The VR headsets do not stay that long. Just long enough to convey to the viewer what the actual 3 body problem is and what the consequences of it actually means to everyone. More interesting things happen afterwards.I have now seen 2-3 episodes. I found it interesting until these Vr headsets came along. Is there still a lot of interesting things happening? I'm not sure if I'm going to keep watching it.
Episode 4 ok really hooked and then holy fuck episode 5!! 3 more to go for me!I have now seen 2-3 episodes. I found it interesting until these Vr headsets came along. Is there still a lot of interesting things happening? I'm not sure if I'm going to keep watching it.
If I wasn't already going to watch it, this sealed the deal.Finished 3 episodes. I think this is an incredible adaptation so far, and has the potential to be better than the books.
The trilogy is an incredibly difficult thing to adapt. In the books, the ideas are complicated, there are very thin characters to work with, the dialogue sucks, and the pacing can be all over the place. But the show is doing a great job so far; it's improved all of those aspects.
I'm just worried the show is still too inaccessible, the popularity of 3BP won't take off enough, and we'll never get the full series. I can totally see us getting just this season, or maybe one more, the show being cancelled after that, and people gradually coming to appreciate how damn good this is, but too late to make an impact.
At least the start of the show depicts communist revolutionaries in an accurate light.
I've read plenty of chinese commenters noting that it's actually quite safe to criticize that historic period even in China.So did the book, as surprising as it was for me when reading it (given that it was Chinese writer).
The recent Tencent adaptation left that out.I've read plenty of chinese commenters noting that it's actually quite safe to criticize that historic period even in China.
The predominant sentiment today is that a lot of the extremism of that particular transition wasn't exactly the best way to handle things.
Fun fact: even the current Chinese leader had his entire family persecuted during the cultural revolution. He had to start from the bottom of the ladder and climb his way up to political relevance.
EDIT - Another fun fact: what's happening today in a lot of American colleges (and not just there) mirrors dangerously close the attitude a lot of Chinese students had during the cultural revolution.
No, it didn't?The recent Tencent adaptation left that out.
Ok I miss understood the changes. I’m starting the Chinese version and didn’t see it.No, it didn't?
I know because i watched that too.
It just made the scene a bit less "hamfisted" in its presentation.
They need to commit to doing all 3 books because I’m hookedHoly shit this is good...if not great! It's been a hot minute since I've read the books but they are hitting every highlightvi can recall. It looks fantastic and everyone is holding their own. I'm totally in love with Jin/Copernicus. Crazy eye girl is luscious as well.
I'm fascinated by all the smoking. Haven't seen a "here is a light" scene, much less TWO, in years.
They MUST keep going, based on ep3 so far they are doing the lords work on this and I want it ALL!!!!!
From what I read the Cultural revolution struggle sessions are accurate.That opening scene is like something out of a nightmare. Anyone know how accurate it is to what actually happened?
3 Point Problem.3/53 Body Problem Season 1 Review - This Isn't the Next Game Of Thrones
3 Body Problem Season 1 Review - The creators deliver a larger-than-life series without a coherent script to keep you invested.readysteadycut.com
Just roll with it. In this case I think the casting is a fairly acceptable compromise from the source which would be almost all chinese. Just be glad all the girls are hot and there are no danger hairs. Everyone acts fairly smart. For such a complicated set-up I think they are doing well, though I think a lot of reviewers, unfamiliar with the books, would have benefitted from a VERY basic "here is the plot" bit of exposition. The time jumps and array of characters, most just referred to by name, makes this a tough show to follow at times.So I've just started it and good lord it's full of all the Netflixisms one expects.
I mean we are at Oxford and there's no white scientists . Except the the cuckold and the loser who makes chips.
There's a correction from "he" to "she" about a neurologist .
All the embarrassing people in the bar are white people who are dumb apparently
Does it continue like this throughout or is it just Netflix from start to end
Yeah I watched ep 2 and the netflixisms disappeared.Just roll with it. In this case I think the casting is a fairly acceptable compromise from the source which would be almost all chinese. Just be glad all the girls are hot and there are no danger hairs. Everyone acts fairly smart. For such a complicated set-up I think they are doing well, though I think a lot of reviewers, unfamiliar with the books, would have benefitted from a VERY basic "here is the plot" bit of exposition. The time jumps and array of characters, most just referred to by name, makes this a tough show to follow at times.
I can see where you're coming from. Here are other possible perspectives/additional context:So I've just started it and good lord it's full of all the Netflixisms one expects.
I mean we are at Oxford and there's no white scientists . Except the the cuckold and the loser who makes chips.
There's a correction from "he" to "she" about a neurologist .
All the embarrassing people in the bar are white people who are dumb apparently
Does it continue like this throughout or is it just Netflix from start to end
Whole show is most of the first book and weirdly ~80-100 pages of the third.Those who have finished the season and read the books: how far they go in to the second book? Halfway?
This show reminded me how much I hate time-jumps
Dropped it after two episodes
Judging plots for episodes, they introduceWhole show is most of the first book and weirdly ~80-100 pages of the third.
Adaption is pretty mediocre for me, they have dumbed down the science and poorly cast the leads (the whole 5-people from Oxford is not in the books, Auggie isn't a model rather an intelligent 30-40 year old billionaire, etc). Boring "pretty" for the masses. Writing is very teen-like - academics do not talk about science like those (teen dialogue) experts. Maybe I set my exceptions too high, I thought this would like Dark, Stranger Things. It's not even a competition.
That being said, I enjoyed Episode 5.
I do recommend the books but with a caveat: the English translation isn't that great and the story picks up momentum after ~80% of the first book. If you can overcome the excruciatingly bore of a start, you'll find it very compelling to read the rest. The third book especially is such a thrill ride.
I agree with what you are saying...I can see where you're coming from. Here are other possible perspectives/additional context:
The cuck becomes very sympathetic later on. The loser who makes chips is a millionaire. One of our protagonists assumed the neurologist was "he" instead of "she", which is ironic because earlier she implicitly told that guy hitting on her at the bar to sod off by saying what she did for a living. The embarrassing people at the bar are shown to be having way more fun than our protagonists, who come off like literal buzzkills.
God, that line was so ridiculous.There's a correction from "he" to "she" about a neurologist .
Yeah, that lone did stand out. I can only imagine it was a legacy of an earlier draft where auggie was more dismissed because she's a woman or maybe there was an extended but where she went to several doctors and only the female one took her seriously. So reason for her to be so sharp about it.God, that line was so ridiculous.
"I've seen my neurologist"
"What did he say?"
Auggie in an alarmed tone "What did SHE say!"
Her friend "Oh GOD I'M SORRY" said with all the guilt of someone who just accidentally insulted your dead parents.