xuexiao // wangxian [who are you?] the untamed mv
joint character study of xue yang & the yiling patriarch - and the relationships they destroyed on their paths toward demonic cultivation. [alternately: xue yang and wei wuxian have identity crises and are bad boyfriends for two minutes straight]


just…augh. what I love about this (what I hate about this) is how much it’s…not just trying to bring Xiao Xingchen back from the dead, it’s Xue Yang actively trying to bring back their entire life from the dead. picking up the vegetables, cleaning up the house, setting up a-Qing’s bedding (possibly this kills me most of all! she’s coming back too!)…it’s like everything’s just going to start over again if he puts it back just right. and then when nothing happens it’s just–

had forgotten the bit where he tries to fix Xiao Xingchen’s actual wound, hours after he’s dead. it’s switched around - you expect someone to try to fix the wound first and when that doesn’t work…but here the resurrection is the first response, and actually addressing the wound is an afterthought, and I don’t even know what to do with that. other than. cry about it. and about how so much of what hurts me in this scene is the sense of confusion in it.
I think a lot about Xue Yang’s relationship with death, and the ways in which I think he’s sort of numb to it as a thing that happens all the time and also doesn’t really matter, people are corpses are people who could be corpses soon. killing people is real, but people being dead is sort of…not exactly.
and just. if this is one of the first times in Xue Yang’s life that the fact of someone’s being dead, and what that actually means in real terms, lands. and what grief is for someone who thinks of mourning as something other people do.
(and don’t even get me started about the fact that he apparently just like. goes and sets up a whole resurrection ritual with an open stomach wound and then is like. oh right guess I should do something about that. further vindication for my ‘xue yang has an absolutely appalling lack of concern about damage to his physical body’ emotions.)
The Untamed (2019) / Recoil - Want
“Xiao Xingchen, you’re so persistent. You finally got me after such a long time tracking me. I almost lost interest in the past few days, but it’s finally getting exciting now.”
The Untamed // Episode 10
Xue Yang, you really are too disgusting
Maybe you shouldn’t have left the mountain.
Oh will you look at that, it’s Xue Yang Feelings Hour on this blog again.
@spockandawe wrote a post a bit ago that expressed at least some of what I’m going to grope around trying to say here, so I’ll link to that first before I start trying. Namely, about Xue Yang, and Xiao Xingchen, and the idea of Xiao Xingchen’s innocence/naivete and Xue Yang’s relationship to it.
At least initially, I think what Xue Yang perceives as Xiao Xingchen’s naivete/incomprehension of the way the world works as something that’s infuriating about him. It shows that he’s out of touch, that he doesn’t get it, that he’s removed from the truth of things - and I think Xue Yang sees that as a kind of privilege.
Of course you think the world’s a better place than it is, of course you believe in people and making the world better, you didn’t grow up in it, you haven’t seen the worst of it, you’ve never been weak and vulnerable to other people who want to hurt you.
So what Xue Yang does with the ghost puppets is, I think, specifically targeted at that aspect of Xiao Xingchen. It’s not just about sullying him morally (though there’s that, too) - it’s about a combination of proving to him that he really doesn’t understand (because if he did he couldn’t be tricked into killing all those people) and making him a part of the terribleness of the world (by turning him into a murderer).
Xiao Xingchen doesn’t understand the way the world works and so he’s vulnerable to trickery, which makes him weak, naive, stupid. It makes him easy for Xue Yang to take advantage of, and Xue Yang is going to take advantage of him for all he’s worth.
But. But.
When other people try to take advantage of his (literal) blindness, he threatens them. Or with the straw game: he lies to Xiao Xingchen about who drew which, but when Xiao Xingchen believes him he tells him he was lying.
And in this conversation, he holds back the truth about what Xiao Xingchen has done - what he made Xiao Xingchen do - for an astonishingly long time. It’s a weapon he has, and he has to know how much it’s going to hurt, but he doesn’t use it for a long while into the argument. It’s well before the reveal about the ghost puppets and Song Lan when he throws out this bit - when he tells Xiao Xingchen maybe you shouldn’t have left the mountain.
On the one hand, there’s the read on those words that’s the face value of what Xue Yang is saying before - why did you have to interfere? Why did you have to get in my way? But there’s the look on his face that I think is saying not you out of touch, naive, idiot, how dare you talk about things you don’t understand and more you out of touch, naive, idiot, why didn’t you stay where you were safe.
Why didn’t you stay where your innocence wouldn’t get you into trouble, and where people (like me) couldn’t take advantage of you?
Somewhere during those three years, Xiao Xingchen’s kindness and relative innocence has gone from being an irritating indicator of his ignorance and hypocrisy to an exploitable advantage to something that should be protected.
But ultimately, anger and hurt override that, and he turns it back on Xiao Xingchen (”are you qualified to judge me?”) by dragging him down to his level.
Even if that’s not really where he wants him to be anymore.
oh god oh fuck xue yang oh my god u forgot to add the ‘happy ending’ tag xue yang no xue yang hey no listen xue yang u forgot to add th
captain-stab-a-hoe
I know xuexiao is enemies to lovers gone very wrong but technically it's also just xue yang suffering through a one sided enemies to lovers phase while xingchen is living out his wholesome friends to lovers fantasy in blissful ignorance