Today I was created characters of the Second World War setting. I don`t really know why? for what reason? or how?
The red kite is nazi who like reading and good at linguistics. Professionally, he used to subdue others, but in fact a great dude.
The hear is belarussian villiger who lost his leg once and now can`t participate in the war. By the way a very smart guy but speaks at the mix of Russian and Belarusian languages (trasyanka).
In my mind, their story is not a drama. It is a comedy(?) story with minimal glass splashes(?) And ofcourse it is gay
I don`t know should I write similar text here in the future. If you think it interesting (....and my Eng level doesn't bother you...akhemmm) you can say it in comments
and I will thank you for it♥
The red kite is nazi who like reading and good at linguistics. Professionally, he used to subdue others, but in fact a great dude.
The hear is belarussian villiger who lost his leg once and now can`t participate in the war. By the way a very smart guy but speaks at the mix of Russian and Belarusian languages (trasyanka).
In my mind, their story is not a drama. It is a comedy(?) story with minimal glass splashes(?) And ofcourse it is gay
I don`t know should I write similar text here in the future. If you think it interesting (....and my Eng level doesn't bother you...akhemmm) you can say it in comments
and I will thank you for it♥
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Setting a comedy against the backdrop of the Second World War could make for some super interesting fiction!
It is a jarring, but also compelling combination! It is a good opportunity to explore the tragedy in comedy and the comedy in tragedy. And what you came up with is funny: a “good dude” Nazi having a relationship with a Belarusian villager who he was likely sent to kill.
You seem to have written this dynamic (of finding comedy in tragedy and vice versa) into your actual characters and their relationship— each character has the quality of being both funny and sad, evil and good. So, you actually wove the war into your characters, almost like personification!
I realize you are just sketching this idea out, but it has good potential. Hope you continue to pursue it. Sorry for the long comment!
It is a jarring, but also compelling combination! It is a good opportunity to explore the tragedy in comedy and the comedy in tragedy. And what you came up with is funny: a “good dude” Nazi having a relationship with a Belarusian villager who he was likely sent to kill.
You seem to have written this dynamic (of finding comedy in tragedy and vice versa) into your actual characters and their relationship— each character has the quality of being both funny and sad, evil and good. So, you actually wove the war into your characters, almost like personification!
I realize you are just sketching this idea out, but it has good potential. Hope you continue to pursue it. Sorry for the long comment!
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