Rain with a hint of sunshine
From the first episode of La Pluie, no, actually from the early trailers and teasers of La Pluie, we can acknowledge what we're signing up for. This is more than just a love story surrounded by rose petals and glitter; the roses' thorns keep on scratching the wounds and the glitter attempts to cover the vulnerable bruises. We can't merely depend on love in order to stay together with our loved ones.
In order to truly understand the story of La Pluie, you must be willing to take part in it.
La Pluie is a realistic portrayal of love, misunderstood feelings, lack of communication, and morals. Each character is imperfect in their own way, there are no antagonists. La Pluie truly grasps the philosophy as such; "no one is a bad person, we just do bad things". That's human nature. Everyone makes mistakes, what truly matters is whether they'll be able to redeem themselves for them or not. La Pluie explores these feelings of regret beautifully.
While La Pluie has realistic characters with their own individual morals and ideals, the writing as a whole is astounding. Some comments stated that La Pluie didn't fully explain things and that the soulmate system didn't make any sense in the end, some even thinking that the story wouldn't have been all that much different without their soulmate connection- but that's where I want to step in, because that's exactly the point of this show.
The soulmate system supposedly not making much sense isn't a plot hole. What would make it a plot hole is if we were continuously fed facts about it while being assured that it's a solid connection between two people, but La Pluie didn't do that. It was made sure that we knew that the soulmate connection is still a mystery in their reality as well, so it doesn't really have any known logic to it.
The message of La Pluie was that whatever your supposed connection is, and no matter how much you love each other, what matters most is whether you can get through your hardships together or not. That's true to reality.
To put it shortly:
What I liked:
- Depth of the characters
- Realism
- Phasing
- Writing
What I didn't like:
- Awkward cutting of OST at some parts
- Using a similar plot device twice
Overall, you won't enjoy La Pluie if you're expecting to get confirmation and explanations for everything, this story is told from Saengtai's perspective and therefore we know as much as he does.
Slight spoiler ahead:
It was a pleasant yet significant detail that La Pluie is a book published by Saengtai himself, therefore the story is told in past tense and we get to see other viewpoints even while he might've not acknowledged them in those moments. An amazing end to a series and I can't wait for the hinted season 2.
In order to truly understand the story of La Pluie, you must be willing to take part in it.
La Pluie is a realistic portrayal of love, misunderstood feelings, lack of communication, and morals. Each character is imperfect in their own way, there are no antagonists. La Pluie truly grasps the philosophy as such; "no one is a bad person, we just do bad things". That's human nature. Everyone makes mistakes, what truly matters is whether they'll be able to redeem themselves for them or not. La Pluie explores these feelings of regret beautifully.
While La Pluie has realistic characters with their own individual morals and ideals, the writing as a whole is astounding. Some comments stated that La Pluie didn't fully explain things and that the soulmate system didn't make any sense in the end, some even thinking that the story wouldn't have been all that much different without their soulmate connection- but that's where I want to step in, because that's exactly the point of this show.
The soulmate system supposedly not making much sense isn't a plot hole. What would make it a plot hole is if we were continuously fed facts about it while being assured that it's a solid connection between two people, but La Pluie didn't do that. It was made sure that we knew that the soulmate connection is still a mystery in their reality as well, so it doesn't really have any known logic to it.
The message of La Pluie was that whatever your supposed connection is, and no matter how much you love each other, what matters most is whether you can get through your hardships together or not. That's true to reality.
To put it shortly:
What I liked:
- Depth of the characters
- Realism
- Phasing
- Writing
What I didn't like:
- Awkward cutting of OST at some parts
- Using a similar plot device twice
Overall, you won't enjoy La Pluie if you're expecting to get confirmation and explanations for everything, this story is told from Saengtai's perspective and therefore we know as much as he does.
Slight spoiler ahead:
It was a pleasant yet significant detail that La Pluie is a book published by Saengtai himself, therefore the story is told in past tense and we get to see other viewpoints even while he might've not acknowledged them in those moments. An amazing end to a series and I can't wait for the hinted season 2.
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