Friday, March 01, 2013
Weekend Discussion: Is it always necessary to have a Felices Para Siempre?
Labels: no-podia, telemundo, telenovelas, weekend
Teresa also wasn't a super happy ending for the main couple. They did end up together, but they seemed more resigned than happy.
One sad ending I can think of is from Dona Barbara. Anyone heard of it? It was a Telemundo series that didn't end well for its main protagonist, being Dona Barbara: she didn't get the man & she died alone. But at least she got her revenge at the end. :)
~ posted by not-a-dan-fan
Not-a-Dan-Fan: Dona Barbara was recapped here on Caray Caray if you ever want to look back at those recaps. The good guys, Marisol and Santos, did get a happily ever after.
Personally, I found Marisol annoying and thought it was super-creepy that Santos got it on with both Marisol and her mother. I actually had a lot of sympathy for Barbara and was cheering her revenge against the monsters who raped her when she was an innocent young girl.
Rubi did not deserve a happy ending and I thought Teresa got off lightly at the end. I think that the most logical ending (which wasn't shown on US TV) was where she ended up alone, at a new job, preparing to seduce her new boss.
My theory about tragedy in opera is that it makes for much better music as well as the overarching general themes of tragedies we are meant to learn from.
I will ultimately do an essay on opera and novelas which -- I hope -- will confound those who consider novelas to be lowbrow entertainment.
BTW, here is a shot I wish were in that montage. Jay Hunter Morris is a great Siegfried, both vocally and physically.
Juan Ferrara is another actor I added to the list for a retrospective.
I like the journey, the romance, but an ending that's not contrived. I completely dislike novellas where the protagonists spent ¾ of the novella separate and fighting and to magically end up together at the last minute.
I find the Argentinean protagonists to be flawed individuals that we know in our everyday lives; I empathize easier to their situations than the Mexican protagonists.
Myo-
What is it that the audience really wants? If we don't even know, I suspect the writers can many times have a tough time figuring it out. So we see them doing many different things with the characters throughout the story—some things we enjoy, other things we hate. But at least the writers feel that they can guarantee the audience one thing—a happy ending—no matter what all came before that.
India had an ending that was probably unsatisfactory to many viewers since it featured 2 perfectly hopelessly in love couples (both resulting in pregnancies and healthy births) ultimately separated by an arranged marriage and of course all sorts of extraneous forces never to be reunited.
For some reason Univision elected to air both of these on Telefutura rather than the its more widely available parent network.
Carlos
Was Dona Barbara based on the Romulo Gallegos book? I know nothing about the show. If based on the book, did it stick pretty closely to it?
The most tragic ending in a novela has to be Pueblo Chico, Infierno Grande. I don't think anybody there got a happy ending and half of the cast died. Possibly every side story ended tragically. The villain wasn't one of those you enjoy and love so her death was also sad. Even with all of that, it's still my favorite novela from Jose Alberto Castro (Rubí, LQNPA). The story is based on the life of his great aunt and the setting is a small town in Michoacán in the 1920's. I guess since the story is based on real life events he didn't want to change them into a happy ending. The opening sequence shows the characters in a play, with the town as their audience, this is to show that this is a tragedy that will be contemplated by the whole town. The story is made of 150 half hour episodes, so, by today's 1 hour standard it would be only 75 episodes. It's short but it doesn't need more.
Jarocha
Jarocha
LXV--Interesting that although there are many parallels between opera and telenovelas, we get much more invested in a 4-5 month long, nightly telenovela and we get to know the characters intimately (sometimes more than we want--a la Dion & Hissadora) and get involved in their fates--as we would a long novel.
An opera, even with a great story line, isn't spoken, it's sung, so right from the opening scene, we have a deviation from reality. We can easily take a hero's (Manrico) or heroine's (Mimi) death, because we've only invested 2-3 hours in the story and the characters and besides, we want to hear the music, the voices, the sets, the costumes. Their deaths don't affect us as much, whereas a tn protagonista would.
I've pretty much enjoyed all the tn's I've watched. Knowing the protagonista couple would end up together helps me get through the rough parts of their separation. But being a romantic at heart, I need to see a lot of lovin' togetherness to balance the apartness. One exception was Un Refugio para el Amor. I was able to tolerate the separation, although we were all furious at Rodrigo's inability to go ahead and divorce Gala.
What I object to, and other people have commented on, are contrived and hurried endings just to get TO the End. Maria Isabel comes to mind--she did a very quick turn around and forgave Ricardo in just a few minutes and to a certain extent, Sortilegio did the same, too as Alex wooed MJ all over again and someone else shot the villain.
One tn that had an ending that disappointed and disgusted just about everyone was La Esposa Virgen, as UA pointed out. They made so much to do about the strong attraction and relationship between Jose Guadalupe (our own Rogelio) and Virginia (Adela Noriega) that when it didn't turn out that way we felt cheated. (I could say that it was a Mejia production and that's all that needs to be said. I understand he got a lot of criticism for how he ended it--despite audience feedback. I guess the original audience had stronger feelings for Sergio than Jorge).
UA-Nope--Do *not* want to see the villains win, ever. They need justice and punishment and there's no way we can mete it out. The writers have to.
Carlos--Happy to see your mention of La Pola. Life in those days was certainly unpredictable and muy, pero muy duro. Throw the church and race relations into the political mixer and no one is safe.
It would be nice to see one end differently.
I didn't see Dona Barbara but I saw the book at the bookstore & had the mistaken idea that I could read it. I couldn't even get past page one, it even has a glossary for all the regional words.
Variopinta- Cuando Me Enamoro didn't end with a wedding. Since it's the same writing/directing/producing team, they might go the same route in AB.
Querida Enemiga was a bit different (from the other telenovelas I have seen) in that the heroine got to choose which galan she wanted rather than the one she started out with. That was fun, especially since she chose 'Chef Haut.'
Anyway I also wanted Luis and Victoria to live happily ever after. I participated in a Desencuentro discussion group when it aired in the US. No one liked the ending. Y ¡pobrecita de Maru (la hija de Luis)! She lost both her mother and father.
By an amazing coincidence they began airing the telenovela a couple of weeks before my advanced Spanish class began reading the novel for discussion in class.
There were a lot of differences. DB indeed loved Santos Luzardo in the book, but they never had sex. I loved the book and the wonderful descriptions of the llanero life in Venezuela. The "cowboys" who worked on Santos' hacienda were in the novel, but they didn't really go into their personal lives that much.
DB was raped in the book as well, but not graphically, since it was written in 1931. I don't remember her ever getting revenge on the rapists in the book.
To sum up, I loved both the book and the telenovela, but there were lots of differences.
I forgot one other tn where the sweet young second stringer ended up alone--without Big Ed: La Verdad Oculta. Big Ed did end up with the right woman, but we were sorry that for some reason there weren't enough nice men to go around for Elsa.
Vivi--No more bodas in CME. There had already been enough of them, I guess. It was cute to see Jeronimo and Renata with a whole pack of kids stomping grapes as the camera faded out!
I also think they have the best chemistry of any tn couple since Fernando Carrillo and Adela Noriega in 'Maria Isabel'. I'm fine felices para siempre endings because tns usually make the fps hard won.
Many of the novelas on Telemundo don't end in weddings, especially the drug related ones. And Sin Senos No Hay Paraiso had a shocking ending. The protagonist definitely made a lot of poor choices, many due to the environment in which she grew up. The end was tragic in an operatic way, and wasn't disappointing at all. Muñecas of the Mafia also had bad endings for most of the 5 girls. Again, this was fine, as they all made bad choices. So there's a lot of moralism at play. But I agree, in the traditional telenovelas, where there's a main good couple, we all like to see a happy ending.
Since my family has had to deal with drug addicts I don't watch the drug-themed novelas. I suspect they're being made to attract more male viewers, but the violence in them is such a turn-off. I also understand that those can't be expected to have the standard happy ending; that would make no sense whatsoever.
I totally agree that the drug themed ones appeal to a different audience, and that may be why they don't always have happy endings.
Anita: I think with operas, the supension of disbelief is part of the package despite trends towards more naturalism in acting and fewer fat sopranos. But in opera, the more you know it, the more affecting it becomes. In a TN, the thing unfolds, the suspense builds, we develop our loyalties and hatreds and then justice prevails; we get a wedding and feel great and ready to do it all over with a new story.
Operas improve and grow deeper with each seeing/hearing because of the music. It carries with it the ineffable, nonverbal emotion. In plots that make not one lick of sense (Così, for instance) the music is the plot. Wagner makes his point through leitmotif and Puccini actually uses it for narrative. I don't know how many times I've listened to Butterfly and in the final scene, Pinkerton cries the first "Butterfly" and I'm thinking, "you jerk, too little too late" And then he does it again, and I start to realize what she's really done, and by the third cry I am collapsed in a heap. It only takes a few notes to fill out the entire emotional gamut of an opera. I don't think TNs hold up to repeat exposure, although I confess, I've watched Alborada (complete) about 4 times and got emotional about the ending each time.
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