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The Double chinese drama review
Completed
The Double
1 people found this review helpful
by kookiejamz
11 days ago
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 3.0
Story 2.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 10.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

Screenwriter's hatred for WOMEN is off the roof

Xue Fangfei promised Jiang Li so many things, only to be a huge let down. I could dismiss all the silly plotholes, weird tone shifts, and the FL dumbing down for the ML since it's a Mary Sue revenge plot, but the screenwriter's seeping misogyny was too hard to ignore.

The story basically dumps all of the two FL's suffering onto the stepmother and those stereotypical evil women side characters. These characters are one-dimensional, existing only as plot devices to push the story forward, with no real personality or emotional depth. Even when there's no real reason to hate Xue Fangfei (jealousy?), the story still forces and amplifies it. The real Jiang Li knows her father is the real instigator and hates all of the Jiang family equally, whereas Fangfei ends up reconciling with father Jiang, disrespecting Jiang Li's dying wish. This is a textbook case of excusing men and shifting responsibility away from them.

In this storyline, Fangfei even comes off as an enabler of patriarchy. Fangfei has enough money to buy Qiongzhi's freedom. But instead, as a woman, she turns a blind eye to Qiongzhi's suffering and exploits Qiongzhi's body to save a man.

Xue Fangfei is a hypocrite. She said she hates rumors that tarnish a woman's reputation—but only when they concern herself. To others, she’s more than willing to add fuel to the fire. Imagine surviving sexual violence then dying from it, only for your boyfriend’s sister to tell him you ran off and wed someone else—misdirecting his grief while erasing your victimhood, your contributions, and your reputation—in a society where a woman’s worth was tied to her virtue. That's a surprising low EQ move coming from a protagonist that had good performance up until now.

The malice toward supporting female characters (all good and evil) is expressed through the destruction of their reputation, appearance, bodies, and reproductive organs. There are countless ways to justify antagonist Princess Wanning's fall into darkness, yet the writers once again resorted to sexual violence. Likewise, there are countless ways for the protagonist to defeat Princess Wanning, but the writers specifically chose childbirth.

I can't believe something like this is able to get a 8.8 rating on MDL, where the main users are female. It's 6.6 on Douban.
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