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[personal profile] nineveh_uk
TL:DR It's brilliant, watch it!

One of the highlights of the past couple of months has been Chinese 'historical' costume drama Nirvana in Fire. I saw this mentioned online a year or so ago and thought that one day I should get round to it, and occasionally saw it again, and when I reached the end of season 3 of Black Sails and had re-watched the 2015 and 2017 cross-country skiing world championships from the sofa and still there was no end in sight to lockdown or coronavirus, I thought it was time to give probably cheesy, certainly gorgeously-costumed Chinese drama a try.

I am so, so glad I did. One, occasionally two, episodes a day has been my mainstay over the past month. I'm 30 eps in now, with a glorious 24 to go, and I love it. Who would have thought that people sitting opposite one another having conversations, which is a good 80% of the scenes, could be so riveting. And yet it is. Every single episode I sit there going "no, you're not going to are you? You are! Oh you cunning bastard!" about a whole range of characters.

NB I've kept this basically spoiler-free other than the basic premise as revealed in the first episode. No spoilers, please! This is one I need to watch to the end unspoiled (except for the rather silly thing I am aware of.)



Plot/set-up summary

12ish years ago, General Lin, his teenage son (Lin Shu) and his army of 70,000 were wrongly accused of involvement in a plot against the Emperor and were all slaughtered. Somehow Lin Shu secretly survived and thanks to a case of plot-function-itis/magical TB his appearance has completely changed and he is ready to enact the revenge he's spent all this time plotting, though with a bit of a time limit, as his doctor is dubious as to the chances of his living another two years.

Meanwhile, back in the Court, a hive of scum and villainy and gorgeous robes, the Crown Prince and his brother Prince Yu (and their respective mothers, there are some really enjoyable female characters) are both scheming to remove the other's power base to insure that they inherit when their father the Emperor dies (not that he appears ill, but of course these are hazardous times). LangYa Hall, the ancient Chinese equivalent of Time magazine, gives both Yu and the Crown Prince a 'prophecy' - to have the 'Divine Talent' as your spin doctor is to have the world. Who is the Divine Talent, they ask? Could it be this famous figure from the world of martial arts and wisdom who has just arrived in the capital in a very thin disguise covering his ‘true’ identity as an amazing martial arts leader, Mei Changsu? It could! Could this possibly be a set up? Of course it could...

It is fair to say that NiF, with zero nudity*, zero swearing, far fewer scenes set on ships or in brothels, and very limited blood, is in many ways the polar opposite of Black Sails. Except that for all the differences, both lead characters and the plot are driven by an obsessive quest for revenge/justice against a great power, while themselves suffering secret pain. And if that means that they, or the innocent, get hurt, well that’s just what happens. Admittedly the protagonist of NiF tries quite a lot harder than Captain Flint not to hurt other people, but he doesn't hesitate to do it if he has to, and when he does, he is brutal.

Tune in now for cunning plotting, amazing costumes with truly ridiculous hair ornaments, fighting, and people exchanging a wide variety of Significant Glances** indicating various cunning plotting***, nefarious plans, suspicion, stoicism, ruthlessness, guilt, and of course doomed love.

Here is the trailer. Click on the closed captions box for English subtitles.



I've been watching it largely on YouTube (there are a couple of different English subbed versions, this one has the Viki subtitles), but there are a few episodes missing, so those I watched on Viki, which is official but has really annoying adverts, presumably unless you subscribe. I should probably look up which is the version with the best subtitles, but this one is perfectly adequate and I like the footnotes as to what various honorifics mean.

Delayed: Complete YT series here.

ETA Oh God, I am halfway through ep 33 and it is encapsulating the agony of viewing! The Emperor is unsure, Consort Jing is so clever, and her son really, really needs to acquire a political brain fast. So much is said so calmly, but it is devastating underneath. This is why I love it.

ETA 2 Finished ep. "Xiao-Jingyan, why do you not have a brain?" I could have died. It is so good.

* There is a shocking rolled-up sleeve moment.

**There is a lot of what Joey Tribbiani would call "smell the fart" acting, except that the acting in this is top notch and the Significant Glances representing what cannot be said matter desperately. A huge amount is done with a the slightest movement of the expression.

***Actually cunning plotting, revelations unfold one after another in beautiful order.

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