I think they skipped the actual deer hunting part. fl said to her brother to not to go to deer hunt and rest instead…
That is right. I'm actually happy they omit the scene entirely. Trimming out the superfluous, saving on budget and logistic and no use of animal in the process. Triple win for me!
i've only seen another work of liu duan duan -the rebel princess- and there he also played a layered character.…
Yes that scene was beautifully filmed. I felt the level of details and care poured into those few minutes.
The poem, the background song Not in Vain lyrics and timing, the painting itself, the inner monologue, the setting and lighting during that specific scene, the multi angles of the cameras, the focus on both his face and the lady in the painting ...
Everything, absolutely everything was coherent and fitting together.
And his acting, small gestures, delicate facial expression until the final stroke on the painting: focusing on his face. His eyes full of emotion while the rest of his visage stand still as if frozen.
It wasn't overwhelming. Overacting. Some might even miss it entirely. Because of the subtility. But we viewer saw through it
But as you said so well. he convincingly illustrated the coming to realization of his own inner sentiment that he wasn't even aware of. As if from an out of body standpoint witnessing himself unfolding in front of the thread of fate. The awaress brought to him by the portrait representboth a solace and a curse.
For me Wei Yin character from the drama can be a character taken out directly from a greek tragedy.
Petition pleaseeeee.... another drama of them Liu Yuning and Song Zu Er pleaseeeee either modern or Historical…
I had a vision of Lareina being a witty and successful CEO and her competitors wants to eliminate her so they are sending assassins after her. LYN with an obscure background will be a mercenary who will chose to protect her. LYN will have to take on physical and combat training à la John Wick to fit the role 😝
And even though he loves manman, he always smiles whenever he sees she's happy with wei shao🥲i don't understand…
Thus far, i collected that it's because the actor isn't visually appealing enough, his hair is bothering them, doesn't act well enough, looks like a villain, he must be a villain equation, his character comes in between the two main leads and having unrequited love is a capital crime because how one dares to make a painting this obscene amongst the few that i bothered on remembering. 😮💨
I won't dwelve into the double standards i came across for our mental health.
1st picture: effortlessly
2nd picture: no one saw me
3rd picture: streching to release ...
But I'm not sure about this two 艦舱. I feel like there is some hidden anuendo ... a sexual one at that.. example
"Streching to release pent-up" or something....
I might have read too much into thing. Or it just me having a dirty mind coming from the lack of sleep.
Then again, nowadays some might have eyes and yet still cannot reconize Mount Tai. 😑
The poem, the background song Not in Vain lyrics and timing, the painting itself, the inner monologue, the setting and lighting during that specific scene, the multi angles of the cameras, the focus on both his face and the
lady in the painting ...
Everything, absolutely everything was coherent and fitting together.
And his acting, small gestures, delicate facial expression until the final stroke on the painting: focusing on his face. His eyes full of emotion while the rest of his visage stand still as if frozen.
It wasn't overwhelming. Overacting. Some might even miss it entirely. Because of the subtility. But we viewer saw through it
But as you said so well. he convincingly illustrated the coming to realization of his own inner sentiment that he wasn't even aware of. As if from an out of body standpoint witnessing himself unfolding in front of the thread of fate. The awaress brought to him by the portrait representboth a solace and a curse.
For me Wei Yin character from the drama can be a character taken out directly from a greek tragedy.
I won't dwelve into the double standards i came across for our mental health.
My poor baby Wei Yan