Archive | January 2015

Into the Wild: Fairy Tales Run Amok!

Into the WildEver wonder what it would be like to throw all of the old fairy tales together and see what happens?  That’s pretty much the plot of Into the Wild by Sarah Beth Durnst.  The “Wild” is a storybook forest that’s goal is to complete story upon story of fairy tales, recycling the characters such as Rapunzel and Cinderella through their stories over and over again with no end.  Rapulzel or Zel, as she’s called in the story has beaten the Wild once before, forcing the forest into a little tumble of weeds that hides under her daughter’s bed.  All of the fairy tale characters have moved into the real world and set up homes, businesses, etc, and are all too happy to be away from their respective stories.

Julie, the daughter, has grown up knowing the characters apart from their tales and thinks of the Wild as a nuisance that eats her shoes and turns them into Seven League Boots.  She knows her grandmother, not as the witch she once was in the Wild, but as someone caring and loving, who has a good relationship with Zel and would never want her back in the tower.  Julie’s father is MIA, and no one seems to want to tell her what happened to him.

The Wild, being, well, wild, gets out of control, taking over Julie’s town and imprisoning her mother and friends back in their stories and taking townsfolk with them.  Anyone stuck in the growing forest could become a knock off Red Riding Hood or Sleeping Beauty.  Julie finds she must navigate the strange rules of the Wild in order to save her mother, grandmother, the town, the world…you get the idea.

I loved this book!  It’s a quick read and is for younger readers, so romance is thankfully thin, and the adventure thick, magical, and leafy.  References abound for those who know their Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Anderson, and the like, and the stories generally stick to their original alarming endings.

If you need a change from YA fairy tale romances, give this a try.

I also attempted to read Winterspell, a YA romance loosely based on The Nutcracker and sadly, I could not finish it.  Slinking seductively in the arms of a statue just…should not happen, I don’t care if the statue does turn out to be an enchanted prince.  The sexual awakening and predator scenes dragged the beginning of the book, and having the prince run around naked for an extended time after that just became creepy.  Guys aren’t just pieces of meat either, you know!  A lesson I dearly hope Clara learns throughout the story, though I did not want to take the time to find out.  I like to think of YA fantasy-romances as something apart from the “Romance” genre, but maybe I’m kidding myself.  At any rate, kudos to the author for trying to tell The Nutcracker in a new way.  Sadly, it just wasn’t for me.

Why Do Dramas Do That? – ebook review

Why Do Dramas Do That?Why Do Dramas Do That?: Part One is the first in an informative ebook series about Korean TV dramas, or Kdramas.  This is a must-read for any Kdrama fan, especially one not from South Korean culture.  The ebook has a lot going for it:  It is short, to the point, and separated into easily-navigated chapters detailing key South Korean culture points, lingo, characters, story arcs and the like.  This information makes watching Korean TV all the more exciting.  For instance, I had no idea just how crazy the shooting schedules of Korean TV can be, so I enjoyed the tidbits and stories regarding that the most.

The ebook is written by JavaBeans and GirlFriday, the creators of a great website called dramabeans.com.  If you want awesome Kdrama reviews, check out their site.  You won’t be disappointed, as the reviews are in depth and insightful, and it’s obvious that the writers truly appreciate the subject matter.  They also have a wealth of viewing history and thus information, so they are truly informed critics.  I, for one, cannot wait for the next part in the series.

The Assets

The AssetsThere’s no better spy story than a true spy story.  The Assets miniseries now playing on Netflix tells the real story of a mole hunt within the CIA, a hunt that started in 1985 and took many more years than it should have to find the guilty culprit.  Although I didn’t find Jodi Whittaker (BBC’s Broadchurch) to be the best choice for playing officer Sandy Grimes, she did a decent job despite her unnatural-looking blond hair, and the teenage-like tantrums that may have been more the fault of the writers/directors than the actor.  Paul Rhys (Borgia) was perfect as cocky-yet-geeky traitor Aldrich Ames.  Has ever a man been so obviously influenced by a love interest?

What keeps The Assets compelling is that it bounces between the CIA offices, the Russian assets they are recruiting, and Grimes’s difficulty balancing her secretive work with family life.  Themes running throughout the miniseries cover bureaucracy/institutionalism vs. doing the right thing, how the definitions of “traitor,” and “hero” change depending what side one is on.  Based on the book Circle of Treason by Sandy Grimes and her colleague Jeanne Vertefeuille (a wonderful performance by Harriet Walker), the series indicates that were it not for the persistence of these two women, Ames would have never been caught because the heads of the CIA didn’t really seem to care.  Chilling, if true, and a stark contrast to the KGB that is shown taking great pains to weed out any possible traitor in their midst.

Indeed, the scenes showing the fates of both the US operatives in Russia and their assets are the most compelling in the series, revealing just how sinister Ames’s actions were.  These women and those on their team are to be commended for their bravery and persistence in pursuing the truth.  The last few scenes had me in tears as truth won out.

For a full understanding at how closely The Assets fits the real story, watch the final episode, which is a documentary with real interviews and historical background.  I find the journalists’ mockery of the CIA, and especially their unfair condemnation of officer Vertefeuille to be irritating, as so many journalists, especially today, can’t defend or praise the US for any action, no matter how good, just, or honorable, people who throughout the years have most times chosen the stance opposite US interests, pretending that this stance makes them “objective.”

On the positive side, both Diane Sawyer and Ted Koppel both have obvious contempt for Ames and his wife in their interviews.  Also, it is highly embarrassing that Ames was allowed to get away with his treachery for so long, and it is remarkable that he was actually caught, and equally remarkable that the CIA did not appear to foresee such a threat.  Sandy Grimes’s obvious delight in the truth and seeing Alrich sentenced is also refreshing in a society that puts increasing emphasis on sympathizing and understanding evildoers, instead of stopping them.

It’s also refreshing to see communism portrayed correctly as an undesirable type of government, an ideology that spouts love for the common man and for freedom, but always turns out to be the exact opposite.  Communism is merely one side on the die of totalitarianism, just like socialism, fascism, and progressivism.  All four ideologies are touted by those who believe that those in power know better than the common man (incidentally this thought usually begins with a hatred of both morality and Christianity) in how to run their lives, whether it be seeing the common people as too stupid or too poor to take care of themselves, or both.

These are not friendly ideologies, but sinister ones that lead to death camps, eugenics, euthanasia, abortion, mass executions, and the like.  All four ideologies are summarized by a flagrant disregard for human life, especially the lives of those most vulnerable in society, and many in service to them are revealed in history to be some of the worst murderers and torturers that the world has ever seen.  Most chilling is the institutionalization of murder where barbaric acts are seen as “civilized,” and desirable in an “enlightened” society.  The barbarism doesn’t often happen overnight, but takes a number of years to be engrained, for any resistance to the idea that some human lives are worth more than others, needs to be quietly stamped out, as most people’s consciences initially object to such a thought.

Another side to the die, is Islamism, a system that is just as totalitarianism as the others, and currently a more immediate threat to the West, though the others aren’t far behind as the people of the West increasingly look to governments for their daily needs and tell themselves that if something is “legal” it must be “right.”  Western people condemn Christianity and Judaism for “judging,” but happily defend and embrace a religion for more censorious and dangerous.  It’s nice to watch a story in which good and evil are not swapped, and a story in which ordinary people are revealed to be the most capable in caring for the welfare of their fellow citizens.  It’s also of note for any ideology, capitalism included, that some will always want for more money/power, and will do anything to get it, even if it involves taking lives, thus the unwillingness of the CIA to understand that a traitor was in their midst.

2015 Reading List

 

books

If you’re a bookworm like myself, you like always have a stack of books waiting to be read in your spare time. Here are a few that I can’t wait to crack open and get into the adventures already!

1. Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell.  Ever since watching the BBC miniseries of North and South and Wives and Daughters, both by Ms. Gaskell, I’m hooked on her stories.  Mary Barton promises to be the most exciting of the three, as the plot boasts both a murder mystery and jail time for the leading lady.  My copy is an old paperback of my Dad’s.  He remembers the story fondly and as being pleasantly exciting, as he had to read it for school.

2. The Four Graces by D.E. Stevenson.  In 2014 I read the first of Stevenson’s books, and I think I’m in love.  She’s a comedic, yet poignant author, with relatable heroines and provincial life tales that share quaint similarities to the works of L.M Montgomery (Anne of Green Gables).

3 & 4.  The Girl Who Could Fly by Victoria Forester and Into the Wild by Sarah Beth Durst.  No year can go by without me getting my YA/juvie fantasy fix, and I have a great friend who sent me these books for the holidays, and finally, finally, I will have time to read them!

5. The Crochet Stitch Bible by Betty Barnden.  Everything I’ve every wanted to know about crocheting.  I have discovered, that no, I am not a knitter, but a crocheter, and with a long Minnesota winter settling in, I hope to crochet a few scarves and/or blankets while I get my K-drama fix.  Reading, watching, crocheting all at once.  I think I’m addicted to multitasking.

6. In the Kingdom of Ice by Hampton Sides.  I’m a shameless fan of great historical yarns, and this promises to be one, being about “the grand and terrible polar voyage of the USS Jeannette.”  I also want to get to In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick, but that won’t be until much later in the year, and I kinda want to see the movie first.

7. Poems: Rossetti by Christina Rossetti.  This is a book I bought in college.  I’ve read most of the poems, but not all, and this year would like to read it cover to cover.  Christina Rossetti is one of my favorite poets, as she combines faith and imagination in wonderful ways.

8. Winterspell by Claire Legrand. The latest book I happened to come across during my weekly wander through my local B&N. This is what sounds like a fantastic retelling of The Nutcracker, and a good after-Christmas tale to get me through the doldrums of winter.  Plus, I’m familiar enough with ballet to enjoy the references, but not such a big fan that I will shudder at every change.  I’m hoping this one’s a keeper.

9. Trolls for Dust: Season One by moi.  Shameless plugging, I know, but what writer’s blog would be complete without it?  They don’t tell you when you become a writer that you better like your own stories, because you’ll have to read and reread and reread them, especially if you’re writing a series and want to make it all cohesive and stuff.  TfD Season Two is still on its way, and I’m so glad to have writing time again.

Cheers to 2015, and as always, Happy Reading!  –Pixie

Full House Kdrama (review)

Full House KdramaGreat ideas suffer. I know this, because as a writer, I have many great ideas are hard to carry out. Great ideas and the execution problems that go with them often plague artists from all genres and all walks of life. The 2004 Korean drama Full House suffers from a great idea that was oh so poorly executed. Good writers can make bad actors look and sound good, and vice versa, but put bad writing and acting together and you end up with worse than bad: mediocre.

It’s standard rom-com stuff: Boy meets girl or girl meets boy and either one hates the other, or they both detest each other.  Full House establishes the mutual hate early on, and, honestly, there’s not a lot to like about the characters, though we sympathize with Han Ji-Eun, a good-hearted orphan who gets massively taken advantage of by two supposed friends.  She meets movie star Lee Young-Jae on the way to what she thinks is a free trip she won to Shanghai.  Panic starts to set in once she realizes that her ticket is one-way, there are no hotel reservations for her, and that she cannot reach her delightful friends who not only put her in an extremely dangerous situation, but also end up stealing and selling her house (as they aren’t the actual owners, I’m still not quite sure why they were able to do this, but, whatever, it happened).

Han Ji-Eun decides to turn to the only other Korean she knows in China, Young-Jae.  This would be like me being stuck in India and the only other American around would be Leonardo DiCaprio.  Would I ask Leo for money and/or help?  And this all after I threw up all over him on the airplane ride over?  Hmm.  Massive comedy ensues…or should ensue.  This was the first big misstep for Full House.  They could have played up this damsel in distress vs. the movies star’s view of a fan gone crazy for at least another episode or two.  Not only for laughs, but also for the romance angle, Ji-Eun’s situation could have been made far more dire.  Shanghai’s a big city and she’s quite dumb and naive at first.  It would have been great to see Young-Jae have to get her out of some other sticky situations before they even set foot back in South Korea.

But that’s not what happens.  What happens is that Ji-Eun is helped by his much cooler, much hotter, and much more confident friend.  This initial interaction at the hotel puts our romantic hero at a distinct disadvantage from which he never quite recovers.  Despite or rather because of how this girl irritates him, movie star Young-Jae helps her to get back to their country, probably hoping he’ll never see her again, but as the three rom-com fates would have it, he of course has decided to buy a new house that is of course Ji-Eun’s which has been callously sold by her two dear, dirtbag friends.  To make a long story short, the two leads decide on a contract marriage so Ji-Eun can work off the debt she owes Young-Jae and eventually get her house back.  He gets a poor attempt at making his long-time crush jealous, a move that actually works, though it really shouldn’t, as his long-time crush is longing for the better looking friend from the beginning.

What ensues after this fake marriage ceremony is a lot of cleaning. I’m talking massive amounts of cleaning that should only be shown on infomercials. Full House is named as such because it’s supposed to be full of love, but I think it’s actually full of a ton of dirt that can’t be seen by the naked eye and is wiped, brushed, and swept away by Young-Jae and Ji-Eun over the course of sixteen episodes. The insane amount of time the characters spend cleaning (and also staring into space) is such weak writing, I have to wonder if the writers of this show still have jobs. Why on earth did they think that cleaning was an interesting and romantic way to carry the story along? People do other things in their houses besides cleaning.  In addition to all of the cleaning, both leads spend the rest of their time yelling at each other like two brat siblings. These characters are supposed to be in their twenties, and while it is often charming for lovers to act childish, here it’s just one toddler tantrum after another.

On top of that there is no hint or speck (perhaps it got swept away with all the cleaning) of romance between the two! Even when two characters of the opposite sex don’t like each other, it’s often a thing in Rom-Coms (especially if they end up living together) to have them accidentally touch, bump into each other, pick the wrong moment to open the bathroom door, etc. Living with a strange (and theoretically very attractive) man for months in her own house should be unsettling as a woman for our heroine. As they grow to like each other, and because they are acting as husband and wife, it would have been more natural to have them start building a physical closeness. I’m not talking jumping right into bed like in American TV shows, but something more interesting than cleaning, perhaps? I mean, this is a movie star who is sadly not a player (that would have been too interesting), but who has a huge almost shirtless picture of himself in his own bedroom! This is also a guy who works out all of the time and there is no scene, no moment when Ji-Eun says to herself, “my, this pretend husband yells at me a lot and is a neat freak, but he’s also quite fit.” Considering that they do kiss once early on, and that they are legally married despite it being a charade, and that his family is hoping they will get pregnant soon, it’s head-scratching that there is almost zero sexual innuendos and/or references to anything of a sexual nature throughout the entire series. Sexual tension is a staple of these kinds of stories!  And it doesn’t have to be done in a licentious way, but could have furthered the romance of the story. I’ve made it (I don’t know why) to episode 15, and, honestly, they might as well just be brother and sister who live together and clean their house.

Full House isn’t completely devoid of romance and charm. There are fleeting moments and ideas, like a silly bear song that was introduced so out of place that it only became funny later on because they kept singing it so much. Random jokes are scattered throughout, but with no real attempt at humor. The overdone cleaning is sometimes endearing, as are a few of the numerous scenes where one character spends the night waiting for the other to come home. Clean, fight, wait. Repeat multiple times each episode.

The only character with real spunk was Young-Jae’s grandmother, played by Kim Ji-Young, a veteran actress who knows comedy. Song Hye-Kyo (The Winter, That Wind Blows) does a decent job as the plucky Ji-Eun, but the writers don’t give her much to work with. Indeed, I find it ironic that Ji-Eun is supposed to be a struggling writer who has trouble thinking up dynamic stories when the show suffers from the same lack of dynamism. The biggest problem actor-wise for Full House was the singer Rain totally miscast as movie star Young-Jae. Rain is pretty famous all over Asia.  When I taught English in China, a lot of my students were fans of his or knew who he was, so I’m a bit dumbfounded not that he’s a bad actor (so many singers want to be actors and vice versa, but should stick to their day jobs), but that as such a big performer with star appeal, he radiated zero of that star quality in the character of Young-Jae. Young-Jae has about two expressions and he spends the majority of Full House with his grumpy face on. Rain’s smile is adorable and, again, staggeringly underused.

Also miscast, but only because Rain was, was Kim Sung-Soo as Young Jae’s sort-of friend and the guy who makes a play for his sort-of wife. Kim is blessed with very good looks, and like I said earlier, it’s a blow to our romantic hero, as this friend is not only more attractive and manly than the movie star, but despite being labeled as a playboy (which is shown in exactly one scene) is kinder, more gentlemanly, and far more worthy of Ji-Eun’s love than the juvenile Young-Jae who. has. NO. game. whatsoever. The fourth person in this love quadrangle who is Young-Jae’s stylist and childhood friend/crush played by Han Eun-Jung. Like in most Kdramas, this female rival to the heroine is cooler, dresses better (as-in clothing pricing), and is never seen either cooking, cleaning, or anything connected to domestic life. She’s a magazine cutout with questionable hair and wardrobe choices.

Full House is a great idea for a story, but so poorly executed that it teeters on boring.  If you like you Rom-Com’s where the leads have to live together and/or pretend to be married and fall in love while doing it, watch the Kdramas that have done it better and in which poor acting is covered by good writing and vice versa (how many times have I used that phrase, now?), namely:  Playful Kiss (Mischievous Kiss), Personal Taste, To the Beautiful You, and Lie to Me.