It's something that bothers me whenever I watch a historical cdrama, where the scene set/stage is a city, the city is very uniform in appearance and looks like brand new. There is nothing "bad" in the environment, like the streets are super clean, there is no filth or anything, no beggers, no horse poo, everybody dressed cleanly, etc. It looks too fake in my humble opinion. And when there's like a poor child, they sometimes smear a black coal smudge on the face, but even that looks fake.
Why do they do such a bad job at it? Is it propaganda? That historical china was all fine and dandy? And it did not have all the filth that every other civilization had? I mean, if you have horses in the street, everywhere else on the planet there is horse shit on the street and the street is dirty.
I'm not saying the environment has to be super realistic, but it shouldn't be this obviously faked, sanitized version of history.
Cleanliness and beauty sell better than a realistic gritty environment.
In terms of propaganda the concern of the communist party deals more with writers who use the setting as satire for current issues and the government of today.
So a corrupt foolish ruler in an ancient Chinese tv show might be perceived as an attack on the leadership today and that show would get censored.
Does recent history count as historical? If so, you might be interested in The Blue Kite, a realistic movie set in the 50s and 60s.
mjf314:Does recent history count as historical? If so, you might be interested in The Blue Kite, a realistic movie set in the 50s and 60s.
I am only thinking of dynasty dramas.
You might like Ming Dynasty in 1566. It's probably not quite as realistic as you want, but it's the most realistic historical drama that I've seen so far.
ArniA:It's something that bothers me whenever I watch a historical cdrama, where the scene set/stage is a city, the city is very uniform in appearance and looks like brand new. There is nothing "bad" in the environment, like the streets are super clean, there is no filth or anything, no beggers, no horse poo, everybody dressed cleanly, etc. It looks too fake in my humble opinion. And when there's like a poor child, they sometimes smear a black coal smudge on the face, but even that looks fake.
Errr... aint those also in other historical dramas - like kdramas and western dramas (eg. GOT)?
Maybe this will help explain why historical Cdrama settings look surreal. You can google more about Hengdian World studios, a very interesting place which I plan to visit once China opens up.
https://www.hengdianworld.com/en/
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7735569/The-mega-Chinese-film-studios-Hollywood-shame.html
Tulup07:Maybe this will help explain why historical Cdrama settings look surreal. You can google more about Hengdian World studios, a very interesting place which I plan to visit once China opens up.
https://www.hengdianworld.com/en/
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7735569/The-mega-Chinese-film-studios-Hollywood-shame.html
Yea, they have great variety in film sets for historical dramas.
I notice in korean dramas they re-use the same film set for kdrama historical dramas a lot, so much I recognize it between different dramas. But I've not yet experienced the same for cdrama.
But the cdrama film sets seem a bit too "freshly built" and very clean, even so much that when a horse carriage is driving down a street that is made of sand, you can see only one set of tracks, from that one horse carriage.
And I notice this a lot, this cleanliness, like tools have never been used before.
I agree, especially with lower budget "idol" dramas which get produced in droves.
I found the historical sets/costumes more acceptable in dramas like Yanxi Palace or even One and Only.