8.6 for such a bad show is crazy it is like i was just fast forwarding each episode bcz there was nthg that i…
For drama with a similar theme and a female general, watch Fated Hearts. FH is better than this one. FH handles "falling from a cliff" and "amnesia" very well.
With the ending saying this is basically only season 1, do we know how well the drama did and what are the chances…
I do hope they will continue this show. In the meantime, I will watch the donghua. The story is basically the same, but the donghuaâs quality is superbâalmost realistic. I just wish that, in the drama version, they would explore Han Li and Mo Caihuanâs reincarnation relationship more and establish it as the main love line throughout the story. I donât like Nangong Wang or the nature of her relationship with Han Li. I find Mo Caihuan more relatable and pure compared to the others.
Do you know what "realistic" means? It refers to things that are grounded in reality, not reality itself.…
Maybe you can learn something by watching Mulan (2009) as the closest comparison. Study Vicky Zhou's portrayal of a female soldier in that movie. The actress is beautiful, and she plays "man" in a humanly realistic manner.
This is adapted from a novel aimed at a target audience. When it's made into a drama, inevitably it will look…
Yeah. This drama undermines its own premise by revealing the FLâs true gender far too soon. If being female in the military is taboo in this universe, her feminine side should have been hidden much longer to preserve tension and raise the stakes. The worldbuilding promises high-stakes secrecy, but the execution leaks it away from the start.
When I saw her fall from the cliff I said ânot again! Please spare us the amnesia plot.â I thought theyâd…
I think this drama undermines its own premise by revealing the FLâs true gender far too soon. If being female in the military is taboo in this universe, her feminine side should have been hidden much longer to preserve tension and raise the stakes. Instead, from episode 1, her mannerisms, voice, and ease in womenâs attire make her disguise implausibleâespecially after years of serving as a man among soldiers. This lack of believability flattens suspense. The worldbuilding promises high-stakes secrecy, but the execution leaks it away from the start.
Wow, this comment section is all over the place! I'd just like to point out that dramas adapted from novels rarely…
Do you know what "realistic" means? It refers to things that are grounded in reality, not reality itself. A story is fiction. It is not real and did not actually happen in reality. To say whether a story is realistic, we evaluate the elements in it by the degree to which that fiction could possibly occur in real life.
Figures like a female general are fiction. So, of course, we can't and won't expect this figure to be a real person in history. However, we generally have some common knowledge about how a military general (as a masculine role) is "born", should behave, live, solve problems, lead others, etc. As we have "male general" as a template, we compare the female one here to the template. That is how we find some gaps and say some things are not realistic/ not believable enough to help us enjoy the story as a whole.
I know most of us love this drama. But some others just cannot shut their eyes and ignore the gaps between what should be and what actually is.
I just think that if being femaleâor assuming a false identityâis considered taboo in the military in this universe, the drama should have kept the feminine side of FL hidden for as long as possible, because such information could have significantly raised the stakes of the story in a positive direction.
But, unfortunately, this drama has already been leaking this critical secret to us since episode 1, through the FLâs subtle behavior and the way she carries herself comfortably when dressed in women's attire. After years of serving in the military, living among men, and most of her life being a boy/ young man, it is highly improbable for a woman to still talk and walk like a woman. Thatâs why, for some new viewers (not the novel readers), thereâs not much left to spark curiosity about the FL as a character.
The only thing making the FL a man is the viewerâs own stubborn insistence, despite knowing full well she is a woman. Isn't that silly? Thatâs why many viewers canât wait to see when the FL will finally be revealed as a woman. IMO, if the worldbuilding and story premise are right from the beginning, we shouldnât and wouldn't be waiting eagerly for her identity as a woman to be revealed.
This is adapted from a novel aimed at a target audience. When it's made into a drama, inevitably it will look…
I wish we had another drama like "Nirvana in Fire" where we have a female general character like Mu Nihuang. She is a general without pretending about her female identity. She is strong and mature.
Or, like Mulan in Mulan (2009), played by Zhao Wei/ Vicky Zhao, who perfectly portrayed a female military character from zero to hero. She stayed a man when in duty and only returned to be a female when she had to infiltrate the enemy camp, and when the war was over, and she finally came home.
Both actresses playing these characters are beautiful, but for the sake of the story, their beauty and romance plot are simplified, and their masculine personality side and maturity are amplified, so the audience can focus on their main role as military figures.
1. Who is Fang Zhou? Why is he important and his death angered many people?
2. Who is Yique Yingyang? Why is he important and hated by many?
3. Who is Tang Lici actually? Is he a monarch, a martial artist, or a deity?
Figures like a female general are fiction. So, of course, we can't and won't expect this figure to be a real person in history. However, we generally have some common knowledge about how a military general (as a masculine role) is "born", should behave, live, solve problems, lead others, etc. As we have "male general" as a template, we compare the female one here to the template. That is how we find some gaps and say some things are not realistic/ not believable enough to help us enjoy the story as a whole.
I know most of us love this drama. But some others just cannot shut their eyes and ignore the gaps between what should be and what actually is.
I just think that if being femaleâor assuming a false identityâis considered taboo in the military in this universe, the drama should have kept the feminine side of FL hidden for as long as possible, because such information could have significantly raised the stakes of the story in a positive direction.
But, unfortunately, this drama has already been leaking this critical secret to us since episode 1, through the FLâs subtle behavior and the way she carries herself comfortably when dressed in women's attire. After years of serving in the military, living among men, and most of her life being a boy/ young man, it is highly improbable for a woman to still talk and walk like a woman. Thatâs why, for some new viewers (not the novel readers), thereâs not much left to spark curiosity about the FL as a character.
The only thing making the FL a man is the viewerâs own stubborn insistence, despite knowing full well she is a woman. Isn't that silly? Thatâs why many viewers canât wait to see when the FL will finally be revealed as a woman. IMO, if the worldbuilding and story premise are right from the beginning, we shouldnât and wouldn't be waiting eagerly for her identity as a woman to be revealed.
Just a piece of my thought.
Or, like Mulan in Mulan (2009), played by Zhao Wei/ Vicky Zhao, who perfectly portrayed a female military character from zero to hero. She stayed a man when in duty and only returned to be a female when she had to infiltrate the enemy camp, and when the war was over, and she finally came home.
Both actresses playing these characters are beautiful, but for the sake of the story, their beauty and romance plot are simplified, and their masculine personality side and maturity are amplified, so the audience can focus on their main role as military figures.
This rating is a blind rating, ignoring problems such as plot holes, relatability, believability, characterization, and weird introduction.