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Dare to imagine a faux-medieval fantasy with somewhat accurate hair
Like, if the hair was even on the same level as the costume design, which is to say, recognizably alluding to multiple places and times in the general time period, or more accurately, body of cultural memes and ideas associated with it. And yet in spite of a wide variety of creative and fancy styles of braids and updos on show, mostly on the side characters but occasionally the main characters, like Egwene and Nynaeve... there's still a plurality - majority? - of female speaking characters wearing their hair unbound, or half unbound, in completely implausible situations.
I mean, it's possible that I'm too suspicious, but I think hair and makeup design are casualties of the need for women to look fuckable and pretty at all times, just like body hair. And dirt. And non-modern eyebrows. And, all too often although not in this show, practical shoes.
I mean, it's possible that I'm too suspicious, but I think hair and makeup design are casualties of the need for women to look fuckable and pretty at all times, just like body hair. And dirt. And non-modern eyebrows. And, all too often although not in this show, practical shoes.
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For medievalesque shows, there's an additional confusion because so many surviving paintings depict the Virgin Mary. She's often shown with unbound, flowing hair to signify her virginity, to be different & remarkable--but since so many of the pictures are of her, we tend to read it as normal for the period.
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It's not ONLY Mary who would be shown without a veil - and for that matter she's often depicted with one too - but saints and queens, occasionally, but probably for the same reason (purity). And that's probably why the 19th-century-on historesque depictions of - I hesitate to confuse their subject with the actual period, so perhaps I should say the Age of Chivalry - typically feature the Eowyn on the Battlements hair. And of course, these latter-day depictions are the roots of the modern fantasy genre.
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And you are completely right about hair and cosmetics. Maybe in one sense it's analogous to the script being in modern English instead of (say) Tudor-accurate vocabulary and accents. Viewer understanding of the story, or what the lead character is supposed to be like, is a factor. Even so, a serious drama wouldn't use modern slang, and shouldn't have this year's make-up quirks on display.
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Wax has been watching a show that's supposed to be prestige TV and there is all this stuff in the 1960s with these tiny little sad "80s teen at a 60s party" hairstyles.