(no subject)
Jun. 27th, 2011 04:28 pmSo, when it comes to TV, I apparently have a thing for non-enemy-in-main-canon pairings that involve people pointing guns at each other.
Nathan and Audrey point guns at each other and bicker the first time they meet in Haven. Nate and Sophie shoot each other in a flashback in Leverage's first episode (Of their first meeting? I can't remember.)
Then there's the currently airing kdrama City Hunter, which most of my kdrama loving friends were squeeing over and I put it on my "maybe" list, and then everyone started exclaiming over ep 7 where Na Na shoots Yoon Sung and he falls off the roof. Though, I doubt there will be reciprocal shooting and Yoon Sung would die (possibly literally) if he, like, accidentally stepped on her toe. But basically, I watched because i was told she shoots him, even if she doesn't know who he is.
I can think of others (including some with swords) but those are the most recent.
(No spoilers or hints after ep 7 of City Hunter in comments, though I expect to catch up today.)
And yet, outside of wuxia, I rarely care for "enemies as lovers" as a trope.
Nathan and Audrey point guns at each other and bicker the first time they meet in Haven. Nate and Sophie shoot each other in a flashback in Leverage's first episode (Of their first meeting? I can't remember.)
Then there's the currently airing kdrama City Hunter, which most of my kdrama loving friends were squeeing over and I put it on my "maybe" list, and then everyone started exclaiming over ep 7 where Na Na shoots Yoon Sung and he falls off the roof. Though, I doubt there will be reciprocal shooting and Yoon Sung would die (possibly literally) if he, like, accidentally stepped on her toe. But basically, I watched because i was told she shoots him, even if she doesn't know who he is.
I can think of others (including some with swords) but those are the most recent.
(No spoilers or hints after ep 7 of City Hunter in comments, though I expect to catch up today.)
And yet, outside of wuxia, I rarely care for "enemies as lovers" as a trope.