Xie Yan, who has spent the entire time desperately missing Shu Nian, decides to go to New York. Unbeknownst to Xie Yan, Shu Nian returns to China and starts living/working somewhere else. Ultimately, Shu Nian is sent off overseas to get a Masters. Xie Yan leaves the room in disgust, and, then, immediately begins to distance himself from Shu Nian. One day, as he plays with Shu Nian, he discovers Shu Nian’s excited state. Xie Yan continues to treat Shu Nian as his personal pet, ordering him around, hugging him, biting him, and sleeping with his arms wrapped tightly around Shu Nian. Over time, it becomes harder and harder for Shu Nian to hide his orientation when Xie Yan touches him and his body reacts. Xie Yan demonstrates his abhorrence when his current girlfriend teases him about holding hands with a friend in England. By this point, Shu Nian’s feelings for Xie Yan have grown from a young boy’s gratitude and adoration to a mature love, which he desperately hides from Xie Yan, knowing the other man hates gay people. Xie Yan returns from abroad, and the first person he comes to see is Shu Nian. The story then jumps forward to the two as adults. The two spent their childhoods playing together, with Shu Nian doing everything his master wanted, including sleeping in Xie Yan’s arms like a doll. He made Shu Nian cry and then decided to keep him. Xie Yan came to the orphanage to look for a replacement for his dog, Alice. While he didn’t get a prince, he got a two-years-younger master, Xie Yan. Shu Nian was an orphan, who had spent his entire young life dreaming of the day he would be rescued by his prince. It was released on YouTube in Summer of 2016 and starred Meng Rui as Xie Yan and Wang Bowen as Shu Nian. Uncontrolled Love was a two-part movie, adapted from Chinese writer, Lan Lin’s, novel of the same name. A shout out to those amazing subbers out there who provide us with the opportunity to watch all Asian Dramas/movies. These leads leave the wrist-grabbing, stalking heroes of Korean dramas miles behind in their quest to make the other male lead their own.īelow I’ve summarized and commented on Uncontrolled Love, A Round Trip to Love, and HIStory: Obsessed which I recently finished watching on YouTube. A few of the movies have been adaptations from books, and have some really scary male leads. Most of the shows/movies that I have seen have paper thin plots and some really bad acting. Since I haven’t seen any other mention of Taiwanese BL besides this one series, I wonder if Taiwan is also getting into the BL game? And I was impressed by one of the Taiwanese dramas I saw. Thailand dramas, the ones that I’ve seen, are of the sweet and young love variety. Japanese BL anime (called yaoi) is just not my cup of tea. Japanese films are still as dry/too quiet for me, with that hint of melancholy that seems to soak through every scene in the movie, eating away at any other emotion. I haven’t seen enough to make any generalizations about the shows or movies, but I do know that most Chinese films post-ban have had either open endings or downright sad endings, with no happily ever afters for the main couple. It’s those YouTube thumbnails that get you! I’ve seen bits and pieces of a lot of movies/shows from China, completing only a few, some from Thailand, some from Japan (including bits and pieces of Yaoi Anime) and even a couple from Taiwan. I recently began watching Boys Love (BL) movies and shows, coming across this genre when watching other Asian dramas like Bromance. Uncontrolled Love, Round Trip to Love and HIStory: ObsessedĬREDIT FOR ALL PICTURES GO TO THEIR UPLOADERS!
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