"Better a fallen rocket than never a burst of light."
~ Tom Stoppard, The Invention of Love

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Relationship Spotlight: Veil & Sunny (Into the Badlands)

On Into the Badlands, Sunny and Veil’s relationship is somehow central and understated at the same time – a better, safer life for him and Veil is the goal that drives much of Sunny’s actions, and because of his clipper status, the very fact that they have a relationship puts them both in danger, and yet there isn’t a huge amount of drama mined from them as a couple.  It’s like they have the plot relevance of a main-character romance as well as the more low-key portrayal of a supporting-character romance, both of which are good things in my book (a few spoilers.)

One of the first things the show does right with Sunny/Veil is having them already in an established relationship when the show starts.  “Celebrated clipper with 404 kill tattoos” and “gentle doctor who helps even her enemies” is quite the opposites-attract pairing, which gives it dramatic potential, but it’s also the sort of dynamic that could tip very easily into “‘bad boy’ (ugh) redeemed by the love of a good woman (ugh!)” territory.  If we’d opened on a will-they-won’t-they instead of an established couple, showing their polar-opposite approaches to life and death while their physical chemistry inevitably brings them closer and closer together, I feel like that dynamic might have been hard to avoid.

As it is, though, we don’t see Veil trying to understand how “she could ever be attracted to a man like Sunny” or Sunny wrestling to bite back his feelings because “deep down, he knows he doesn’t deserve her.”  There’s no, “What are we doing?”, “This could never work,” “A person like you,” and so on and so forth.  Whatever brought them together – we don’t know the details, but since Veil is a doctor and Sunny is in a wildly dangerous line of work, I bet some level of patching-up was involved at some point – by the time we meet them, Veil and Sunny are already comfortably, beautifully together.

I love the softness of their first scene in bed:  the soulful companionship, the easy sensuality, the clear sense of deep trust between them.  Lounging in bed together in comfortable states of undress, Sunny works at his literacy (Veil has been teaching him to read,) and they both smile as he tosses the book aside and declares that The Cat in the Hat was better.  It’s not that they’re rock-solid, because genuine, substantial conflicts arise between them at different points, rising organically from the different ways they respond to the often-perilous trials of living in the Badlands.  But even when they fight, they talk to each other and the mutual respect comes through.  They feel like a real couple that just happens to be in an impossible situation in a post-apocalyptic world rather than a “TV couple,” and I like that.

They balance each other out quite nicely.  Sunny can protect them with his sword and glorious fighting skills if necessary, but Veil can remind him that that’s not always the optimal method of problem-solving.  Veil’s tendency toward hope can counteract Sunny’s toward pessimism, helping spur him to think of ideas rather than accept that nothing can be changed for the better.  Sunnny’s eye for strategy recognizes the smart plays, and Veil’s knowledge can help put them into action.  And Veil’s quiet diplomacy can open many doors, while Sunny’s guarded nature keeps her vigilant as well.  Just a great pairing all around – this season has had them apart from one another, and although it’s interesting to see how each reacts to challenges when they’re so far from the other, I can’t help but hope it doesn’t take too long to bring them back to each other.

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