Short, simple, playful, straightforward and cute. Full of heart and wispy charm. Also rather smoothly done and well-played by these cute lads. Mind Trio really has a talent for this sort of charmers. Calculating Love has similar vibes and qualities also.
Someday, somehow, there will be drinking in a BL and nobody will vomit all over the place. They had like four…
It is not 100% it was beer. As far as I know in the Philippines spirit and liqueur are often put into bottles like this. We don't know how much they were drinking. They had lucid conversation while we saw those 4 bottles per each, they might have carried on drinking afterwards. Hours might have passed between that scene on the terrace and vomiting in the bathroom. And Asians generally have low alcohol tolerance. My Asian ex-bf literally got tipsy and dizzy from two glasses of cider.
He also got a part in Wabi Sabi's 7 Project. So he is coming back. All his haters could take their friggin' "toxic" buzzword and shove it up where the Sun does not shine.
Papa & Daddy season 2 just got the support funding from Taiwan's Minstry of Culture. That is, they got the funding from the government. And the producer, writer and others involved just happily announced that season 2 was coming.
I cannot get my head around whether the Mon-Team stuff was just role playing. It is so campily out-of-character in both of their cases, it just does not make any sense. And that is not how they act and behave at the end.
I still see many people throwing around the phrase "Once a cheater always a cheater." What evidence do you have…
It is probably time to set up a collection of "The most stupefyingly inept bullshit slogans sexually frustrated teenage girl and spinster SJWs of BL fandom could come up with". This "once a cheater always a cheater" and "drunken people cannot give a consent" are strong contenders, for sure.
To all the people who are saying the dialogues are unrealistic, I feel thoughts like that do come out when you…
The dialogue is certainly not realistic but I don't get why it should be. Conversation Piece or Talk Piece is a genre with exactly this sort of language. Playwrights like Noël Coward, Neil Simon, Bernard Slade or George Axelrod made a career of writing plays where the characters speak in such literate, sometimes philosophical one-liners. And that goes for the movies of writer-director Whit Stillman. It is a special kind of entertainment.
The first epsiode gave me Taiwanese BL vibes á la Trapped, with a touch of Where Your Eyes Linger, but the second episode went more on conventional Thai lines. Boat and Gun are fine, Gun has improved a lot in the second episode acting-wise compared to the first one. The Pitch-Bank drunk scene was embarrassing, what they did after however was cute.
Some of us here need to chill. I have watched plenty of series, and I find Nitiman to be very refreshing, and…
I am totally with you. I enjoy this show most of the time. It is not perfect, there are some illogical aspects and under-developed narrative issues, but on the whole it is a decent enough time-passer. I honesty don't get how this series could infuriate so many people to grudge and even being mad at it to such extent over the weeks. This is just not that sort of stuff.
After watching the first two episodes, I have to tell that it is one of the rare cases when the remake seems to be even an improvement on the original.
The Hong Kong version of Ossan's Love is freaking hilarious so far.
It slightly tones down the over-the-top anime-like aspects of the Japanese original and all the better for it. It is smooth, fast-moving, sprightly and visually expressive. The cinematography is slick, the dialogue is witty, there are plenty of smart one-liners and wisecracks, and even the characterizations seem to be bolder and more detailed also. The greatest turn is probably the character of the Boss who is not a gloomy and lonely old chap, but a self-confident, seductive middle-aged dandy and charmer who seems determined to get the boy he wants. Quite a few other side characters added as well, and they are all quite amusing (the bartender and his outspoken sister, for instance).
Nothing groundbreaking but a pleasant enough, glossy fluff. There are some awkward moments, but quite a few casual wit as well. The contrasting personalities of the 4 guys are amusing.
"His own sexual frustrations and inability to admit that he is gay led to his violent demeanor. Unfortunately, his character doesn’t even note the fact that Kiko said he was raped. It was disappointing to me in he doesn’t care about it at all."
1. Mark is clearly openly gay and his whole environment seems to know about this, including the clerk of his parish. 2. Kiko never told Mark that he had been raped by Roy.
Before writing a review, it is worth understanding what one sees on the screen.
https://mega.nz/file/EYwCka6a#SEhs5rm7zg4ZcAhiZK2miLVBtFn7-bfseIrLKER_39M
https://mega.nz/file/EYwCka6a#SEhs5rm7zg4ZcAhiZK2miLVBtFn7-bfseIrLKER_39M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxB8EmUuZE0
He also got a part in Wabi Sabi's 7 Project. So he is coming back. All his haters could take their friggin' "toxic" buzzword and shove it up where the Sun does not shine.
After watching the first two episodes, I have to tell that it is one of the rare cases when the remake seems to be even an improvement on the original.
The Hong Kong version of Ossan's Love is freaking hilarious so far.
It slightly tones down the over-the-top anime-like aspects of the Japanese original and all the better for it. It is smooth, fast-moving, sprightly and visually expressive. The cinematography is slick, the dialogue is witty, there are plenty of smart one-liners and wisecracks, and even the characterizations seem to be bolder and more detailed also. The greatest turn is probably the character of the Boss who is not a gloomy and lonely old chap, but a self-confident, seductive middle-aged dandy and charmer who seems determined to get the boy he wants. Quite a few other side characters added as well, and they are all quite amusing (the bartender and his outspoken sister, for instance).
I am already in love with the show.
1. Mark is clearly openly gay and his whole environment seems to know about this, including the clerk of his parish.
2. Kiko never told Mark that he had been raped by Roy.
Before writing a review, it is worth understanding what one sees on the screen.