Punisher wrote: Mon Sep 11, 2023 9:54 pm
I don't think I ever read the books and haven't watched the show yet.
Can someone tell me what it's about amd what shows it's mist like?
I don't know where they're taking the show, so it's a little hard to be specific. Keeping it general (and spoiler free beyond prologue level stuff), it's about a fantasy world where the people accidentally released a major bad entity (think 'Satan and Sauron had a baby more powerful than either' and you won't be too far off. It was a futuristic sci-fi world with magic, and they got a little too curious. They were able to imprison the entity again, but it was shoddy, and the process nearly destroyed the world, obliterated society, and drove every male who could use magic insane from that point forward.
It was very well known and accepted that one day, the guy responsible for both imprisoning the entity and destroying the world in the process would be reborn, and that when he did so, the entity would also break free. There would follow a 'last battle' in which the entity would either be destroyed, or the entity would win and all of the world would become, essentially, hell as the fabric of reality itself unraveled under the entity's control.
The story takes place thousands of years later as those events are just coming to pass. The world still hasn't recovered from what happened. Practically all of the technology is long gone and turned to dust, and the world is in a late medieval/early renaissance period (a typical non-Tolkien fantasy world - there aren't a bunch of other races, monsters don't wander all over, etc), with women being the only ones who can safely use magic (men who can use it are hunted down.) It centers on a small group of village youths from a rural town that's so remote that even the kingdom they live in has forgotten that the region exists (they haven't seen a tax man in generations.)
As for feel - the books are epic 'serious' fantasy full of characters and detailed cultures. Comparisons to something like Game of Thrones wouldn't be unwarranted (and it's worth noting that Wheel of Time is the longest single fantasy series ever written, currently sitting at 4.4 million words.)
The show changed the focus a bit, made the youths a bit older, but the core premise seems the same.
The feel (for the show, just going from season 1) is... less serious and grounded than Game of Thrones or The Witcher, but still has the scope and stakes of Game of Thrones. In film... more Hobbit than Lord of the Rings.
What doesn't kill me makes me stranger.