perseii said:supransh said:Now he seems to understand the unhealthy relationship between him and Violet and it makes sense to distance yourself from a person after that, I say distance, not DISAPPEAR, ghosting a person who relied on you solely for a purpose in life, is not a healthy way of dealing with things at all, it makes it harder for her, this is what I would call pussying out. But well, but I guess it's better than being a selfish prick and taking emotional advantage of that poor stockholm syndrome afflicted teen. WELL GUESS WHAT HE ENDS UP DOING ANYWAY.
"Ghosting", as you put it, may not have been the best choice, but still an understandable one. The two of them were forcibly separated in battle, and after some time has passed while recovering, "just leaving things be" does seem like a reasonable course of action to me. Tracking the other person down just to cut/lessen ties with her might very well turn out worse, especially if that person is "obsessed".
But to be fair, I also think that's a pretty generous interpretation of Gilbert's character, because it doesn't look like he was thinking in terms of "ending their toxic relationship" anyway. If he really cared about staying away from Violet for her (and his) sake, then I would expect him to be trying a little harder to rebuild his life and find happiness. Instead, he came across as consumed by guilt and self-loathing, more like "I don't deserve her and I don't deserve happiness".
For me, the character
as a concept could still have been interesting and sympathetic, but the actual writing was confusing and not satisfying, like something was missing.
supransh said:I don't even want to talk about how freaking creepy it is for a 29 year old to fall in love and confess to a 14 year old (15 year age gap)
I really don't like this trope either, but I could at least forgive the initial confession for depicting a distorted relationship that was formed in the horrors of war.
Although Gilbert was not a child soldier, we do see that he also led an unhappy life, a lot of it related to the military (expectations from his soldier father, strained relationship with his brother, difficulty dealing with wartime casualties and atrocities). As I was watching the show, I interpreted their relationship as between two traumatized, emotionally stunted people who were stuck in an abnormal, horrible situation together.
It was, as you say, unhealthy, but it was still genuine, and ended up becoming a starting point for Violet, post-war. It would have been for the best to leave it behind and grow beyond it, which the show did (I believe you disagree on this, but it felt like the show was trying to at least).
Even when the movie brought this relationship back into focus, I still thought this had potential to be an interesting and emotional story. Now that both of them are a little older and had a chance to grow, how will they approach their relationship now? Will they completely start over? What will it be like now that they're not in the military and they've each built new lives for themselves?
I think the movie was in a unique position to tell a mature and complex story about the age gap problem. Again, it
could have. It's just a shame it defaulted to the idea that the original relationship was completely valid and all-conquering.
It was, as you say, unhealthy, but it was still genuine, and ended up becoming a starting point for Violet, post-war. It would have been for the best to leave it behind and grow beyond it, which the show did (I believe you disagree on this, but it felt like the show was trying to at least).