Why The Shadow & Bone Netflix Show Is Better Than The Book

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Let's review the shadow and bone netflix show shall we! I decided to make a more fun video essay style video to share my opinions on the show and why I gasp think the show is better than the shadow and bone book! I'm not really talking about six of crows here but i do shortly give my thoughts on that part as well in the beginning. Let me know your thoughts!
    00:00 intro
    2:10 quick thoughts on the six of crows part
    3:04 synopsis
    3:55 alina
    6:44 mal
    14:44 the darkling (the one thing i didn't like)
    18:38 other changes
    20:55 gimme feedback bois
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Komentáře • 874

  • @gemmaberlanti3508
    @gemmaberlanti3508 Před 3 lety +2310

    The only downside of this adaptation is that Netflix didn't give the show ten episodes.

    • @TheBookLeo
      @TheBookLeo  Před 3 lety +175

      agreeed

    • @emmal3819
      @emmal3819 Před 3 lety +42

      @a user they have actually, it got renewed for season 2 before season 1 even came out

    • @abbeyBominable123
      @abbeyBominable123 Před 3 lety +11

      @@emmal3819 no they have not. Netflix has not yet renewed the show.
      The showrunners already has plans fro upcoming seasons but Netflix has not officially confirmed anything.

    • @ienvs
      @ienvs Před 3 lety +40

      For me personally, even though I would like more episodes, it also didn't feel too short. They really made good use of the time they were given.

    • @selmm2023
      @selmm2023 Před 3 lety +7

      @@abbeyBominable123 Actually a source, not an official one, but one that has never been wrong in their predictions of shows being renewed or not, has already said that they will be renewing. It's not an official source of course, but considering they've never been wrong, it's safe to say it most likely will be renewed for Season 2.

  • @dancerluver195
    @dancerluver195 Před 3 lety +3841

    I actually think Ben Barnes portrayed the fact that the Darkling secretly cared about Alina pretty well. For example when they kiss and he has to leave, he comes back abruptly to kiss her again which I took as him genuinely wanting to kiss her vs just trying to manipulate her. Also when he learns from Kaz that she wasn't kidnapped she chose to leave , you can see the heartbreak on his face. There are also other moments when if you watch the Darkling's face closely you see that he has feelings for her, Ben portrayed it very well but subtly.

    • @dancerluver195
      @dancerluver195 Před 3 lety +557

      I think the addition of the Darkling backstory also helped a lot because in the book I really struggled to understand the Darkling's choices, but in the show I can clearly see how lonely he is and how much he thinks he is doing the right thing in order to never be as vulnerable as he was in the flashback. It makes even more sense that he is so infatuated with Alina because after so long he finally found someone like him. I think in some way the show fleshed in him out much more than the book did.

    • @SharonLinfromTaiwan
      @SharonLinfromTaiwan Před 3 lety +105

      @@dancerluver195 Agree!!!! Love Ben Barnes portrayal of him!

    • @ashleyelisabeth4
      @ashleyelisabeth4 Před 3 lety +102

      @@dancerluver195 There was actually a prequel to Shadow and Bone called "The Demon in the Wood" where it explains how the Darkling came to be and why he thinks the way he does. Reading it added a lot more depth to Darkalina scenes and fleshed out his character arc.

    • @aimun5255
      @aimun5255 Před 3 lety +150

      Yea I thought you could tell he likes her but when he sees her choose another path, he hardens his heart again and flips the switch to "make me your villain" aka I will have you, no matter what the means, which is an amazing depiction of his abusive personality

    • @jennrobertson1758
      @jennrobertson1758 Před 3 lety +83

      I agree, he did show his feelings so well. I was impressed with the subtle looks he gave her that conveyed so much in his eyes. The back story gave more understanding of his behavior. In the book the darkling was so one dimensional I didn’t get that he cared for her or really even the grisha. He seemed just self absorbed and power hungry.

  • @crazykenna
    @crazykenna Před 3 lety +2333

    I loved how the Darkling took her to a fountain and he said he used to come there all the time, but it’s a ruin that’s over grown and forgotten by time and it subtly tells the audience that his history is quite a bit longer than he’s letting on.

    • @TheRedHaze3
      @TheRedHaze3 Před 3 lety +62

      I mean, he is pretending to be like 120 years at that point. It's not inconceivable that the fountain could look like that after just 100 years.

    • @crazykenna
      @crazykenna Před 3 lety +17

      @@TheRedHaze3 I recall reading that in the book, but was that his claim at that point in the show as well?

    • @jelletinny
      @jelletinny Před 3 lety +6

      Omg, i totally missed that! Great catch!

    • @jeanetten.s.8557
      @jeanetten.s.8557 Před 3 lety +28

      OH MY GOD THAT'S WHY HE WAS CLEANING THE FOUNTAIN WHEN THEY VISITED THERE! Those plants take a long time to overgrow a stone structure like that! He said he used to come there all the time and since I've never read the book I - like Alina - have no biases to this General Kirigan. So I was just as fooled as she was.
      I thought the Darkling is 26 years old. And from the way he was talking I thought he was still coming till well into his teens years (when he first got his post). So why would there be overgrown plants at a fountain you had not visited in 5 or so years?
      Before anyone roast me for my dumbassery. I only realized after Alina removed her scar that something is up with Kirigan. Genya said Kirigan gifted her when she was 11. But she only look to be in her late 20's - probably 5 years younger than Kirigan. So how could someone so young be in any position to gift anything to the queen. I just thought he looked good for his age but that's when I started getting super sus.

    • @happyjellycatsquid
      @happyjellycatsquid Před 3 lety +5

      @@crazykenna They say nothing about his age before talking about him being the Black Heretic in the show :)

  • @sabrinalauren1484
    @sabrinalauren1484 Před 3 lety +2316

    Milo was the best addition to the show

    • @Dynsdead
      @Dynsdead Před 3 lety +20

      I agree 😂

    • @martinacosta3821
      @martinacosta3821 Před 3 lety +44

      Milo is love, Milo is life hahaha

    • @AnnaJovhomishch
      @AnnaJovhomishch Před 3 lety +9

      Oh,my.. forgot about the goat. Thought you called Mal Milo, 'cause he is, you know, boldhead :P (like that little airbender in Legend of Korra)
      P.s. i'm sorry, nevermind

    • @sabrinalauren1484
      @sabrinalauren1484 Před 3 lety

      @@AnnaJovhomishch I'm surprised with your reference hahaha Don't worry, it happens!

    • @melseha3449
      @melseha3449 Před 3 lety +7

      @@AnnaJovhomishch omg that little fartbender is everything

  • @gurubishisama
    @gurubishisama Před 3 lety +770

    As a viewer who came into Shadow and Bone completely blind, having never read any of the Grishaverse books and knowing literally nothing about them or the plot, I actually thought it was very clear that the Darkling wasn't just pursuing Alina's power, but also her companionship as his equal. I wouldn't be too worried that the show didn't make that clear, because I thought it was abundantly clear and one of the most interesting pieces of that love triangle.

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety +30

      Me too,it was very clear to me that he developed unexpected feelings for her

    • @tiffanymaeuy5869
      @tiffanymaeuy5869 Před 3 lety +4

      Same here😊

    • @justsaying8358
      @justsaying8358 Před 3 lety +6

      I defenetly got the feeling that he feels that he's in the right to have Anila as his lover as they are destined to be together no matter what, and that he looks forward to it

    • @AllThingsShaunda
      @AllThingsShaunda Před 3 lety +13

      Same. Plus you could see that he was very jealous when Alina was reunited with her childhood crush. Ben Barnes did a good job!

    • @JTZombiE
      @JTZombiE Před 2 lety +7

      I actually thought the Darkling was gonna be a "good" person, not the main antagonist, and I didn't even know the books existed until I finished watching the series. So in my perspective, I think they made the reveal well-written, and I kinda thought Pekka Rollins or another character out in the world was going to come into play to be the main antagonist lol

  • @stephaniaariasr4652
    @stephaniaariasr4652 Před 3 lety +1067

    I'm glad you mention the scene when Inej meets sankta Alina, her reaction was so powerful and really give chills.

  • @josh_5911
    @josh_5911 Před 3 lety +889

    My only problem is how they rushed through Alina's time in the little palace... We didn't get to see the power dynamics between the different grisha groups or even delve deep into Alina's friendships there... We also got like one scene with botkin and didn't get to see her grow her powers well during training.

    • @iremSusi
      @iremSusi Před 3 lety +55

      Absolutely I agree ! I even felt myself in a roller coaster while watching, and that bothered me a lot because they could go into more detail. I understand they have a shortage of time and episodes, but they could put a 10-minute time lapse per episode.

    • @josh_5911
      @josh_5911 Před 3 lety +17

      @@iremSusi I know ! I felt like they really rushed the story. I would have loved at least two more episodes to be honest.

    • @caramelcoffees
      @caramelcoffees Před 3 lety +50

      i felt robbed of a magic training montage. it would have really helped to explain what alina's powers actually are

    • @user-tw4vv2dx5p
      @user-tw4vv2dx5p Před 3 lety +35

      Exactly and that's why we needed two more episodes. Also I hate how they made her so close to Marie and Nadia from the start. She also confesses so easily that she can't use her powers. I think those changes made Alina seem less developed in the series. In the books we see her GROW attached to the Little Palace. Also since she was basically all alone there that made her whining more reasonable whereas in the series it's like she has everything except Mal. In the books she was so much more than that. It's like all her development went into Mal. But I still love both the show and books.

    • @lost0055
      @lost0055 Před 2 lety +11

      It felt like the whole plot happened in just a week. Needed more of alina's character development and her relation with the darkling shou've been a little more gradual. I heard 2nd season has 8 episodes too which means it'll be just as rushed as season 1

  • @monarie7856
    @monarie7856 Před 3 lety +1001

    I didn't read the book, but in the scene when the Darkling is talking to Mal about how Alina will come to love him in years to come, I did get the feel, that he really wanted her, because she's his equal. But that dialogue certainly wouldn't have hurt.

    • @TacticusPrime
      @TacticusPrime Před 3 lety +129

      It seems to me that Kirigan just wanted Alina for her power and wanted her to rely on him. I think he wanted to separate her from her old life and he wanted to control her power. He uses a sort of performative vulnerability to manipulate her into trusting him.
      But then she kisses him. He seems to really want her. She's someone who, unlike everyone else that he has been with, can remain with him through the centuries. She's passionate and young in an exciting way.
      When Mal arrives, he is jealous and controlling. He's determined to keep her for himself. Ultimately, he'll enslave her rather than let her leave him.
      Does he love Alina? In the way that abusers can love their victims, yeah. But it's overshadowed by his own goals and ruthlessness.

    • @frauchen9864
      @frauchen9864 Před 3 lety +42

      @@TacticusPrime according to ben barnes in netflix afterparty, kirigan really has feelings for alina cause he’s been lonely for so long

    • @mammamonssterr
      @mammamonssterr Před 3 lety +7

      @@TacticusPrime your comment is amazing 👏👏👏

    • @Bluey306
      @Bluey306 Před 3 lety +32

      @@frauchen9864 and i don't think the above comment invalidates that. a bad person can care and have feelings for someone else even when they're making choices that ultimately harm them. i enjoy that nuance of Kirigan also deep down having feelings for Alina, and having a desire for a connection with her because of his loneliness -- it's just that it clashes with his overall goals and his inability to treat Alina as her own person with her own agency. it's almost like, on top of his own goals with the Grisha and the Fold, he's also so desperate for companionship with what he perceives as his equal (and Alina objectively is, being the Sun Summoner) that he'd do anything to keep it -- even though it means being possessive, controlling, and hurting her. Amanda the Jedi said it best: he (and i'm paraphrasing) genuinely wants to be with her, but like all bad guys he's unable to see that he's the bad guy. when Alina calls him out for treating her like a pawn and an object, instead of an equal, he says "fine, make me your villain" -- which from a writing perspective is such an awesome gut-punch of a line (and i love how Ben Barnes had a sliver of hurt in Kirigan's eyes), but also shows that he still thinks he's right. so yeah, he loves her, and he genuinely wants her after centuries of loneliness, but in the way abusers love their victims, and overshadowed by his own goals and ruthlessness. the complexity we get through Ben Barnes' portrayal is able to make it convincingly tragic. we see that he _could_ love her in a healthy way, without possession and without control, but he doesn't. he chooses not to. it's so interesting!

    • @Bluey306
      @Bluey306 Před 3 lety

      @@TacticusPrime well said! 👏

  • @jenniferg.9017
    @jenniferg.9017 Před 3 lety +933

    I was watching Ben Barnes's interview and I think they did want to add that layer of complexity you mentioned with the Darkling and Alina. Ben said he sees the Darkling as the Ying to Alina's Yang this balancing force that he is undeniably drawn to. I think that he liked her more than he wanted, especially when he ran back to kiss her for a second time after he was called to leave. That was a small detail that Ben said he purposefully added to show the audience that it wasn't all a manipulation. I wonder if they took away the line.. "the problem with wanting..." because it came off corny in real life? I got the feeling he was incredibly jealous of Mal even when he was like "Orphans in Karmazin...how adorable". He lost his cool and that level of self-assurance whenever Mal came up...

    • @Natalia-ix6iz
      @Natalia-ix6iz Před 3 lety +80

      YES! And the fact that he rejected Zoya.

    • @moonlightstripess
      @moonlightstripess Před 3 lety +38

      Yeah as a non reader that line would have came off as really corny.

    • @ahonabhattacharyya6116
      @ahonabhattacharyya6116 Před 3 lety +50

      totally agreed. Like every time Mal's name came up you could see cracks in his cool and calm exterior and that was just so nice to watch.especially when he is trying to convince Mal to give up on Alina in episode 6 (I think) like he knows that Mal is serious competition and that he would anything in his power to just not let Alina go.

    • @nomadine85
      @nomadine85 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes yes yes exactly. All of this

    • @flyfantasy6565
      @flyfantasy6565 Před 3 lety +13

      @@ahonabhattacharyya6116 and in my POV he knew if he kills Mal Alina wouldn't forgave him and it would hurt her

  • @e50e1
    @e50e1 Před 3 lety +213

    It was such a genius idea to bring in the crows, they brought in so much energy and humor to the story & their interactions with Alina and the Darkling were so cool to see.

    • @gwenc7805
      @gwenc7805 Před 3 lety +36

      For me, the answer to "why the shadow and bone show is better than the book" question can be condensed to two word: the crows

  • @frakkintoasterluvva7920
    @frakkintoasterluvva7920 Před 3 lety +446

    As someone who hasn't read any of these books, I can assure you that they did very much get across the pining between Inej and Kaz. It was my favorite ship in the show and the most interesting one because it was subtle

    • @nomadine85
      @nomadine85 Před 3 lety +62

      I agree! (I also haven’t read the books.) It wasn’t spelled out but it was still blatant, I thought. I mean. She kills for him, against her faith, the one thing connecting her to her parents, after having witnessed Alina. He puts up his club for collateral for her. Then there’s the clear sense of heart break when Kaz accidentally voices that they’ll go without her if they have to, which he obviously regrets and doesn’t mean, as soon as he said it. That wasn’t just professional. You can see the conflicting emotions in regards to her possibly leaving at the end. The whole “nobody is like you” - and that being very much not in regards to their acrobat ninja capabilities, which she directly said the other girls also have. It’s so very blatant to me how much they are pining after each other, while being “professionally” respectful and supportive “as a friend”. Maybe I’m just too attuned to such romantic subtleties, but it was definitely very obvious to me.

    • @unrulycrow6299
      @unrulycrow6299 Před 3 lety +28

      Oh yeah, I haven't checked the books yet (though they've been on my radar for a while and I already got Six of Crows on my Audible account), but I greatly enjoyed the subtle dynamic displayed between Kaz and Inej. Overall I enjoyed Kaz' gang the most out of all the cast - they're highly entertaining and capable despite being regular joes compared to Grishas. Then again, I always have been weak for rogue characters.

    • @c.a.2945
      @c.a.2945 Před 3 lety +18

      Agreed. THere was a lot conveyed with the little looks between the two characters and the visible pain on Kaz's face with Inej was hurt. Plus the fact he put his club on the line as collateral for her.

    • @marybr5154
      @marybr5154 Před 3 lety +9

      I agree. I haven't read the books but they where adorable in the show. I also could tell from the very begining that the darkling was just using Alina. So yeah, not at all shocking when he is revealed as the bad guy. I kind of got the felling he wanted her by his side, but in a very posesive way, not as a loved one.

    • @Thenoobestgirl
      @Thenoobestgirl Před 3 lety +22

      As someone who read the books I can insure you that their relationship only gets more and more interesting as the story advances 😍

  • @bubblepop999
    @bubblepop999 Před 3 lety +314

    Okay, the Darkling and Mal duking it out mano a mano in The Fold was pretty amazing and unexpected too. Lmao. I loved it. No magic, no bullshit, just a good ol cockfight.

    • @rafz9147
      @rafz9147 Před 3 lety +11

      Yh but not gana lie the darkling was putting the pressure on mal. Mal got wooped

    • @TinyCloud90
      @TinyCloud90 Před 3 lety +17

      Also when mal says I’m not gonna kill you, your past will !

    • @takemeaway5548
      @takemeaway5548 Před 3 lety +1

      @Jayy Menace he didnt die tho like at the end of the ep we see him come out of the fold

    • @alealcantaram
      @alealcantaram Před 2 lety

      LOL 🤣🤣

  • @Kodzuken8396
    @Kodzuken8396 Před 3 lety +259

    The scene that everyone is talking about where mal tells Alina that she doesn't need to explain whatever she did with darkling.
    Actually that happens in the books as well..
    He Infact says “I don’t care if you danced naked on the roof of the Little Palace with him. I love you, Alina, even the part of you that loved him."

    • @frank7411
      @frank7411 Před 3 lety +83

      The book line sounds a bit more, idk, passive-agressive? Insincere? It sounds a bit off to me, the serie's line feels more genuine.

    • @aceballeza3804
      @aceballeza3804 Před 3 lety +27

      I hope they would dance together in the next season lol 🤣😷 darklinaaaaaaa for the end game...

    • @Naahi95
      @Naahi95 Před 3 lety +46

      YES Mal gets too much hate for things he doesn't even do just because the fans interpreted him wrong

    • @Kodzuken8396
      @Kodzuken8396 Před 3 lety +1

      @@frank7411 may be you feel that way because of the palace scene where mal was jealous

    • @Kodzuken8396
      @Kodzuken8396 Před 3 lety +2

      @@aceballeza3804 🤭

  • @dianalovesbooks2591
    @dianalovesbooks2591 Před 3 lety +425

    I read somewhere that they make the darkling reveal his name so that Alina could have a reason to trust him in the first place.
    Because it wouldn't have make sense for Alina to actively seek for him and kiss him if they didn't show us that both have connection.

    • @aleksandra3552
      @aleksandra3552 Před 3 lety +30

      @@blushberryxo So that she thinks she's special to him because he trusts her with that info. I really wonder how they are going to show us that during the manipulation he actually developed feelings for her.

    • @dianalovesbooks2591
      @dianalovesbooks2591 Před 3 lety +16

      @@blushberryxo I mean, that's the point, since they wanted to give Alina more agency of her own, they make her start the kiss, and as a colateral damage I guess; they reveal the darkling's name for it to make sense.

    • @ashleyelisabeth4
      @ashleyelisabeth4 Před 3 lety +12

      The Darkling could've given Alina a fake name though so it didn't sabotage the significance of his real name being revealed later in the story.
      Also, it would've shown his character development like it did in the books where he went from being afraid to trust and be vulnerable to someone again to being someone who is willing to allow that part of himself resurface, all because Alina reminds him of a place from his childhood where he felt the most welcomed and safe.
      If you read "The Demon in the Wood", it literally explains how the Darkling came to be and why Alina is his salvation.

    • @starkovsummoner
      @starkovsummoner Před 3 lety +14

      exactly, it would also have been weird for them to be so close to each other and she still referring to him as "general" or "sir"

    • @user-tw4vv2dx5p
      @user-tw4vv2dx5p Před 3 lety +6

      I disagree. The reveal of his name was so Alina could see his human side after all he's done. She also finds out about his childhood and how complex he really was. It was like a battle inside her that made her accept her powers. Also in the books it was the first amplifier that connected them a lot. Don't forget that it was the Darkling who first sought her out. I wish they didn't change that.

  • @emblogger7658
    @emblogger7658 Před 3 lety +379

    To be honest, I didn't mind that change. In the books, he clearly wanted to seduce and use her but started to like her in the process, while in the show, I didn't feel like seducing her was part of the plan, having this romance seemed like a suprise to him too. His intentions were more genuine in the show, and that (for me) made him more of an antagonist and less of a villain, if that makes sense. I get your point, I just like the direction they went in. (Great video by the way)

    • @nomadine85
      @nomadine85 Před 3 lety +9

      A very nice way of putting it! Antagonist instead of villain. Yes.

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety +25

      Yes exactly, I didnt get the feeling that he was romantically manipulating her in the tv show, he was lying about the shadow fold and the use of her powers of course, but it didn't seem that the romance between them was something planned, he really seems surprised for this to be happening, like when alina kisses him for the first time and he says "not many people surprise me miss starkov". I also like the direction they went in, I prefer much more how the darkling and alina's relationship is in the show than in the book.

    • @emblogger7658
      @emblogger7658 Před 3 lety +3

      @@aryanemarques2089 Yes, my thoughts exactly. To be honest, I like almost all romantic relationships better in the show :D

    • @madeleineharp6167
      @madeleineharp6167 Před 2 lety +1

      i watched the show before i read the books and i was legitimately a darklina shipper until i read the books. in the show he doesn’t feel enough like that sarcastic witty antagonist that we get in the books.

    • @viljakristina2583
      @viljakristina2583 Před 2 lety

      Totally agree!!

  • @tessyliz7062
    @tessyliz7062 Před 3 lety +208

    One thing I really liked about the show was how likeable Alina was, sometimes the main character isn’t likeable at all, but she was definitely a great main character

    • @TKDDLJ09
      @TKDDLJ09 Před 3 lety +19

      And she wasnt likeable or memorable in the books. I only remember not liking her and thiking she was stupid the book, that all i rememeber from the book 🤣 show Alina is definitely much much better.

    • @tessyliz7062
      @tessyliz7062 Před 3 lety

      @@TKDDLJ09 I really want to read the books, would you recommend them?

    • @TKDDLJ09
      @TKDDLJ09 Před 3 lety +5

      @@tessyliz7062 I only read the first and didn't like it. But if you have read other YA novels written arround 2010s then I'm pretty sure you will like it. It's very standard 2010s YA fantasy/dystopian character wise. 😊
      Six of Crows is AMAZING though!

    • @tessyliz7062
      @tessyliz7062 Před 3 lety

      @@TKDDLJ09 thank you so much 😊

    • @tomatosoup1304
      @tomatosoup1304 Před 3 lety +4

      Yup!! Especially since i wasn't the biggest fan of her (or Mal) the show made them much more likeable

  • @jenniferg.9017
    @jenniferg.9017 Před 3 lety +240

    I can't wait for more seasons and more time to flush out the crows' backstory. I believe the reason why Inej and Kaz's chemistry is not as intense yet, is that Inej and Kaz have only known each other for like 6-8 months at the time the show started. Once we get to the actual heist in Fjerda, they have known each other for 2 years and Inej had come close to dying several times lol which will hopefully heighten that chemistry. I need to see Kaz more ruthless and harsh! He had glimmers of that, but I need to see him takes someone's eyeballs out in sheer rage lol.

    • @purpleplanetary
      @purpleplanetary Před 3 lety +2

      yesssss

    • @TKDDLJ09
      @TKDDLJ09 Před 3 lety +29

      I think people forget that this is a prequel to six of crows. And like they arent yet the characters we know and love completely. We see glimpses of it here and there, especially Inej and kaz. When we end the show, they are just meeting Nina and then a whole ass year is supposed to happen before six of crows. Thats a long ass time to develop characters.
      Like Inej hadnt even killed someone in the show, so we actually got to see her first kill, which was great. So im hoping the characters will grow in the next season and kaz will become more sarcastic as he is in the book and then i want to see how badass Inej really is with her stealth and stealing secrets.

    • @elizaelise5192
      @elizaelise5192 Před 3 lety +4

      yassss I'm so pumped up! I really hope they give us that scene where Kaz rips out Oomen's eyeball. also, yeah, the best part about this being a prequel was how we got to see inej's first kill

    • @yasminechoerryscherry3701
      @yasminechoerryscherry3701 Před rokem

      ​@@elizaelise5192 I love this random but sometimes y'all scare me a little bit

  • @lyka6338
    @lyka6338 Před 3 lety +387

    A lot of good points were already covered here but I wanted to add that I also found the change to Alina’s race so interesting. Apart from the fact that I’m Asian myself, it’s also timely given all the Asian hate in the US recently. Not sure if this was an adjustment made before or after casting Alina but either way it blessed us with the beautiful Jessie Mei Li!
    I also liked the reversal of roles in Mal and Alina’s childhood. If I recall correctly, Alina was always the weak and sickly one in the books, but in the show it was actually Mal who was the weak one and Alina became his protector. It really helped cement Alina as a strong female character in a more modern way vs the outdated not-like-other-girls-way.
    Would also like to sneak a quick thank you to you Leonie because you were the reason I picked up the books earlier this year! 💙

    • @phadenswandemil4345
      @phadenswandemil4345 Před 3 lety +19

      The change to Alina's race was made before casting!

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 Před 3 lety +12

      As an Asian American myself, it really hit closed to home

    • @nochu9753
      @nochu9753 Před 3 lety +5

      If you think about it, Alina was never weak

    • @Goiriath
      @Goiriath Před 3 lety +26

      Nah, even in the books it's clear that while Mal looked after Alina when she was sick, he was more timid as a child than her (I would have been afraid of the dark) and he kind of grew up to be braver to try and match her.
      He says that she looked after him, and it's his chance to look after her.
      Honestly, show Mal *is* book Mal, it's just that the books are written with unreliable narrator, and there's often a big gap between what Alina thinks is going on with Mal and what he actually says, does, or turns out to have been doing later.
      Honestly, it seems like the author decided that whole single narrator with misunderstandings *did not work* and dropped it for later books and the show.
      This is definitely Leigh Bardugo's Mal, just not one she got across to all readers.

    • @lyka6338
      @lyka6338 Před 3 lety +9

      @@Goiriath ​ and @Nochu 97 So I ended up looking back at the first few chapters of the book and realized I somehow forgot that Alina's "weakness" was only a physical one. She may have been frail, sickly, scrawny (heck, people nicknamed her Sticks), but she was snarky and wasn't afraid to talk back. It was actually one of the things that amused me about her character early on in the series. What I didn't pick up on though, for some reason, was Mal being a reserved and timid child. IDK if I just wasn't invested enough in him to notice it (LOL sorry!) or if that facet of young Mal was just played up more in the show.

  • @nayrarodriguez3385
    @nayrarodriguez3385 Před 3 lety +248

    I actually thought they rushed Alina's independence. They made it that the scar was everything holding her back and when she erased it, she was a new person so easily. When in the book, she had months to grow and learn about herself, train physically and discover her powers. And in the end, when she erased the scar, she immediately went to Kirigan. I would have actually liked to see her friendship with other Grisha (especially Genya) since when Genya hinted at what the king did to her, Alina kinda moved on or didn’t seem to fully catch on.
    For me, they made her sort of go from one man to another (which doesn’t show much independence imo). And about the kiss, I liked that she took the initiative, but they also took away the factor of the Darkling being a seductive manipulator and wanting to charm her to get her on his side.

    • @ChangesOfTomorrow
      @ChangesOfTomorrow Před 3 lety +47

      I think the intent was that Alina has been in the palace for months, but the show did poor job showing us how much time passed between events. I perceived the Darkling as her seducer despite her initiating the kiss, to me it was more like he did a great job leading her to come to him. But yeah, that development felt a bit rushed especially when she ran away in basically the next scene which felt off.

    • @nayrarodriguez3385
      @nayrarodriguez3385 Před 3 lety +20

      @@ChangesOfTomorrow Alina mentioned to Mal how he ignored her for months. That's the only hint we got at the time pass, because even with the crows' story, I would have believed just a few weeks passed. I wish they would have worked on her development more, as it is something I doubt will be worked on if we get more seasons. I just feel like they ruined that part especially since she's the main character. Alas, I hope we get to see more in next seasons

    • @ig1441
      @ig1441 Před 3 lety +15

      You said it so perfectly! What’s so sad is that in the first book of shadow and bone I just didn’t care much for Alina she just felt eh. And in the show the case is so much worse. She feels reduced to being a girl in the middle of a love triangle and it’s so obvious. There never is a moment where she’s just alina who’s not tied to mal nor the darkling and it’s disappointing. The pacing definitely adds to this problem like you said everything felt so rushed so when Alina tells Mal it had been months I was shocked bc it didn’t even feel that way

    • @nayrarodriguez3385
      @nayrarodriguez3385 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ig1441 Exactly! I've seen many people say how they liked Alina in the show more but I don't understand how when we aren't shown enough of her without being tied to a man and improving by herself :/ I wanted to see her train, both her powers and fighting, and not only when fighting another female character over a man.

    • @MinieAnne
      @MinieAnne Před 3 lety +7

      Wow that really not what I see in her it's funny because I really don't watch the show with the lens of the romance and maybe that's your problem, when she get rid of her scar she become more confident and that as nothing to do with the darkling actually she did not need him anymore and she's ready to take her role as the sun summoner her falling for him it's just a bonus. And even her relationship with mal even though we know they both love each other for now they act like brother and sister and I don't have a problem with that they deeply care for each other but they both need one each other and not only Elena.

  • @Mjackson2319
    @Mjackson2319 Před 3 lety +428

    I’m glad somebody said it! I feel like they took all the criticism the readers had about the book and I corrected it in the show. Plus the flow of how certain things was presented in the show actually made more sense in the way that it was presented in the books

  • @skyycollector
    @skyycollector Před 3 lety +668

    the only thing that bothered me was when they revealed the darkling's name just like that, bc that is such a beautiful thing at the end of the trilogy and now.....what is going to happen to that scene at the end?

    • @muskaan3711
      @muskaan3711 Před 3 lety +24

      Ikr that was annoying

    • @Suzumiya_
      @Suzumiya_ Před 3 lety +8

      Quite annoying 😒

    • @krystene.9457
      @krystene.9457 Před 3 lety +8

      I agreee!!! That got me sad😿

    • @salmaraf
      @salmaraf Před 3 lety +22

      Riiiight i was so mad when that happened like dude you dont even know each other that well yet

    • @ashleyelisabeth4
      @ashleyelisabeth4 Před 3 lety +7

      I know! 😖 They basically just threw his character development out the window by doing that

  • @sieliestschonwieder1987
    @sieliestschonwieder1987 Před 3 lety +341

    I understand your point saying this dialog of the darkling talking to Alina was missing in the Show.
    But to me even without that, I loved the way Ben Barnes showed through his acting that Darkling really cares for Alina, too. There were those sweet tiny scenens like him looking at her all the time secretly, being soft and worried, asking for her consent and being very emotional when she turned away. So to me he portrayed well that he manipulated her but unwillingly started to love her, too. :)

    • @dancerluver195
      @dancerluver195 Před 3 lety +23

      I agree, when I was watching the show his feelings for her were so clear.

    • @ashleyelisabeth4
      @ashleyelisabeth4 Před 3 lety +5

      I was 50/50 when it came to Darkalina in the show because there were some scenes between them that I really loved, but then there were others that just felt rushed or anti-climatic. For example, I thought them kissing in episode 5 was way too soon since it seems like they just started talking and they really didn't have that many scenes together to make their kiss convincing.
      I understand that they're supposed to be insta-love whereas Malina is a slow burn in order to show why the Darkling and Alina are not compatible, but I still think there should've been a build up to it so you can actually understand the chemistry between them.

    • @SharonLinfromTaiwan
      @SharonLinfromTaiwan Před 3 lety +3

      Yes. I also really enjoy Ben Barnes' portrayal of him!

    • @mayakane9978
      @mayakane9978 Před 3 lety +11

      @@ashleyelisabeth4 I think the point is also because he's manipulating her. He's actively trying to get her to fall in love with him to use her powers so he wants it to happen fast before she knows any better and she's been ripped away from everything she knows, had it thrust upon her that she was not what she thought she was and she's desperately trying to find somewhere to belong, something the Darkling promises to provide her. This isn't two people making a bond out of love its two people doing something out of fear and desperation.

    • @ashleyelisabeth4
      @ashleyelisabeth4 Před 3 lety +11

      @@mayakane9978 Darkalina is such a complicated relationship because originally the Darkling was just using Alina for her power, but what he didn't anticipate was for him to fall in love with her.
      Ben Barnes and Bardugo said that when Alina brings out his humanity, it catches the Darkling off guard because he's been living for so long that he's forgotten what it feels to be human and now he's conflicted on what to do about it.

  • @niamhharikasen7848
    @niamhharikasen7848 Před 3 lety +281

    Why did Netflix had to release Shadow and Bone during my exam season🙃

  • @VictoriaHatzson
    @VictoriaHatzson Před 3 lety +42

    Ben Barnes as The Darkling *chef’s kiss* 👌🏻

  • @msbv...
    @msbv... Před 3 lety +83

    I totally get being frustrated with the removal of the Darkling's iconic line (i was too). But, I still think what it represented character-wise can still be found in the show, and that is all thanks to Ben Barnes' performance.
    In the book, that line indicates that he has actually gotten feelings for her, something he never planned for. But in the show, it is evident by the way he looks at her and the way he regards her that he has come to care for her too. "You mean a lot..." for example; he doesn't need to say "to me" for the audience and Alina to see what he means. And the biggest example is in the war room scene, when Alina tells him "you are not alone". Once she leaves, he stands by the door unsure of what to do. That moment is exclusively for the viewers, he is alone in the room and Alina can't see him. He lingers, either hoping she'll come back or about to follow her. We see there and then that he is falling for her, that feelings have entered the game. He wouldn't have done that unless he felt something for her. Another thing that highlight his feelings shining through is when Alina runs away and he searches the palace grounds for her. He never assumes she left by her own free will and is worried she might've been abducted (this is bad for him, both because of his plans and new found emotions). In the book we never know if this happens, (because it is from Alina's perspective) but actually seeing it lets us know that he actually worries for her well being and safety. We can see genuine worry in his face
    Again, the line in the book might've made this part of his arc clearer, but it is nevertheless present in the show. Actually, I think that Ben Barnes made the character seem more into Alina than he ever did in the book, just by the simplest glances and interactions. The relationship they both have is very complicated and interesting, I'm excited to see where Netflix takes it next

    • @nomadine85
      @nomadine85 Před 3 lety +6

      Okay I got emotional reading this comment, I’m way too invested. But yes, to all of it

    • @happyjellycatsquid
      @happyjellycatsquid Před 3 lety +4

      @@nomadine85 Honestly same, I wanna cry when Ben’s eyes fill with tears when he realises Alina’s left him 🥲

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety +1

      Wow I loved this comment! I agree with everything you said, I dont mind that they took away that line of the darkling because I think that in the show they showed so many times, in various subtle ways, that he did develop feelings for her, just the way he looks at her shows that so clearly to me. I'm very excited to see more of their relationship in the show, they have such an interesting and complex dynamic for me, their interactions were the part that I most enjoyed and held my attention in the show.

  • @TheRedHaze3
    @TheRedHaze3 Před 3 lety +143

    I think they should have kept the Darkling's quote, "the problem with wanting is it makes us weak", but I think there were other hints that he fell in love with Alina.
    For example, when he talks with Mal when he's captured. He says he that Alina is eventually going to forgive him for what he did, and that he is willing to wait for as long as it takes, even years.

  • @alonya8412
    @alonya8412 Před 3 lety +108

    Honestly, I love the darkling from the show. And that change from the books makes him different yes, but not worse in my opinion. Actually, it makes him more likeable for me. When in the books he was manipulating her and was clearly aware of it(with him saying that"this wasn't supposed to happen"), in the show you can actually believe, that he is truly trying to make the world a better place just doesn't realize that the means he is using are manipulative. At least with Alina. And we do get to see that he truly fell for her in the scene with him and mal, when mal is captured. That speech about mal aging while he and Alina will not was not a manipulation towards Alina since she didn't hear it or know about it. so we don't have any reason to assume it wasn't honest.

    • @XEveryoneLovesEmilyX
      @XEveryoneLovesEmilyX Před 3 lety +4

      The scene of them making out was way to close to the one where his mother helps her escape. To me the speech would have taken away all the suspense because you already are suspicious that he has different motives and the speech would make it way too obvious. Why would he talk about not being supposed to want her when he is exactly what he is pretending to be.

    • @McKatie101
      @McKatie101 Před 3 lety +1

      @@XEveryoneLovesEmilyX yesss agreed!! His mom made it sooo obvious he had other intentions too early.

    • @nomadine85
      @nomadine85 Před 3 lety +5

      @@XEveryoneLovesEmilyX Yes exactly! He was doing what he wanted to, why would he stop in the middle of a make out session to admit he “shouldn’t” be caring and therefore make her “suspicious” when he was just genuinely wanting to be with her - his care and hesitation came across in the “are you sure?” Line way better than anything else could have conveyed. And to be honest, I think he was kind of asking himself that question, too, on some level. Also, just because he’s obsessed with the fact that someone he NEEDS now exists, and that this influences how much she means to him (isn’t that normal?? We are all influenced by all parts of the people we like) - it doesn’t automatically make his actions manipulative, just because there’s more than just romantic feelings. The practicality of liking the person who you also need doesn’t negate the romantic attraction he has towards her, it’s a part of it. That scene and many other scenes weren’t manipulative, they started to become manipulative once Alina made it clear that she was choosing Mal and a believed in a different methodology to achieve the end of the war than he did. Saying “together we can achieve anything” instead of directly confirming her question whether they would destroy the fold. Saying he said won’t harm Mal, not that he’ll release him. Even the fact that he doesn’t tell her “everything” from the get go is not a manipulative thing. It’s a careful thing. She was only just getting used to being a Grisha, who would skip along someone dealing with an entirely new view of life to tell them YAH LETS UNITE BY USING OUR POWERS EH no. He’s had centuries (I think?) to plan a line of solution to the war, no matter how much you like someone, she could even be his wife, as a war strategist he doesn’t have to tell her everything?? And they’re not even that close but only starting to get to know each other. Why are people saying he’s manipulative because he doesn’t tell her everything right off the bat? Come on. It’s not like they’re talking about a surprise birthday party. If anything the manipulative aspects emerge in conjunction to Mal (and thus Alina’s connection to a value system which doesn’t like the Grishas, likely delaying her integration and acceptance of being a Grisha). It was manipulative to not pass on their letters, but very telling of his jealousy and seeing Mal as competition for Alina. I actually think that his mother somewhat misinterpreted his intentions with Alina, because she was basing her judgement on his previous behaviour. I had the impression that he was genuinely hurt when he realised she left, and not in terms of “dammit my mother thwarted my plans” but more so in terms of “dammit, that’s not how it is at all and now I can’t prove it to Alina because proof does exist, it’s just not true! But wow she believed her that quickly?” Anyway. What was my point? Ah yes. Yes, he’s manipulative, but not just generically, and it doesn’t impact the fact that he does genuinely feel understood and less alone and fond of Alina. In a more mellow, less dramatic progression of events (that wouldn’t make for as interesting of a story), I could totally see them balancing each other out and finding a middle ground to achieve the end of war after some internal discussions among them, after, ya know... actually being together (instead of just freshly making out once). It’s such a teenage angst thing to judge proof in such absolutes...

    • @Thenoobestgirl
      @Thenoobestgirl Před 3 lety +4

      @@nomadine85 I agree with every word. I love show Darkling because they gave him genuine redeeming qualities that Ben Barnes also portrays so well.
      I am looking forward to seeing how they're going to handle the love triangle in the future (and in the far future aka in the eventual portrayal of Rule of Wolves) since they've changed so much of his character. He still deceived her, but it wasn't intentional in order to get power but more because they were just getting to know each other and you don't exactly put all your flaws on the table on your first date... Which brings me to Baghra - fuck you Baghra, you unnecessary cockblock! Honestly I think that if it wasn't for Baghra spiriting Alina away the Darkling would have come around and made Alina his equal for real instead of tried to control her. I think he felt like he had to put a leash on her simply because she ran away from him and he couldn't bear to lose her. If she didn't run away they could have been a real power couple...

  • @mundanehauntings
    @mundanehauntings Před 3 lety +59

    You are soo right!!
    Kaz is exactly like how I imagined and I am obsessed! Because I read the books, I know every thought from by just looking at Kaz's face and it was amazing.
    Also, the face off... Im ded

  • @davidshead1323
    @davidshead1323 Před 3 lety +100

    Already commented but just want to gush about the show more. Like the six of crows crew are so dam cool. Like especially Kaz Brecker. The music comes on and he stares incredibly intensely and just lays out his plan to make all the money and it's just so sick.

  • @sukerbole2463
    @sukerbole2463 Před 3 lety +49

    i feel like the show felt kinda rushed, though? in the book you really had the feeling that a lot of time had passed in the little palace, that she was struggling for a long time with her powers, and in the show it felt (to me) that it wasn't _that_ big of a deal because she got over that fairly quickly

    • @alexz3t899
      @alexz3t899 Před 3 lety +10

      yes! i felt the same way but i honestly think it’s because netflix didn’t give them enough episodes to work with. which is why i’m hoping people will watch it and we’ll get a second season where hopefully there will be more episodes.

    • @JTF2402
      @JTF2402 Před 3 lety +4

      She was months in the little palace. But the show didn't show that very well. Only, she said to Mal. that she wrote Mal for months.

    • @TKDDLJ09
      @TKDDLJ09 Před 3 lety +3

      But i would be boring to see her struggling for episodes and episodes. It was clear that she was there for a decent amount of time. And since we have to follow way more characters we cant spent so much time with Alina. So I dont think 2 episodes would have made a difference, because it would then maybe just be filler episodes of seeing Alina train and it would do nothing to the plot. I think i episodes were quite right, because it didnt drag the story, like so many other show does.

  • @arfielding4495
    @arfielding4495 Před 3 lety +117

    I agree with this so much. I hope they include the wanting line a future season. But I think they did capture the spirit of it with other acting decisions throughout the show, because Ben Barnes makes it looks like he really does care--frequently has tears in his eyes, and his delivery of the line "Make me your villain" is super different than it's described in the books. So I think they got the essence of the 'it's genuine feelings but he doesn't let that override his hunger for power and domination'.

    • @crazykenna
      @crazykenna Před 3 lety +7

      Yeah in the book I could feel him rolling his eyes as he said it, in the show he’s actually conflicted (or so it seems).

    • @starkovsummoner
      @starkovsummoner Před 3 lety +13

      'it's genuine feelings but he doesn't let that override his hunger for power and domination'. you perfectly summed up for me what i was thinking but wasn't able to put into words. he did fall in love with her but that doesn't mean he is gonna stop wanting power . its a case where those 2 things can coexist

    • @sarahgomes5180
      @sarahgomes5180 Před 3 lety +6

      It makes sense for him to act like that, as he himself said to Mal, he and Alina are eternal, he acts from the perspective of someone with centuries of life, where a fight, however big it is, becomes just a minimal disagreement in the grand scheme of things.
      It’s more rational for him to solve the immediate problem he has in his hands and use eternity to appease Alina's fury. For this I can’t believe it’s fair to say that he puts his hunger for power before his feelings, because he has a completely different perspective on how to act, when compared to the mind of someone mortal, this is so clear when he talks to Luda, when she says that she could live another 100 years with the amplifiers and that doesn't make him excited, because what is another 100 years for someone who is immortal? Does he suffer from losses? Of course, but he waits for them and over time that makes him distant, it’s his form of protec himself, because if he gets attached to something or someone finite he’ll sufer, I believe that this reasoning can even explain his change of focus, because the fight for Grisha no longer has the same weight as centuries ago, before so many losses and so much solitude.
      Alina comes and shakes this conviction and his posture, because he and his mother are no longer the only ones, he is no longer alone. I believe that over time Alina would have changed him completely, given the chance.

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety +2

      @@sarahgomes5180 I love your comment! I agree with you, I think things are more complex with him than just "greed of power", he is someone that lived for a long time, he has experiences that other don't have, he thinks differently from the others. He sees, acts and plans things in the long run. I think that when he meets alina, he finally sees someone that can understand with time the things he has been through and the burdens he carries, he sees someone that he can perhaps open up his heart and develop feelings without the fear that she will be taken away from him like almost everything else in his life was including Luda.

  • @starkovsummoner
    @starkovsummoner Před 3 lety +33

    ben barnes himself has said that the darkling did in fact fall in love with alina in the show and that her light seduced him (he was conflicted between his newfound attraction to her and his thirst for power), and i did really see that in the way he looked at her during many scenes. i do really wish they had kept the dialogue from the makeout scene in the book, but regardless of that i still felt he fell for her

  • @elrilmoonweaver4723
    @elrilmoonweaver4723 Před 3 lety +127

    Other changes: Alina is SHU! She wasn't in the book. She was never described as mixed-race. But here, she is. She's having to deal with racism in the show and it's.... great. I love that change, highly approve.

    • @07xxEMMA
      @07xxEMMA Před 3 lety +4

      Yes, you’re so right. Such another level of depth for her.

    • @crazykenna
      @crazykenna Před 3 lety +14

      I wish they did more with that. The Shu are the only characters in the series who never get to speak for themselves. Yes, racism bad, but can we KNOW WHAT THE SHU ARE ACTUALLY LIKE AND HEAR THEIR PERSPECTIVE ON ANYTHING. Kuwei never even gets a POV chapter. It’s so frustrating!!!!!

    • @kobimorgan6522
      @kobimorgan6522 Před 3 lety +17

      really? i thought it was really unnecessary and distasteful to add racism towards her character. she's literally a fictional race and gets called "rice-eater" which just perpetuates that POC will always deal with racism and stereotypes no matter where they go. also they never addressed or resolved the prejudice she goes through; she just gets called "half-breed" and nothing comes of it.

    • @elrilmoonweaver4723
      @elrilmoonweaver4723 Před 3 lety +8

      @@kobimorgan6522 Are... you talking from the perspective of someone who's actually read the book.
      Yes, racism is terrible and should not be perpetuated... in real life, but this is a fictional character, that was bland in the book from the start.
      Giving her some external conflict to make her interesting, even if it does mean having to deal with racism, is never a bad thing, because we see more layers to the character.
      I am not approving the racism itself, I am approving the use of racism to flesh out the character more. Strictly, from a story perspective.
      I don't know what you understood from my comment, but approval of racism is not what I meant.

    • @kobimorgan6522
      @kobimorgan6522 Před 3 lety +12

      @@elrilmoonweaver4723 what did it add to her character though? i love seeing more POC actresses on big names like Netflix, but it sucks that casting them also means adding racism to the story even when it wasn't in the source material. in the TV show alina doesn't become anything because of her struggles with racism, she just takes it silently and moves on. no character faces backlash because they're racist.
      and if you didn't know, most if not all of the writers of Shadow & Bone are white. it just doesn't sit right with me . . .

  • @deli5194
    @deli5194 Před 3 lety +20

    I never read the book but I clearly got the idea that the darling wasn't JUST manipulating her and cared about her as well, maybe because of the flashbacks and the scene in the tent before they go in the fold. He also tells that other grisha about how she is her only equal and protects her.

  • @kostisth1436
    @kostisth1436 Před 3 lety +329

    I havent read the books and i quite liked the show but i felt that everything happened a bit fast..

    • @TheBookLeo
      @TheBookLeo  Před 3 lety +145

      yes i do think they didnt really take enough time to explain everything to non book readers

    • @ratgirl44
      @ratgirl44 Před 3 lety +4

      The characters needed a bit more fleshing out like in the books IMO.

    • @ashleyelisabeth4
      @ashleyelisabeth4 Před 3 lety +12

      Yeah, that's because there was just a lot for the writers to cram in for only an 8 episode season and the fact they were combining two stories didn't help either.

    • @SilverstreamPJ28
      @SilverstreamPJ28 Před 3 lety +24

      I heard that they could've done 10 episodes but on the same budget as 8, so they opted for more high production on 8 episodes instead of 10 with lower production, which would explain why it may feel rushed

    • @ashleyelisabeth4
      @ashleyelisabeth4 Před 3 lety +10

      @@SilverstreamPJ28 Yeah, that's what I heard too. I just hope that for the next season they're given a larger budget so they can do more episodes and not have to worry about trying to cram everything in because the pacing was definitely one of the major issues I had with this season.

  • @winterzephyrr
    @winterzephyrr Před 3 lety +39

    so I disagree with the whole cutting that one "wanting" line after the darkling kiss. it was unnecessary in the show. not only is Ben Barnes giving uwu eyes at Alina the whole time showing he has feelings for her (even after the betrayal), he does tell Mal he expects Alina to forgive him with enough time. it's very obvious he still has a villainous crush. I think the line ends up being unnecessary in the show becuase of it's visual medium and being able to garner truthfulness or implication through observation of the stellar acting

    • @TheBookLeo
      @TheBookLeo  Před 3 lety +8

      yes, that's a good point actually!

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety +6

      Exactly, though Ben's acting it was very clear to me that the darkling developed feelings for her, so I did not miss that line from the book

  • @estadoagridulce
    @estadoagridulce Před 3 lety +34

    it’s so obvious that the show made mal more interesting so the general audience won’t question malina as much a readers do. don’t get me wrong i really liked show!mal, i even get why alina would choose him over the darkline....something that the book just didn’t pull for me.

  • @taylor_green_9
    @taylor_green_9 Před 3 lety +49

    I hope the show will give more weight to the Darkling's backstory in future seasons and show how he went from wanting to protect his people from genocide to being obsessed with power for its own sake. I'll love it if he eventually reverts to his original goals and ideals, especially if he is forced to choose between clinging to power and achieving those goals and makes the right choice

  • @claragrossi7569
    @claragrossi7569 Před 3 lety +18

    I agree with what you said about the darkling but not completely. I feel like they substituted this "forbidden desire" with something that, in my opinion, strikes as even more meaningful which is the idea of only ever finding true company in an equal? I really think that the whole internal turmoil he had regarding mortality, or his lack thereof, was very interesting to me. Seeing him loose his girlfriend was very nice because i think it heightened the sense of urgency that he felt of finding someone who could endure and be with him forever. Sure there are power motifs behind his infatuation with Alina, but the interesting thing about it is that he's too naive to even notice it. As it's shown throughout the show, we constantly see displays of his ego and his savior complex. He thinks he's saving people, he thinks he's acting for a noble cause, and he thinks his infatuation with Alina is love. He's delusioned, and I think that comes with the lack of consequence being immortal ends up causing you. That's just my take on it though, I really loved your video

  • @emberadler9793
    @emberadler9793 Před 3 lety +14

    this is just my thoughts, but i think that they reveled the darkling's name in the third episode because they didn't want everyone to address him as just 'the darkling' for the majority of the series. it also gave a piece of him to alina, and that started the process of coming to trust him.

  • @amaZINGsabrina29
    @amaZINGsabrina29 Před 3 lety +13

    I think they set up the plot for Six of Crows very nicely at the end! It was nice to see Nina and Matthias' relationship play out but I agree, it did happen more quickly. Im hoping that they'll have the Six of Crows plot in season 2 and then the Crooked Kingdom plot in season 3

  • @priyambalsara3639
    @priyambalsara3639 Před 3 lety +18

    Awesome review/analysis! The only thing I disagree with is regarding the removal of the Darkling's dialogue. In the book, the line "the problem with wanting is that it makes us weak" provides the reader with an explicit glimpse into the Darkling's psyche. Since the book is from Alina's first person perspective, the easiest way for us to learn what the Darkling is thinking is for him to straight up tell us in some way or the other.
    However, in the show, we have Ben Barnes to do things with his face. You can 100% tell that the Darkling actually has feelings for Alina. In episode four, when he monologues about having fought alone for so long and briefly loses control of his powers, that wasn't manipulation, it was real. During the famous "make me your villain" scene, rather than saying the line with a tone of resignation like in the book, he seems genuinely heartbroken at Alina calling him out. In fact, I'd argue that the show's version of the character is far more willing to open up to Alina than his book counterpart, and thus genuinely believes that she has betrayed him.
    TL;DR: Removing the dialogue doesn't really ruin the Darkling's character. They removed a line which "tells" us who he is and replaced it with scenes which "show" us instead.

    • @Ducavalentino15
      @Ducavalentino15 Před 3 lety +2

      My thoughts exactly :)

    • @jammin.g918
      @jammin.g918 Před 3 lety +2

      You know what, I agree. I just feel like it’s probably harder to see that and understand his physique for those who haven’t read the books. I’ve seen people say that all of that (the tears, etc) were a part of his manipulation/grooming plan

    • @mipaleditx
      @mipaleditx Před 3 lety +1

      Totally agree. I feel like they showed much more how the Darkling feels for Alina even though they left that dialogue. For example, when Kaz tells him that Alina has escaped on her own we see him having tears in his eyes and there were other scenes when he was even more emotional towards her than in the books. I feel like in the show he really falls in love with her.

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety

      Yes I agree with all that you said

  • @aidafuentesv
    @aidafuentesv Před 3 lety +31

    I’ve been waiting for this video so much.... I wish Netflix would’ve contacted you to promote the show on their channel, hopefully it will happen in season 2

  • @jemimaburton4101
    @jemimaburton4101 Před 3 lety +27

    The crows (yes that includes Milo) were the best parts

    • @lightandleaves3858
      @lightandleaves3858 Před 2 lety

      Milo is the best part, I understand Jesper on this point 😌♥️

  • @davidshead1323
    @davidshead1323 Před 3 lety +27

    Never read any of the books but loved the show. Love a fun fantasy with actual believable performances. The changes you talk about make me think I really wouldn't like the books so I'm glad this is the version I've experienced. That being said like I personally got what those words they said in the kiss scene just from the performances and they did well to have enough humanity with the general, like calling him Alexander, I felt that he did need to have a real name to feel more human. I do think after the twist he was just a little bit one note but I did get a sense that he did genuinly want to be with Alina and that he did find peace with the fact that she could share in that power and immortality. I think it could have done with an extra episode just to flesh his motivations out more before the finale once we know the twist. I thought that Nina was really well done. I don't think it was too quick with the development personally, it was just efficient and felt believable given the circumstances they were in. Even once she saved his life he still took a bit of convincing to come onto her side and like her but his performance gave the impression that he wasn't all bad at the start anyway and it was more his background and job that made him treat her badly. It felt like he was saying all the things he said to justify having her imprisoned and barely fed to himself but I was like yeah he feels bad about that. Better the sequence of events that happened than dragging stuff over more time thans needed. I like Game of Thrones but Christ the character development in that could be way more efficient for what that show does. This found a really good balance I felt at doing things as efficiently as possible without being rushed other than the finale really, I think it just needed a bit more. So excited for another season, will probably rewatch a few times tbh. Great video btw, I know how much work it is to edit such a long video and put in all the clips and have your timeline bits as well like really good job dude, can't wait for the next video!

    • @TheBookLeo
      @TheBookLeo  Před 3 lety +8

      loved hearing your thoughts as someone who hasn't read the book! i hope Netflix gives them a few more episodes to work with in season 2

    • @TKDDLJ09
      @TKDDLJ09 Před 3 lety +3

      You are so right on GoT. Like jesus christ it was slow, like mother of christ they could spent a whole season and they would only make it 1% 🤣🤣🤣 and Nina is literally exactly like i imagined her from the books, right down to her voice. That actress is such a spot on cast, that im suprised not more people are talking about it! She is exactly as I imagined her! And if you had the read the books than Nina and Matthias happened exactly as it did in the show and it was clear in the show that they had been lost for days, if not weeks. And in the book they arent lost much longer than that either.

  • @equestrianrosie
    @equestrianrosie Před 3 lety +19

    I haven't read the books but from watching the show it was apparent to me at least that the Darkling HAD fallen in love with her. Ben Barnes showed this through so many subtle actions in the season's last act. Being disappointed rather than irritated when Fedyor had info on Nina, not Alina. The look of despair, not rage, he has when Kaz says Alina CHOSE to leave. And everything in Ben's performance of the Tent scene after Alina's been infused with the amplifier. At this point, brute force could accomplish everything he wants, no need to try to explain his actions to Alina UNLESS he does care for her.

    • @nomadine85
      @nomadine85 Před 3 lety

      Yes! I also thought it an important distinction to make that it wasn’t him who “placed” the antlers but his - admittedly somewhat clumsy seeming - equivalent that Alina’s red haired friend liked. I forgot the name for what they do. We see later on that the antlers could also have been sunk in fully into the skin, it seems like that was almost like... a botched operation? And the darkling seems visibly regretful when she says “instead you made me THIS”. But what he actually did (still not cool) is order for it to be placed on/ into her against her will, after realising she’s no longer choosing him. But the reason I differentiate it here is because I think the fact that it wasn’t him but his servant (?) that actually performed it, both on her and on his hand, speaks more so against that guy’s skill level, than the darkling’s intent. I doubt he wanted Alina to have spiky antlers protruding from her skin, since he didn’t want her to be against him as a base line. It seems like he felt bad about it, but more justified because she chose Mal over preventing the genocide of their people (in his eyes).

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety

      Exactly!

    • @maiasanders3691
      @maiasanders3691 Před rokem

      yeah in the books, he's crueler. But, he does still want power more over Alina--well he wants to save eveyrthing but he doesn't realize what he's doing is wrong.

  • @BadBloodwillout
    @BadBloodwillout Před 3 lety +8

    I haven't read the book but the way you described the darkling is exactly how I perceived him in the show. He likes her for her power, he's lonely, he falls in love with her in the process. Like it's all there. I don't think the dialogue you mention would have added anything tbh. Interesting analysis though!

  • @caitlyn.m.t9618
    @caitlyn.m.t9618 Před 3 lety +13

    One thing I really wanted out of the show is a bigger focus on the friendships because I do feel like they took a backseat to the romances in the books, particularly the friendships between the women. So the fact that I got so much of Jesper and Inej made me really happy, and I loved every scene with Inej and Alina because it was just so pure. I was also living in the scenes at the end involving Zoya and Inej and Alina. Like I was so happy. I would have liked more scenes with Alina and Genya if I am being honest, and I hope we get more focus on those friendships in the future. I also can't wait for Inej and Nina in the next season.
    As for the Darkling and Mal...I always thought that Mal got a lot more hate than he deserved (please don't come at me). Like if you don't like him that's fair and he definitely has flaws in the books but he also has a great development, especially in Ruin and Rising. I personally don't find him interesting, in fact I have no feelings on him, but one thing I would say other than some dialogue changes and the big fight scene being basically removed...he was exactly the same in the show in my very unpopular opinion. His core character was there, it is just (as you said) we're not seeing it purely from Alina's perspective and you don't have to read between the lines either. As for the Darkling...I am not gonna lie he does not appeal to me at all in the books or the show. In fact he very much irritated me in the books. I wasn't irritated by him in the show and wishing for his disappearance from the screen constantly, so that's an improvement. I have no complaints in how he was portrayed in comparison to the book, and I think that speech at the end directed to Mal did show his obsession to Alina well. But then again he is not really on my radar so maybe take that with a grain of salt.

    • @elisong6579
      @elisong6579 Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah I definitely think people are way harder on mal maybe just because he’s alina’s love interest and people think that since shes the protagonist she deserves someone more( which in a way i do see why becuase its entertaining>

  • @pearld1ver
    @pearld1ver Před 3 lety +12

    Can we please appreciate the fact that she is wearing a six of crows earring?

  • @muskaan3711
    @muskaan3711 Před 3 lety +33

    100% agree with the title. S&B show is def better than the S&B books. The show Alina and Mal have more agency over their actions and have well-developed personalities. The only thing I didn't like in the show is that Kaz and Matthais were too soft, they're a lot meaner in the books. Also, the Darkling revealed his name to Alina way too soon.
    Something that didn't sit well with me was they made Zoya racist to Alina in the show (calls her "half-breed"), it felt unnecessary as Zoya had many other reasons to despise Alina. And this remark never gets brought up again.

    • @lotteoosterbaan5336
      @lotteoosterbaan5336 Před 3 lety +16

      The main reason in my opinion why especially Kaz is a bit softer than in the books is because it's his backstory from what we see in soc. I think the show is like a year before the soc storyline and in that year Kaz hardened up a lot, I think in the coming seasons (hopefully) we'll see Kaz get hardened by circumstances and the storyline in the show. As for Matthias, I think they mainly focused on his story with Nina, where he is a lot softer. The moment where we could see Matthias being mean is while interacting with Nina on the ship and that's not a lot, and a lot of Matthias being mean in the book comes from his anger at Nina and that story is yet to happen. Don't want to hate, just wanted to explain my views on these points!

    • @muskaan3711
      @muskaan3711 Před 3 lety +1

      @@lotteoosterbaan5336 that makes a lot of sense. Thanks for the reply :)

    • @shineon6584
      @shineon6584 Před 3 lety +13

      @@lotteoosterbaan5336But isn't Kaz's arc in SoC is about him learning to open up and become less cold/ruthless? So shouldn't he be even more ruthless and intense in the prequel? I'm fine with the changes though since I get everything can't translate perfectly, and the cast did a great job regardless. I think the writing for the Crows wasn't 100% accurate/less complex as a result of mashing their story with Shadow and Bone, but once they start adapting the actual source material SoC, I'm sure their characterization will make more sense! I'm just glad we got to see the Crows on screen!

    • @ceciliacarney6117
      @ceciliacarney6117 Před 3 lety +9

      I think another thing is that the audience is supposed to like Kaz, and new viewers who haven't read the books wouldn't have access to the internal monologue that softens the intense and hardened attitude he gives outwardly, which would make it difficult to like him.
      The most entertaining thing about Kaz and the way he acts is that if we weren't in his head, and he wasn't one of the main protagonists, he would straight up be the villain. He's ruthless, and his inner thoughts undercut that ruthlessness by a lot.
      So if you take book kaz, remove the internal thoughts, and toss him into a show where even the villain (Darkling) is softened at the edges, new viewers would be like " you expect me to believe Kirigan is the bad guy when this dude is over here threatening the lives of children???"

    • @shineon6584
      @shineon6584 Před 3 lety +6

      @@ceciliacarney6117 That's a good point! I'm sure us readers are just being super picky about things and most people who haven't read the books wouldn't notice a difference haha. However, instead of making him "softer" to balance out his "ruthlessness," they could've lightened him up instead by bringing humor to his dialogue. Kaz is serious, but also sometimes snarky/witty in the books, and engages in banter w the other crows, and that makes him more likeable vs. the show where he comes off as a little too serious imo.

  • @peightoncook7931
    @peightoncook7931 Před 3 lety +9

    You’re so right about the darkling thing! I couldn’t put it into words why his character felt off, but the dialogue in the war room scene would have made him feel more like the complex villain we know from the book!

  • @Emma-sj6wp
    @Emma-sj6wp Před 3 lety +15

    I adore Show Mal. He is everything Book Mal fails to be.
    Human, but a good and supportive friends (and later love in life).
    I liked him in the beginning of the first book, was confused, then hated him, then of course you can't mention Book Mal with out that Iconic Tat, but by the end I loved him again.
    I think a lot of it has to do with Archie and Jessie's off screen friendship. It brings a realness to their on screen friendship that just isn't there in the books. It's super enjoyable.
    The show really gave his character a second chance.

    • @maiasanders3691
      @maiasanders3691 Před rokem

      why did you hate him? I defiantly got annoyed at some parts, but I hated the darkling more than anything.

    • @Emma-sj6wp
      @Emma-sj6wp Před rokem +1

      @@maiasanders3691 I'm sure if I read the books again I wouldn't feel as strongly lol. Mostly it was how he guilt-tripped Alina for her decisions at every turn during the second book without fully understanding her reasoning. It really got on my nerves.
      I find a lot of his character beats similar to Jace from *The Lunar Chronicles* and Aspen from *The Selection* .

  • @Dianuxkasfenix
    @Dianuxkasfenix Před 3 lety +11

    I really like Mal in the show! I particularly love how he did not tell her that she was easier to fed when she did not know she was Grisha (and looked way more sickly). Because I really wanted to throw a shoe at Mal after that.

  • @ObviouslyASMR
    @ObviouslyASMR Před 3 lety +39

    I just finished the show and hadn't read the book so this was super interesting, not enough people are talking about Shadow and Bone :P
    One thing I noticed was that the world felt relatively small because I didn't feel the duration of the travel. That also reminded me how I didn't like that in the later Game of Thrones seasons. I did appreciate that you simply had to infer exposition from context without many pauses.
    I wish I could put my finger on why, but this world didn't feel as immersive as early GoT to me. That didn't stop me from enjoying it though
    anyway great video!

    • @Molly-tv5sv
      @Molly-tv5sv Před 2 lety +1

      I feel like they had drawbacks in the show with worldbuilding due to their limited time.
      They had to fit an entire book into eight episodes of screentime, plus the content of a short story for the darkling's backstory and the fact that half of their characters were from a sequel duology that they had to contextualize and immerse the watcher within. It's extremely hard to get all of that in within the space of 8 episodes, especially since, in the Grisha books, we aren't even familiarised with any land but Ravka until the fourth book written within the universe - and that captures the scale of distance a bit better.
      That being said, I do agree that worldbuilding is less than great. Hopefully, as the contextualizing is able to be slowed, the world is able to be expanded upon and we are shown the wonderful intricacies of the world that Leigh showed us in the books :)

    • @ObviouslyASMR
      @ObviouslyASMR Před 2 lety +1

      @@Molly-tv5sv Thanks for the reply! Those are indeed understandable reasons for the lack of time to go further into worldbuilding, but I suppose they could've extended the runtime.
      Anyway I do hope they'll slow down in the coming seasons like you said, because I did enjoy the first one :)

  • @natasha2112616
    @natasha2112616 Před 3 lety +24

    I actually liked the character development Mal had by the last book. And they essentially made him too perfect on the show in my opinion

    • @nigeriangranny5321
      @nigeriangranny5321 Před 3 lety +1

      YES! I actually DESPISE Mal hate now. 😂
      I’ve always liked him, while recognizing his flaws, of course (that also happen to be incredibly human, but whatever). He has a lot of nuance, especially after what he went through after Alina left, IMO.

    • @McKatie101
      @McKatie101 Před 3 lety +4

      Agreed. He’s too perfect on the show. And somehow he’s kinda boring to me. I still ship Alina and the Darkling

    • @aryanemarques2089
      @aryanemarques2089 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes the fact that he doesn't have any flaws makes him a little boring to me, at the same time I thought he was annoying in the books 🤣 I guess his character is just really not for me

    • @maiasanders3691
      @maiasanders3691 Před rokem

      agreed!!! I love feeling annoyed with characters but then slowly loving them!

  • @zofiabochenska1240
    @zofiabochenska1240 Před 3 lety +16

    I love the eyeliner!
    And I'm still debating if I want to watch it, I'm afraid that without the nostalgia I won't really like it...

    • @TheBookLeo
      @TheBookLeo  Před 3 lety +6

      i would stil recommend it!

    • @esterjulian9267
      @esterjulian9267 Před 3 lety

      I read it just before the show and I really enjoyed it even though I didn't have that nostalgia. There were a few things a bit cringy and weird but overall great.

  • @rayb401
    @rayb401 Před 3 lety +9

    I feel like the scene where she says “awe could have had everything... together” and the emotions that play out on his face show that he like, does care but doesn’t see how also doing what he did is awful. I feel like the line on the book should have been there to like, double confirm that that’s how he feels, but I think Ben did his best with the expressions to tell me that at least

  • @treesspeaklatin8950
    @treesspeaklatin8950 Před 3 lety +7

    13:13 I've never read shadow and bone, but I was fully expecting mal to be super jealous and ruin the scene for me, because it happens A LOT in YA books and shows. However when he said that alina doesn't owe him an explanation... I just LOVED that so much👌

  • @uj0608
    @uj0608 Před 3 lety +34

    These earrings are FIRE 🔥

  • @womangela
    @womangela Před 3 lety +8

    I love that this is a more focused review video! I think a lot of people do the broad general reactions videos (whichI love to see as well) but I love coming to your channel knowing that we're going to get a Leonie-style analysis because I always know it's going to be very thoughtful, honest and concise.
    I totally agree that the show took all the weak and outdated parts and updated them to feel more coherent. Almost every character was more fleshed out in some way, and I think they did amazingly with the amount of episodes and budget that they had. There's always room for growth, but in the same way that they heard what didn't work so well in the books and made it better on screen, I have a lot of hope that they'll take certain feedback from the first season and make the next season even better. (And hopefully Netflix gives us the go for more episodes within a season so that the show people can take their time and things won't feel so rushed!)

  • @fiebienietveld9299
    @fiebienietveld9299 Před 3 lety +18

    I feel like they might have revealed the Darkling’s name early, because if/when they do the Morozova reveal storyline, it has to be more fast paced than the book, so they would already plant this seed to lead to that reveal, because we now know that his last name is fake. If you would show Siege and Storm and Ruin and Rising as they are in the books, I feel like it would be very, very boring, because a lot of those books consists of traveling and very static dialogue filled scenes. For the excitement they are of course incorporating the Crows, but I feel like they would want to cram a bit more of that Morozova storyline in less episodes to make it a bit more sensational. I would understand if this was the case, but I was also very surprised when he told her his name just like that.

    • @aleksandra3552
      @aleksandra3552 Před 3 lety +4

      I also think they wanted to avoid the "he-who-must-not-be-named" situation if he was constantly called the Darkling. The name reveal makes sense to me and since Leigh approved it, I think they must have some clever trick for that moment in Ruin and Rising.

    • @fiebienietveld9299
      @fiebienietveld9299 Před 3 lety +2

      @@aleksandra3552 Good point!

  • @BasicallyBrittx
    @BasicallyBrittx Před 3 lety +24

    Yesss loved this!! Totally agree! Loved Mal soooo much more in the show too.
    MILOOOOOOO 😭😍😭

  • @Goiriath
    @Goiriath Před 3 lety +4

    I like that the show Mal does hit the same character beats as book Mal, it's just we don't find out for book Mal until waaay after everything has happened. Like, even in book 3, stuff like he's been saying he's like to marry Alina since he was 8, and continued having 'inappropriate' thoughts as a teenager, but was trying to be a good friend to her, which you can just see in show Mal .
    Or like, the fight, where Mal sees Alina dancing with the Darkling, and...
    So, he is pretty hurt because he did see pretty accurately actually that they are romantically involved. Yes, that's exactly why the Darkling wanted her to wear his colours. Mals response is actually to just leave without saying anything. And then to ask if she's happy. He only gets snarky after she snipes that maybe he'd prefer she was being tortured, which just doesn't hit the same when you realise he really *has* been worrying she was being tortured but not just that, but that physically pretty much has been tortured himself - he's actually still injured, had his best friends and almost entire platoon murdered in front of him, that's all in the book but not revealed till much later! He thought she was in danger then got there to realise she's... moved on. Looks happy. And is now used to a previously unimaginable level of luxury for a couple of peasants, and he hasn't heard from her once.
    They dropped that scene in the show, but they could have kept it and Mal would *still* be a more sympathetic character because you'd have seen exactly where he was at that moment.
    The single pov just didn't work for the book, because most people don't replay the entire earlier book in light of information that gets dropped in one sentence at the end, or even a book or two later!
    I mean, I often do, and go flicking back through to figure out the timeline for something, but I'm a weirdo and kind of deep analyse for fun.

  • @wanderingbeyondpages
    @wanderingbeyondpages Před 3 lety +6

    I think they dropped his name so early because she is the only one who uses it which shows more intimacy between them: They already made him a person by using General Kirrigan instead of this mystical name of the Darkling. Which is what Leigh tried to do at the end of the books: making him a person

  • @shineon6584
    @shineon6584 Před 3 lety +11

    My only complaint was that the writing for the SoC characters didn't feel as accurate/complex (although they were perfectly cast)! Especially when they left Ketterdam. But that's fine given that they were supposed to take the backseat this season, and adaptations aren't supposed to be 100% accurate anyways! Hopefully, things will smoothen out once we get to the actual SoC storyline!

    • @mmormmmorn5370
      @mmormmmorn5370 Před 3 lety +4

      im still mad bc kaz got beaten up easily in the first ep

    • @shineon6584
      @shineon6584 Před 3 lety +3

      @@mmormmmorn5370 Yeah, that was a weird choice :/ But I didn't mind that too much since it's not like he's physically infallible, just good at hiding his vulnerabilities! I'm more disappointed that we didn't get to see any locking picking/sleigh of hand/pickpocketing :(

  • @kat8366
    @kat8366 Před 3 lety +49

    FR LIKE I HATED ALINA AND MAL IN THE BOOKS AND I REMEMBER BEING LIKE A HARDCORE DARKLINA SHIPPER IN LIKE 8TH GRADE BUT AFTER WATCHING THE SHOW I REALLLLYYY LOVE MAL

  • @jammin.g918
    @jammin.g918 Před 3 lety +5

    Totally agree with your points! Though I loved Ben’s portrayal of the Darkling, I feel like that dialogue in the war room scene was very much needed in order to understand him as a character. I feel like those who’ve read the books were still able to understand the Darkling in the show, but for those who haven’t, it’s a lot harder for them to do so. What a lot don’t understand, like you said, he does care for Alina, however, his lust for power and revenge is stronger than his feelings for Alina. I feel like Netflix is really trying to villainize him, but it’s hard to completely do so when you look at his micro-expressions. I guess that made up for the left out dialogue, Bens’ ability to portray his feelings through expressions (phenomenal btw 🤩). Also, I was very much triggered by the early name reveal 😡 lol.

  • @IlseLove100
    @IlseLove100 Před 3 lety +6

    I loved this video essay style about the book and show! I think most of what you said is exactly what I thought! The things I did think however were better in the book are Genya's story and the role Alina played at the end.
    Alina in the show just ends up lying on the floor of the skiff having not really done anything, except freeing herself, while Mal actually fights the darkling. In the book she uses the stags power for the first time cutting the skiff in half and leaving everyone on it to die. Straight up savage Alina, but it's one of those moments where she becomes a little morally grey, now she just felt like a helpless victim and I didn't really like it. And they just got lucky that the darkling got snatched up by a volcra XD I wonder how it will change their dynamic since she didn't leave him to die in the show...
    Genya's has so little screentime and I am not really sure if I would have understood what was going on if I hadn't read the books. The thing with the king, the importance of the kefta (here all the grisha are nice to her, not treating her like an outsider) aren't very clear, and a sentence here and there would have done the job, without taking much more screentime. A friend of mine, not having read the books, didn't even pick up on what the king did to her and that she poisoned him, so her betrayal feels a bit random...

  • @anab4by
    @anab4by Před 3 lety

    love these takes!

  • @gwenc7805
    @gwenc7805 Před 3 lety +3

    I found that even though they didn't include that specific line of Darkling, his other scenes showed us why he wasn't just manipulating Alina, and that he might be genuinely drawn to her--in the scene of his past where he lost Luda, it echoed the scene later when he told Mal that Alina has only one equal, it was because he had experienced that himself, and he saw her as his only chance to not being lonely for eternity. Also, as multiple comments mentioned, he doubled back to kiss Alina even though he had to leave.
    So yeah I would say that line wasn't really necessary for me, but then again it's just me

  • @marinalemosscaeiro255
    @marinalemosscaeiro255 Před rokem +1

    I just ended the 2 season of shadow and bone and came directly for this video. You did an AMAZING job comparing and I as I watched the show I felt just like you about probably everything. Hope you do another video about the season 2! You are awesome

  • @toshomni9478
    @toshomni9478 Před 3 lety +5

    I've heard that the feeling was that calling a character The Darkling for a long live action series would just seem too weird and was one considered one of those things that works on the page but not as well on the screen.

  • @RiverDancer99
    @RiverDancer99 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Love this review!!!! I'd love to hear your thoughts on season 2!

  • @dianalovesbooks2591
    @dianalovesbooks2591 Před 3 lety +22

    I was waiting for this. You and Cindy are the reason why I read the books!

  • @binozba8092
    @binozba8092 Před 3 lety +5

    Finally 😍 I’ve been waiting for this video since the release of the series 😂

  • @sheyslibrary
    @sheyslibrary Před 3 lety +1

    This was such an amazing video! Your editing was spectacular 😍

  • @viivi4196
    @viivi4196 Před 3 lety

    Damn I wish I was able to put my thoughts about any book to tv show series like this, wow! I really feel like you explained everything so well and I do really agree with you, especially with the Darkling thing you said (the Aleksander name reveal too). And yes Milo was the best addition, I loved all the scenes with him and Jesper! And your little Six of Crows earring?? Excuse me that is the cutest earring ever

  • @Directioner171
    @Directioner171 Před 3 lety +2

    Video essays please! I love these because you somehow put into words exactly what I was thinking.

  • @swanily
    @swanily Před 3 lety +1

    Okay I'm two minutes into the video and I know you're a booktuber but I'm BEGGING for a eyeshadow tutorial, you look STUNNING

  • @SharonLinfromTaiwan
    @SharonLinfromTaiwan Před 3 lety +6

    I've been looking forward to your new video on the show! I love the show so much!!💕For screen Darkling, I actually felt that in the show, especially with Ben Barnes' stellar performance, I felt it shows the Darkling does have true feelings for Alina. Like the expression from Ben's gazes, the scene where he went back to kiss her again (so smitten by that 😆), and the conversation he and Alina had in the tent after the amplifier was placed in Alina's body (the way he said for "US"). I like that the show really humanized both Mal (not the unsupportive teenage boy we see in the book🤣) and the Darkling and giving them so much more depth, and I felt I can root for either! As for the revealing of Aleksander, I've only read Shadow and bone so far so I don't have too strong of a grudge to that🤣and I was so smitten by how Ben Barnes delivered that line😆❤️. But yeah I've learned many readers think it's a miss opportunity. But heyyyy this is only Season 1 and let's see what will come next! Netflix PLEASE renew!!!! Gahhhhh

  • @houseofplayboys6413
    @houseofplayboys6413 Před rokem +1

    ahhhh that darkling dialogue!! i never knew it was his dialogue i've seen it so many places! wow woah... also i think his dialogue "fine. make me your villain" that one just blew my mind its still the first thing that comes to mind hearing his name, the entire scene was just *so good*.

  • @joogullae3456
    @joogullae3456 Před 3 lety +1

    Finally thank you, I've been wanting a video since I haven't read the books or plan too.

  • @jed___cloud
    @jed___cloud Před 3 lety +1

    Haven't read the book yet but the way you explain things urges me to read and watch. Anyway, I've followed your channel last week and since then I've been watching your videos everyday. Waving from the Philippines. 😊

  • @megancastle5573
    @megancastle5573 Před 3 lety

    I love all your points! I didn't take issue with Mal until books 2 & 3, so I'm hoping the show is going to improve him there exponentially.
    Also, I'm kinda annoyed Alina didn't use the cut on the skiff in the end. It helps set up why she still feels connected to the darkling in the next book. Also, it would've looked so cool.

  • @1evonvielen
    @1evonvielen Před 3 lety +10

    Why the Shadow and Bone series is better than the books: The Crows.

  • @renee_rambles
    @renee_rambles Před 3 lety +1

    I completely agree! A great video, as always! Love to see Dutch youtubers succeed!

  • @dontmintme
    @dontmintme Před 3 lety +7

    While I also don't like that they made The Darkling tell Alina his name so early, I think they wanted to humanise him

  • @raevynwoods9403
    @raevynwoods9403 Před 3 lety +1

    I liked your close comparison between the storylines of the book and the series! I'd love to see a similar comparison between Six of Crows and the series, because I thought that even though they changed the story of the Crows, there were still a lot of similarities between the book and the series.

  • @paliPhD
    @paliPhD Před 3 lety

    Loved this video style and your earring! (I never read the books but really enjoyed the show)

  • @janerehbine6581
    @janerehbine6581 Před 3 lety

    I decided to watch the show because I saw your video about the books (usually I'm not super interested in the fantasy genre) but I am so glad I did!! It was amazing. Thank you for making this video as well, since I considered reading the books but now I won't waste my time. I WANT A SEASON 2!!

  • @mystoreysofstories
    @mystoreysofstories Před 3 lety

    Great video! I thought your editing in this video was phenomenal! :)

  • @underhypedandoverrated

    I had no idea about the bonus material containing mal’s letters, I will definitely look for it now when I buy a used copy

  • @kashishbhatia6655
    @kashishbhatia6655 Před 3 lety +8

    omg girl when you were talking i was here sitting and yelling YASSSSS GIRL YASSS
    i agree with everything you said

  • @CatChaos369
    @CatChaos369 Před 3 lety

    I remember trying the book and finding the characters meh the world was fascinating so I’d only read shadow and bone but really loved this adaptation and you nailed your explanation!

  • @unknwon_4
    @unknwon_4 Před 3 lety

    I love this video. You literally said EVERYTHING I was thinking about. THANK YOU, OMG.

  • @pendragon2012
    @pendragon2012 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the synopsis. I haven't read the book but I did watch an episode or two of the show, was a little lost. It did seem really cool though--maybe I'll give it another try!

  • @nawarkhandkar8532
    @nawarkhandkar8532 Před 3 lety

    I LOVE HOW YOU ADDED THE BLOOPERS AT THE END HAHAHAH

  • @Brbdreaming_asmr
    @Brbdreaming_asmr Před rokem +1

    I watched the show before reading the books & I loved how they did the darkling in season 1! In the book, he kinda ignored her for the first while she was at the little palace but in the show he kept her close from early on and you could see how torn up he was about her believing the worst about him and leaving of her own will when Kaz told him. I loved the fountain scene and he was more sensitive and less chaotic when testing her in the tent too! With that said, I was shook when I read the books and realized that the name was supposed to be such a big thing and I wish they’d emphasized that more or waited longer to do the reveal in the show. Also I did love the wanting makes us weak line in the book but I didn’t find it necessary for the plot because I felt the emotion was still portrayed with the looks and emotional tone. Reading the books after the show, I was shocked by how different mal was! I agree with everyone else that he’s infinitely better in the show- I literally thought he was a complete jerk book 1 and a whiner book 2. In the show the nostalgic and pure love between the two of them is so much more apparent- it’s beautiful and makes me love his character in a way I couldn’t imagine with the books. Now I’ve read the demon in the wood too so all I need to binge is six of crows duology and king of scars but I’m so excited for season 2! Can’t wait to see how they do Nikolai!!

  • @bloop6734
    @bloop6734 Před 2 lety +1

    I think the darkling change is intresting because i think it fits the change that they gave alina's character well. They made her more proactive and invested in helping the grisha and ravkans (?) And more proactive in coming into her power and becoming more grisha, and through her convos with the darkling i think he sees that coincidentally this might mean she wants to protect grisha, which is something he believes he stands for and is doing, and so seeing that from her without much push from him (on that front specifically), you see he's genuinely interested in her because of that. And so that paired with the fact that he's still a very lonely person bc no one is an outsider like him, has the power he does, and has to live as long as he has, Alina seemingly wanting the same things he does, saving and helping grisha (just through the different means), makes the affection we see he has for her in the show feel genuine, and the betrayal fit as well because he realises that even tho they want the same thing, they don't want it the same way.
    So i still think he's interesting as a villian just in a slightly different direction. But i do think him staying an interesting villian has the potential to get better or worse depending on what they do next

  • @logann-mackenziefroste563

    Yes! I totally agree with you on this video! I haven’t read the books. And I always choose the film or show over the books . But as much as I love to books and reading my adhd makes it’s a bit difficult to really enjoy books.