So Much More Than NC Scenes
The series has not finished airing, so this is a preliminary review because I am reading so much vitriol around this title.
All the talk about this series concerns the NC scenes. Yes, they are many and they are legend, but I take serious umbrage with those who are saying the NC scenes are the totality of the series. We are witnessing two characters Sasom (an actor) and Po (an illustrator) who seemingly enter into an erotic contract purely for sexual gratification. Both characters use sex not only to self-medicate and wrest control back for their lives, but they use sex to keep others at arms length. What unravels between them is a slow lowering of emotional and psychological walls- and yes, that lowering happens first through sex. Their emotional and psychological bond is formed in the moments they spend together after sexual encounters, when the artifice (or contractual purpose) of their relationship slips and they are human with each other.
To state there is no plot is to state that you might not be paying attention to a portrayal of one of the oldest defense mechanisms men and women use when they are emotionally and psychologically fragile- sex. This is a mature examination of what happens after the pretense of orgasm lends itself to emotional vulnerability.
There is a narrative arc for the couple and character arcs for the individuals (though admittedly, up to episode six, this seems more clear with Po).
We don't often see characters who hide in sex when all they want is emotional connection. Only Friends did it (and did it well) and that series was lauded for its bravery and frankness. Peach Lover, in my opinion, is taking Sasom and Po on a similar emotional awakening and is doing so without trope.
I will say, however, that criticism is warranted for the second couple. They are so tonally mismatched with the overall tone of the larger narrative that I feel like I'm watching amateur hour whenever they are onscreen.
I commend the director and actors for their bravery in telling a story they had to know would be wildly misinterpreted: all attention paid to NC scenes without some of the audience bothering to do the work of attempting to see their purpose in the larger narrative.
The series hasn't concluded, so they may not stick the landing. This is a series for a mature-minded audience who understands that sometimes, for far too many broken people, it is easier to get naked with your body than it is with your heart and mind. Finding that balance- to be naked physically, emotionally, and mentally in equal measure- is a healing journey and one worth telling and spending time with. Do they tell this story perfectly? No. Do they tell it well if you are paying attention- yes.
All the talk about this series concerns the NC scenes. Yes, they are many and they are legend, but I take serious umbrage with those who are saying the NC scenes are the totality of the series. We are witnessing two characters Sasom (an actor) and Po (an illustrator) who seemingly enter into an erotic contract purely for sexual gratification. Both characters use sex not only to self-medicate and wrest control back for their lives, but they use sex to keep others at arms length. What unravels between them is a slow lowering of emotional and psychological walls- and yes, that lowering happens first through sex. Their emotional and psychological bond is formed in the moments they spend together after sexual encounters, when the artifice (or contractual purpose) of their relationship slips and they are human with each other.
To state there is no plot is to state that you might not be paying attention to a portrayal of one of the oldest defense mechanisms men and women use when they are emotionally and psychologically fragile- sex. This is a mature examination of what happens after the pretense of orgasm lends itself to emotional vulnerability.
There is a narrative arc for the couple and character arcs for the individuals (though admittedly, up to episode six, this seems more clear with Po).
We don't often see characters who hide in sex when all they want is emotional connection. Only Friends did it (and did it well) and that series was lauded for its bravery and frankness. Peach Lover, in my opinion, is taking Sasom and Po on a similar emotional awakening and is doing so without trope.
I will say, however, that criticism is warranted for the second couple. They are so tonally mismatched with the overall tone of the larger narrative that I feel like I'm watching amateur hour whenever they are onscreen.
I commend the director and actors for their bravery in telling a story they had to know would be wildly misinterpreted: all attention paid to NC scenes without some of the audience bothering to do the work of attempting to see their purpose in the larger narrative.
The series hasn't concluded, so they may not stick the landing. This is a series for a mature-minded audience who understands that sometimes, for far too many broken people, it is easier to get naked with your body than it is with your heart and mind. Finding that balance- to be naked physically, emotionally, and mentally in equal measure- is a healing journey and one worth telling and spending time with. Do they tell this story perfectly? No. Do they tell it well if you are paying attention- yes.
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