are 45+ or something. Because good fucking lord these young ones cannot emote.

Date: 2024-10-13 06:58 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
Could it have anything to do with the age of the fandom? I don't remember much of EN fics I was into in the past... but I am kinda reminded of the woobie!Tony trope thing again. Also a little reminded of the nu!Kirk fics after ST09. Do you recall what was popular in the HP fandom?

Or, it could be a target audience thing. Imperial era cdramas are typically aimed for younger girls more, than, say, modern family drama shows.

Also, a "smart and socially competent main character" just doesn't lend itself to easy drama or conflict. A well written novel might have the room to develop such a character, but TV or movies will probably not go that route. Like, offhand, I am hard pressed to think of any such examples. (And honestly, both smart and socially competent in EN stories tend to be a flag for villain characters than hero...)


Edited Date: 2024-10-13 07:14 (UTC)

Date: 2024-10-13 16:20 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
I would say that shounen and shoujou stories tend to be different also due to the marketed audience. But it doesn't feel like something set in stone, and could also be due to the quality of writing. And then there's like Tenipuri where you sometimes can't tell which market they're aiming at, lol.

With period dramas, I think they have different subcategories. Eg. Though taking place in the same dynasty,《雍正王朝》 falls under (历史)正剧, while 《如懿传》falls under 故偶. The former is targeted more towards adult audiences, the latter young female audiences who are just there for the romance. Based on general sentiments from the TV show forum on douban, there's a general complaint 故偶 quality has been going down the gutter over time, as story and plot get sacrificed for bad directing and actor/idol politics. And there's also complaints that new 历史正剧 continuously run the risk of getting taken over by romance plots that never existed in history, because there's no confidence that people are willing to watch actual history dramas anymore.

Speaking of Star Trek and Comic examples you give, it also makes me wonder if there is also a slow shift over time that reflects the generational changes (or perceived changes). Like, if we take Trek, the original TOS!Kirk was an intelligent and suave guy, not really a womanizer if you actually look at his episodes. However, pop culture warped his characterization, and when they recreated him in ST09, they went with the memetic caricature of him, who was smart, but also an edgy asshole (and not well socialized). Similarly, Picard in his recent serial "Picard" is a more edgier than original TNG (which granted, may partially be due to Stewart indulging in some mid life fantasies or something).

As for comics, if we look at Superman, his original movies didn't emote much, but certainly wasn't the emo wreck that was the latest movie. If we look at the TV shows, the older "Lois and Clark" series was romance centric, but definitely geared towards adult audiences with mature views of romance, and had mature characters. Whereas the newer "Smallville" series was aimed at younger audiences, and had much more emo and edgy main.

The act of grim darkness taking over the industry...would you see that more as due to a change of tastes within the writers own preferences? Or them catering to (or thinking they need to cater to) a reflection of the change of taste in the audience?
Edited Date: 2024-10-13 16:24 (UTC)

Date: 2024-10-14 06:10 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
Tenipuri also felt like the manga and the anime (and the various other medium spinoffs) were each their own different beasts sometimes, lol. XDXD

Wrt to 古偶 taking over, the general blame I've seen being cast is that romance-focus is the only subgenre that still "sells" anymore, as in, retains a decent enough audience to "make up" for the costs of filming. What with the generation that only watches TV gradually, giving away to the generations that grew up with internet, and also the rise of the generation that grew up with short videos (douyin).

I'm not sure I buy all of that entire chain of logic, but it is probably true that focusing on romance over politics is probably easier to write for than anything plot-heavy, because all you need is an attractive enough cast and the audience can do half the work for you in shipping them. *shrug* Could just well be people being lazy or the industry getting a little too...em...capitalistic? :p

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