Title: 1670 Medium: TV show Length: 8 episodes (30-37 minutes per episode). The ship I'm interested in appears in eps 3, 6, and 8. Where to Find It: Netflix Brief Description:
A Polish mockumentary satirical comedy (I've seen people compare the format to What We Do In The Shadows). The series follows the pursuits of Jan Paweł Adamczewski, the head of a noble family living in a village in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth during the 17th century, who aims to become the most famous person in Poland.
What You Love About the Canon:
I never knew I needed a comedy set in this place and time period, but I did. I love the twinky priest who is a second son and treats the Church as a lucrative business career. I love the rivalry between Jan Paweł and the nobleman who owns the other half of the village (good potential for an M/M ship, too). I love that the peasants get to do murder when circumstances align. Most of all, I love the canon F/F ship that took me by surprise.
What You Love About Your Ships:
Don't you wanna see this stately woman have a whirlwind lesbian romance?
Their first meeting is so wild. Zofia's husband slices off Rozalia's finger, and Zofia secretly turns it into a keepsake.
I really dig the unlikely romance between a conservative, devout wife in a traditionally heteronormative marriage and a woman she meets while trying to marry off her son. They're quite different, which is apparent even in the way they dress, but it seems like Rozalia was able to give Zofia some gentleness and pleasure, which Zofia might never have thought to even want before. It's so cute to see Zofia start to smile and enjoy life.
Kinds of Things You're Planning to Ask For:
A fix-it for how the relationship ends in the canon/some post-canon reunion! Or just more of Zofia and Rozalia in the honeymoon phase of their romance. It's a subplot in the show, so we never see enough of them.
Content Notes: it's the 17th century, though the jokes are often about modern issues. I think the show's heart is in the right place, but you might not like its takes on Pride, antisemitism, climate change etc.
no subject
Date: 2023-12-27 03:22 pm (UTC)Medium: TV show
Length: 8 episodes (30-37 minutes per episode). The ship I'm interested in appears in eps 3, 6, and 8.
Where to Find It: Netflix
Brief Description:
A Polish mockumentary satirical comedy (I've seen people compare the format to What We Do In The Shadows).
The series follows the pursuits of Jan Paweł Adamczewski, the head of a noble family living in a village in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth during the 17th century, who aims to become the most famous person in Poland.
What You Love About the Canon:
I never knew I needed a comedy set in this place and time period, but I did. I love the twinky priest who is a second son and treats the Church as a lucrative business career. I love the rivalry between Jan Paweł and the nobleman who owns the other half of the village (good potential for an M/M ship, too). I love that the peasants get to do murder when circumstances align. Most of all, I love the canon F/F ship that took me by surprise.
What You Love About Your Ships:
Don't you wanna see this stately woman have a whirlwind lesbian romance?
Their first meeting is so wild. Zofia's husband slices off Rozalia's finger, and Zofia secretly turns it into a keepsake.
I really dig the unlikely romance between a conservative, devout wife in a traditionally heteronormative marriage and a woman she meets while trying to marry off her son. They're quite different, which is apparent even in the way they dress, but it seems like Rozalia was able to give Zofia some gentleness and pleasure, which Zofia might never have thought to even want before. It's so cute to see Zofia start to smile and enjoy life.
Kinds of Things You're Planning to Ask For:
A fix-it for how the relationship ends in the canon/some post-canon reunion! Or just more of Zofia and Rozalia in the honeymoon phase of their romance. It's a subplot in the show, so we never see enough of them.
Content Notes: it's the 17th century, though the jokes are often about modern issues. I think the show's heart is in the right place, but you might not like its takes on Pride, antisemitism, climate change etc.