Assisti mais um pouco e não dá pra não pensar que quem escreveu essa série é fã dá Torre Negra.
- futuro tão no futuro que parece passado com umas sobras de tecnologia.
- alguém criando uma rebelião pra derrubar o sistema de governo atual. (Viúva lembra o Farson).
- grupo de elite responsável pelas tretas com treinamento desde criança
- terras desoladas
- lugar lendário que ninguém sabe como chegar lá.
Sei que cada item aí é algo bem abrangente, mas sei lá. No conjunto de obra lembra um pouco,claro que em escalas bem menores e de menores qualidades.
tetando pelo tetatalk durante um passeio na outra camada da matrix
Na verdade é inspirada em Jornada para o Oeste. Sunny é o Sun Wukog (Monkey King) e que o M.K. seria o Monk Xuanzang (talvez M.K. venha de
Mon
K). Mas é uma provocação porque M.K. seria exatamente
Monkey
King).
Em uma entrevista com Daniel Wu perguntaram sobre
The show is also said to be loosely based on Journey to the West, a piece of classic Chinese literature by Wu Cheng’En about the Monkey King, aka Sun Wu Kong, who eventually accompanies the monk Tripitaka and several other supernatural allies on an adventure towards enlightenment. It seems parallels can be drawn between Sun Wu Kong and Sunny, as well as M.K. — played by Aramis Knight — and Tripitaka, or the other way around, if the MK may be interpreted as possibly standing for the “Monkey King.” Could you maybe discuss the parallels with the mythical story?
Sunny’s name comes from Sun Wu Kong and M.K. stands for “Monk” which is a reference to Tripitaka the monk, but we’re not playing those characters. We’re playing their essences. The journey the Monkey King goes on is to take the Buddha scriptures from China to India, and through that process he changes as a person — at the beginning, he’s a really naughty and rebellious, feisty character who fights all the time and at the end, he becomes enlightened and more tranquil and peaceful. These mythical stories are allegories for life. And the parallel is that the show is a story about these two people who travel on a journey together where they also learn from each other, and how they change as people through that journey. So the mythical parallels are more about that “journey” element, and the essence of the journey. So it’s not really a literal translation.