cashew: Minako's transformation pen (SailorMoon // pen is mightier)
[personal profile] cashew

So first, NaNo Scandal.

Second, will be busy hosting family.

Third, I'm kind of on the wrong fandom kick for generating fic. Right now I'm bouncing between HSR (although technically only running around in the 景枫/景恒 stuff), 《君子盟》 (兰砚知己), and 敖李敖 RPS. None of these things are inspiring me to write long fic. (Yes, I do intend to finish that one 凤求凤 effort...I'm just...building my vocabulary. Ahem.)

Fourth, I want the golden age of mysteries to come back again.


Meanwhile, as I'm ever so slowly slogging through the last quarter of 《少年歌行》, I'm seeing a lot of elements that also show up in HSR. 飞剑, sword nerds, elemental power associations, 药师 as the evil cult, evil cults existing, 剑首/剑魁, 以身为剑, five-man band... I know some of these are more generic storytelling tropes, but some stuff, like 药师, feels a little narrow and are possibly plagiarized ideas. Or just repeatedly copied to the point of meaninglessness. I don't know; clearly I haven't read enough modern Wuxia to figure out which are tropes and which are over-plagiarized proper nouns. Point is, I'm guessing 《少年歌行》 (the novel, which was initially published in 2017) was probably fairly influential (both in the ideas it invented and ideas it revitalized). There was a while when Wuxia was a bit of a dead genre, but then now it's everywhere again, which may be due to the novel's popularity.

(Or CGI is finally good enough that people can enjoy the power up eye candy instead of cringing at the really cheesy special effects.)

Again, I don't follow the genre evolution close enough to say one way or another. I'm just noticing a lot of repeating tropes/themes/ideas and it's like...who's copying whom?


And on a completely different note again, I've given up on reading web novels. Like, it's technically good writing, 100 points for style, but the content is so bland. Also, it's utterly baffling to me (and many viewers) why the production company bought the IP for 《张公案》 when the final product (《君子盟》) has nothing to do with the original work. Other than the names, nothing is the same. Backstory, personality, inter-personal dynamics, plot...pretty much everything is original. At this point, why still call it an adaptation and not just sell it as an original work? I'm so, so confused.

Date: 2024-10-30 05:49 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
Flying swords are definitely generic xianxia trope. 以身为剑 stuff goes back further to general wuxia.

Elemental power associations, assuming you're talking about 金木水火土 spirit roots and such, that's a generic CN fiction trope.

Evil cults in general are a wuxia trope (and a historical fact)... is there some specific evil cult trait you're focusing on?

Five man band...I automatically think Power Rangers, lol. Or maybe Sailor Moon?

> Also, it's utterly baffling to me (and many viewers) why the production company bought the IP for 《张公案》 when the final product (《君子盟》) has nothing to do with the original work.

Yeah, I have seen the same to with romcom adaptations. I feel like they buy the IP and call it adaption purely to use the existing character names to attract the book audience of a popular work to watch the show.

Date: 2024-10-30 15:31 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
Ah, the super special 雷风冰 elements. Yeah, those are also pretty common in fiction. Generally they come up more in like superpowers fiction (along with 光/暗 elements) than period era fiction, but they do crop up in xianxia occasionally.

> I know it stems from cults promising longevity to people being a thing, but like...they aren't usually successful at influencing the government. Is that old or new?

I dunno... all the daoists making their pills for the emperors, that one Ming emperor who spent more time making pills than holding court and was nearly killed by his servant girls... I would say this stuff comes from history.

> Surely the readership can't possibly be large enough to sustain this business model?

I mean, I can't think of any other reason for spending money to buy an existing IP and then mutilating it beyond recognition. *shrug*

Date: 2024-10-31 03:50 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
> But which doaist was actually ever influencing court politics?

姜子牙?:p The recent 封神榜 movie trilogy (in the works) immediately comes to mind...

> The sad part is the mutilation is often for the better.

Well sure. Ultimately the point of change from book to screenplay wouldn't be to make it *worse* on purpose. That would be even more crazy.
Edited Date: 2024-10-31 03:52 (UTC)

Date: 2024-11-01 01:46 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
> Historically he served under 周文公, so he preceded the Daoist religion. Although I concede he became a retroactive daoist.

Well, if we're just talking fictional works, his novel was written during Ming.

For that matter, Journey to the West fits the bill too. How many kingdoms along the route were manipulated or outright usurped by supernatural forces? That one place where the king ordered 100 children to be prepped for sacrifice based on a lie of achieving immortality comes to mind.

In that respect, this trope goes back to pretty far in the history of novels, at least.
Edited Date: 2024-11-01 01:47 (UTC)

January 2026

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18 19 2021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Page generated Tuesday, January 27th, 2026 12:18
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios