She choose this misery herself. She knew from beginning he was gay. She said it herself. She told her dad she…
Has he risen to such a level because he made that choice, or was it because Dhevi's father made that choice for him, as he was his pupil, the same moment he killed his lover and ordered him to marry his daughter? Sure, he still took the risk of falling in love which was a choice (and probably his only one at that), but that still has nothing to do with him being forced into a marriage by a selfish woman and his selfish father. Dhevi is not a victim of the time nor of the circumstances: she is/was a privileged woman with power who chose to trap a gay man for her own selfish desire.
A real queen for selfishly trapping a gay man in a marriage and basically being the reason for the disappearance…
What are you not getting that SHE brought this on herself? He didn't choose to marry her, SHE chose him, and he was FORCED to do that when his relationship with his lover was exposed. He was forced to do that when they killed win because he was an obstacle to the path that her father and dhevi chose for him. Nothing about this marriage was in his power from the start.
People praising and excusing a selfish manipulator just because she's a woman, how predictable. I beg you to stop babying women. Also, if you think this came out of the blue and makes no sense, please rewatch the series, as it was hinted that she was her father's daughter.
She choose this misery herself. She knew from beginning he was gay. She said it herself. She told her dad she…
Did he really have a choice, tho? Let's say he refused the "order" to marry her and even abandoned the military life after the disappearance of his lover, do you think her father would have let him go without exposing his homosexuality? To me that's not what a choice is.
I like that Dhevi became a villain in the end. She's a member of the most powerful elite class in Thailand, she…
Exactly, i clocked her being her father's daughter when she said "if only my father was here" in relation to Naran dragging Krailert in the news during the first episodes. I only needed that sentence to understand that she was cut from the same cloth of her father. But some people don't really pay attention and it shows
We love you Trin, we love you Thanwa, we love you Krailert, we love you Naran, FUCK YOU DHEVI, we love you Victor, we love you Veera, we love the students' gang. That's all, that's my review.
Okay, so I've finally binge-watched all the episodes, and while I'm dropping this, I have to admit that the hype is well-deserved, because it is objectively a good series. My reasons for dropping it are mainly about my personal expectations not being met (which is not the series' fault, just my preferences). Anyway, hope you all keep on enjoying this series and hype it up, and even though it didn't work out for me, I encourage everyone to give it a shot and form their own opinion because it deserves it.
I have mixed feelings about this series, it is objectively a very good series, from the acting to the plot, but watching it was so painstakingly frustrating to the point that it drove me to madness sometimes. Also 15 episodes were too many, it could have done with the 8 or 12 format
I think nuanced thinking is dead, people can't criticize a character's action anymore that the actor's stans get…
To think nuanced you need to have common sense which is why people are so bad at it because they don't have it. What you're saying is right, all these people can manage is seeing things as black or white and it's deeply sad and unsettling. We are so cooked
Something abt MileApo fans probably being MA fans bc they could see the nuance of the immoral actions of a charater…
I think nuanced thinking is dead, people can't criticize a character's action anymore that the actor's stans get super defensive. Two things can be true at once, for example: Yes, Trin driven by the extreme emotional distress and feeling of betrayal used violence. No, he isn't an abusive person. Yes, Tanwa driven by his own trauma hid the true because he wanted to protect Trin. No, he didn't do everything he could do to prevent what happened. Anyway, i have to agree i find it sad that the discussion about this emotionally packed episode seems to revolve around who to blame between Trin and Tanwa when this was never the point.
Why am i only realizing that pracha let krailert lead the operation just to make him the scapegoat? Maybe i'm dumb, but i swear you can watch these episodes over 100 times and you'll still pick up something new each time
My heart hurts so much for Victor's family, can you imagine the pain of his father having his son murdered by the same authoritarian system he run away from? I don't think I'll ever move on from Victor, what he represent is too much important in these times
That's all, that's my review.
Anyway, i have to agree i find it sad that the discussion about this emotionally packed episode seems to revolve around who to blame between Trin and Tanwa when this was never the point.