Oct. 2nd, 2010

dangermousie: (YKS 14 by srkfanatic)
I promised to get to all the replies this weekend. I know I am behind :)

1. Newer Daemul trailer. How wonderful does it look? I believe it starts next week. I was worried earlier that they changed Kwon Sang Woo's character from the gigolo he was in the manga but thankfully no. Hooray. Some politics, some tough tough smart women, some sexy men, what more can you want?



2. Flames of Jailbait Desire started today. I am very eager to check it out especially as it seems to lack that dreaded monster of lengthy revenge dramas - childhood eps. Apparently the adults are there from the first episode. It does have some striking posters.



With these two, Runaway, Sungkyunkwan Scandal, Giant, Gloria, and Playful Kiss, there is a busy busy slate of current dramas waiting for me. Mmmmmmm.

BUT - did you notice something missing this year? I found 2010 a pretty good kdrama year but with one thing missing - while there were a number of dramas whose OTPs I went rabid for (Chuno, Sungkyunkwan Scandal, Giant etc), there has not been a single romantic drama out since winter. Not a single one! I am not talking about romcoms, which are always a dime a dozen (and often not my thing), I am talking about a go-for-broke, angsty, larger than life romance - the way Snow Queen or Robbers or Spring Waltz or A Love to Kill were. All the OTPs I listed came from dramas in other genres - dramas which are primarily revenge sagas, or period stories, or thrillers first. The last proper romantic melodrama we had was a lovely, low-key Will It Snow on Christmas and that ended in the winter! We are way overdue for another one, but of all the dramas I am looking forward to - Athena, Daemul, Runaway - none qualify. The closest we come is November's Secret Garden (but with its body-swapping premise, I think it is likely to be more of a romcom or oddball drama than an angsty romance I require) and January's My Princess which seems, with its storyline of hidden royalty inheritor, to be more of a light romcom. Boooo! I hoped Cinderella Unni would have been the one but what an all-around disappointment that proved to be.
dangermousie: (YKS 14 by srkfanatic)
I promised to get to all the replies this weekend. I know I am behind :)

1. Newer Daemul trailer. How wonderful does it look? I believe it starts next week. I was worried earlier that they changed Kwon Sang Woo's character from the gigolo he was in the manga but thankfully no. Hooray. Some politics, some tough tough smart women, some sexy men, what more can you want?



2. Flames of Jailbait Desire started today. I am very eager to check it out especially as it seems to lack that dreaded monster of lengthy revenge dramas - childhood eps. Apparently the adults are there from the first episode. It does have some striking posters.



With these two, Runaway, Sungkyunkwan Scandal, Giant, Gloria, and Playful Kiss, there is a busy busy slate of current dramas waiting for me. Mmmmmmm.

BUT - did you notice something missing this year? I found 2010 a pretty good kdrama year but with one thing missing - while there were a number of dramas whose OTPs I went rabid for (Chuno, Sungkyunkwan Scandal, Giant etc), there has not been a single romantic drama out since winter. Not a single one! I am not talking about romcoms, which are always a dime a dozen (and often not my thing), I am talking about a go-for-broke, angsty, larger than life romance - the way Snow Queen or Robbers or Spring Waltz or A Love to Kill were. All the OTPs I listed came from dramas in other genres - dramas which are primarily revenge sagas, or period stories, or thrillers first. The last proper romantic melodrama we had was a lovely, low-key Will It Snow on Christmas and that ended in the winter! We are way overdue for another one, but of all the dramas I am looking forward to - Athena, Daemul, Runaway - none qualify. The closest we come is November's Secret Garden (but with its body-swapping premise, I think it is likely to be more of a romcom or oddball drama than an angsty romance I require) and January's My Princess which seems, with its storyline of hidden royalty inheritor, to be more of a light romcom. Boooo! I hoped Cinderella Unni would have been the one but what an all-around disappointment that proved to be.
dangermousie: (YKS 14 by srkfanatic)
I promised to get to all the replies this weekend. I know I am behind :)

1. Newer Daemul trailer. How wonderful does it look? I believe it starts next week. I was worried earlier that they changed Kwon Sang Woo's character from the gigolo he was in the manga but thankfully no. Hooray. Some politics, some tough tough smart women, some sexy men, what more can you want?



2. Flames of Jailbait Desire started today. I am very eager to check it out especially as it seems to lack that dreaded monster of lengthy revenge dramas - childhood eps. Apparently the adults are there from the first episode. It does have some striking posters.



With these two, Runaway, Sungkyunkwan Scandal, Giant, Gloria, and Playful Kiss, there is a busy busy slate of current dramas waiting for me. Mmmmmmm.

BUT - did you notice something missing this year? I found 2010 a pretty good kdrama year but with one thing missing - while there were a number of dramas whose OTPs I went rabid for (Chuno, Sungkyunkwan Scandal, Giant etc), there has not been a single romantic drama out since winter. Not a single one! I am not talking about romcoms, which are always a dime a dozen (and often not my thing), I am talking about a go-for-broke, angsty, larger than life romance - the way Snow Queen or Robbers or Spring Waltz or A Love to Kill were. All the OTPs I listed came from dramas in other genres - dramas which are primarily revenge sagas, or period stories, or thrillers first. The last proper romantic melodrama we had was a lovely, low-key Will It Snow on Christmas and that ended in the winter! We are way overdue for another one, but of all the dramas I am looking forward to - Athena, Daemul, Runaway - none qualify. The closest we come is November's Secret Garden (but with its body-swapping premise, I think it is likely to be more of a romcom or oddball drama than an angsty romance I require) and January's My Princess which seems, with its storyline of hidden royalty inheritor, to be more of a light romcom. Boooo! I hoped Cinderella Unni would have been the one but what an all-around disappointment that proved to be.
dangermousie: (Chuno - plot)
My favorite romance trope is not the usual Cinderella one (you know - insanely rich/high status guy falls for a milkmaid/beggar/hooker/whatever) but the reverse - a rich/upperclass woman has a romance with a man who is poorer/much worse in status etc.

But, sadly, this is not nearly as popular because romantic stories (whether in dramas or romance novels) are usually directed at female audience and that is not a big female audience fantasy, compared to the Cinderella one.

I've come across a number of dramas which have this, but almost never a romance novel. So, basically, I get excited and check one out whenever I come across one. This led me to Gaelen Foley's Lady of Desire despite my author trepidation (so far I've read 3 Foley romances - one of which I loved to bits, one of which I was meh on, and one which I loathed with a passion. So very uneven).

Heroine of LoD is Jacinda - a well-off aristocrat who decides to run away when her family arranges for a marriage for her with a very suitable family friend. Suitable and nice he may be, but Jacinda has no interest in him at all - he is horridly old (almost 40, OMG), she has no romantic feelings towards him, and she craves adventure and excitement - she would looooove to meet a man like Byron's Corsair (because she's a very sheltered 18 and sort of a fanciful idiot, even if I love her anyway, remembering being this age myself). Not being prepared for the real world, she gets thwarted before she gets very far by a young pickpocket taking all her money. So she does what any sensible young woman would do - she runs after him into the nastiest, meanest part of London wearing her fancy dress and diamond jewelry and ends up right in the middle of a local gang war.

If this was real world, this would be a very short and unpleasant story - the various thieves, murderers and gang members inhabiting the area would rob her, rape her and murder her (or, in the best case scenario, hold her for ransom from her loving if overprotective family). But this is a romance novel, and the gang leader she stumbles across is a macho, sexy, tattooed 20-something Adonis named Billy Blade who takes her back to his hideout while he figures out how to make sure she does not report on him to the police and at the same time how to best return her where she came from before his men slit her throat either for her jewelry or for her sexy self.

I am basically a fifth in and am enjoying this hugely, without the least bit of guilt. She is all "OMG he is so sexy and rough and speaks with Cockney accent and mmmmm...tattoos. I wanna slum, this would be fun, as I never interacted with anyone like this before." And he thinks she is so pretty but also would be an awesome elevating influence and could bring him to the light of righteousness and other similar Victorian terms on the inspiration of virtuous yet sexy womanhood (though this novel is set a bit earlier).

I can't wait for them to hop in the sack (though if I were her, I'd check for STDs carefully - man who's probably done it with cheap 19th century hookers is probably not super safe) and get to the whole angst of "OMG I am not good enough for her" and "OMG, my family would never let me marry a brigand".

I peeked near the end and somehow, improbably, he turns out to be a legitimate son of some aristocrat or other - I guess this way our heroine can have her cake and eat it too. But that's fine, I don't mind. I'll take my slumming romance where I can find it :)
dangermousie: (Chuno - plot)
My favorite romance trope is not the usual Cinderella one (you know - insanely rich/high status guy falls for a milkmaid/beggar/hooker/whatever) but the reverse - a rich/upperclass woman has a romance with a man who is poorer/much worse in status etc.

But, sadly, this is not nearly as popular because romantic stories (whether in dramas or romance novels) are usually directed at female audience and that is not a big female audience fantasy, compared to the Cinderella one.

I've come across a number of dramas which have this, but almost never a romance novel. So, basically, I get excited and check one out whenever I come across one. This led me to Gaelen Foley's Lady of Desire despite my author trepidation (so far I've read 3 Foley romances - one of which I loved to bits, one of which I was meh on, and one which I loathed with a passion. So very uneven).

Heroine of LoD is Jacinda - a well-off aristocrat who decides to run away when her family arranges for a marriage for her with a very suitable family friend. Suitable and nice he may be, but Jacinda has no interest in him at all - he is horridly old (almost 40, OMG), she has no romantic feelings towards him, and she craves adventure and excitement - she would looooove to meet a man like Byron's Corsair (because she's a very sheltered 18 and sort of a fanciful idiot, even if I love her anyway, remembering being this age myself). Not being prepared for the real world, she gets thwarted before she gets very far by a young pickpocket taking all her money. So she does what any sensible young woman would do - she runs after him into the nastiest, meanest part of London wearing her fancy dress and diamond jewelry and ends up right in the middle of a local gang war.

If this was real world, this would be a very short and unpleasant story - the various thieves, murderers and gang members inhabiting the area would rob her, rape her and murder her (or, in the best case scenario, hold her for ransom from her loving if overprotective family). But this is a romance novel, and the gang leader she stumbles across is a macho, sexy, tattooed 20-something Adonis named Billy Blade who takes her back to his hideout while he figures out how to make sure she does not report on him to the police and at the same time how to best return her where she came from before his men slit her throat either for her jewelry or for her sexy self.

I am basically a fifth in and am enjoying this hugely, without the least bit of guilt. She is all "OMG he is so sexy and rough and speaks with Cockney accent and mmmmm...tattoos. I wanna slum, this would be fun, as I never interacted with anyone like this before." And he thinks she is so pretty but also would be an awesome elevating influence and could bring him to the light of righteousness and other similar Victorian terms on the inspiration of virtuous yet sexy womanhood (though this novel is set a bit earlier).

I can't wait for them to hop in the sack (though if I were her, I'd check for STDs carefully - man who's probably done it with cheap 19th century hookers is probably not super safe) and get to the whole angst of "OMG I am not good enough for her" and "OMG, my family would never let me marry a brigand".

I peeked near the end and somehow, improbably, he turns out to be a legitimate son of some aristocrat or other - I guess this way our heroine can have her cake and eat it too. But that's fine, I don't mind. I'll take my slumming romance where I can find it :)
dangermousie: (Chuno - plot)
My favorite romance trope is not the usual Cinderella one (you know - insanely rich/high status guy falls for a milkmaid/beggar/hooker/whatever) but the reverse - a rich/upperclass woman has a romance with a man who is poorer/much worse in status etc.

But, sadly, this is not nearly as popular because romantic stories (whether in dramas or romance novels) are usually directed at female audience and that is not a big female audience fantasy, compared to the Cinderella one.

I've come across a number of dramas which have this, but almost never a romance novel. So, basically, I get excited and check one out whenever I come across one. This led me to Gaelen Foley's Lady of Desire despite my author trepidation (so far I've read 3 Foley romances - one of which I loved to bits, one of which I was meh on, and one which I loathed with a passion. So very uneven).

Heroine of LoD is Jacinda - a well-off aristocrat who decides to run away when her family arranges for a marriage for her with a very suitable family friend. Suitable and nice he may be, but Jacinda has no interest in him at all - he is horridly old (almost 40, OMG), she has no romantic feelings towards him, and she craves adventure and excitement - she would looooove to meet a man like Byron's Corsair (because she's a very sheltered 18 and sort of a fanciful idiot, even if I love her anyway, remembering being this age myself). Not being prepared for the real world, she gets thwarted before she gets very far by a young pickpocket taking all her money. So she does what any sensible young woman would do - she runs after him into the nastiest, meanest part of London wearing her fancy dress and diamond jewelry and ends up right in the middle of a local gang war.

If this was real world, this would be a very short and unpleasant story - the various thieves, murderers and gang members inhabiting the area would rob her, rape her and murder her (or, in the best case scenario, hold her for ransom from her loving if overprotective family). But this is a romance novel, and the gang leader she stumbles across is a macho, sexy, tattooed 20-something Adonis named Billy Blade who takes her back to his hideout while he figures out how to make sure she does not report on him to the police and at the same time how to best return her where she came from before his men slit her throat either for her jewelry or for her sexy self.

I am basically a fifth in and am enjoying this hugely, without the least bit of guilt. She is all "OMG he is so sexy and rough and speaks with Cockney accent and mmmmm...tattoos. I wanna slum, this would be fun, as I never interacted with anyone like this before." And he thinks she is so pretty but also would be an awesome elevating influence and could bring him to the light of righteousness and other similar Victorian terms on the inspiration of virtuous yet sexy womanhood (though this novel is set a bit earlier).

I can't wait for them to hop in the sack (though if I were her, I'd check for STDs carefully - man who's probably done it with cheap 19th century hookers is probably not super safe) and get to the whole angst of "OMG I am not good enough for her" and "OMG, my family would never let me marry a brigand".

I peeked near the end and somehow, improbably, he turns out to be a legitimate son of some aristocrat or other - I guess this way our heroine can have her cake and eat it too. But that's fine, I don't mind. I'll take my slumming romance where I can find it :)

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