The Gauche in the Machine (
china_shop) wrote in
sid_guardian2020-03-14 10:13 am
Entry tags:
Focus on Guo Changcheng: especially ordinary
Zhao Yunlan: If we weren't a little special, how could we be the Special Investigation Department? Being fit to be recruited here means you're also very special.
Guo Changcheng: No, no, I'm not special at all. I'm especially ordinary.
I love non-powered characters being brave in the face of super-powered situations. Guo Changcheng (24yo, human) is as non-powered as you can get, and from the very start, he gloms onto the SID as an institution/ideal, despite some questionable lollipop action from its chief, the team's going out of their way to Halloween-scare him, and being dangled perilously out of a crime-scene window for no obvious reason.
None of that deters him! In episode 1, after he escorts Li Qian's grandmother home, the shadow man comes looking for the Longevity Dial, and Guo Changcheng, although understandably terrified, hurls an apple at him. At the end of the episode, he questions the procedure for dealing with Dixing detainees in front of the awe-inspiring Black-Cloaked Envoy. And by episode 2, he's doing his utmost to protect Shen Wei and Li Qian at the hospital. Even the bad guy looks bemused and/or moved by his tenacity.


Changcheng's parents were killed in a car accident when he was young. His grandmother raised him, and when she died, his uncle and aunt took him in. Maybe that's why, when Zhao Yunlan says at the start, "From this day onwards, we [the SID] are your family," Changcheng takes that so much to heart. He uses -ge (brother) and -jie (sister) with just about everyone, but (I think?) keeps calling Zhao Yunlan "Chief Zhao" as a mark of respect, when nearly everyone else says "lao-Zhao".





Guo Changcheng embodies huge amount of goodness and compassion. He's respectful to strangers. He has a strong moral compass. He's really kind. (The peptalk he gives Ji Xiaobai in episode 5, when Zhou Weiwei is missing, is both super-dorky and effective.) He doesn't let his anxiety, awkwardness or fear get in the way when it counts. (He stands up to Zhao Xinci!) I adore and find it hilarious that his custom-made weapon is a zapper for turning fear into electricity. I love that he's goofy and innocent. And I love that he keeps a diary and a list of Zhao Yunlan's sayings, and tries to make sense of and learn from everything that happens.
There is so much more I could say about him, but the moment I most want to highlight is in episode 5, after the water kidnapping case when, faced with Butler Wu dying and his son's grief, everyone in the SID stands around feeling helpless. Zhao Yunlan looks to Lin Jing, who shakes his head: there's nothing they can do.
It's Guo Changcheng who goes and fetches the Longevity Dial from its case. He's the one who thinks outside the box and summons the determination to risk and to sacrifice. In that moment, he is more heroic than any of them, and Zhao Yunlan immediately learns from Changcheng and takes over, setting a new course for the SID and paving the way for a closer relationship with the Black-Cloaked Envoy. Guo Changcheng's actions -- and his belief in the SID as a force for good -- are pivotal.

Quotes:
- We... we have the spirit. We don't care if we have to sacrifice ourselves to protect the people around us. Chief Zhao, the Deputy, Chu-ge, Hong-jie... even Sang Zan who joined us recently. They all have this kind of spirit. They are my role models. Although I'm a coward, I still know that even if I hide somewhere, how long can that last? If danger is going to come, someone has to stand in front of everyone else. (ep 13)
- Uncle, you're right, I'm useless, but at the SID everyone looks after me. Although I always need help, they still take the trouble to take me on cases, teach me fighting skills, and when there is danger, they protect me. It's the SID people who give me courage and confidence. It's them who help me find my own value and my future path.(ep 14)
And of course, there's the arc of his relationship with Chu Shuzhi, from being respectively intimidated and annoyed to primary partners/family/lovers.

For me, what I love most about Guo Changcheng is the idea that even if you're inexperienced, scared, klutzy, and prone to motion sickness, you can still be a hero!

A few fanworks:
- Gen
- So Brave! by
teaotter
Wherein a second Chief Zhao arrives via wormhole just as the team summons Hei Pao Shi, and Guo Changcheng is very confused. - Conduits of Meaning by
nnozomi
So the final candidate for interpreter, at the reception for the SID and the Lion City visiting governmental delegation, was Guo Changcheng and his good high school grades.
- So Brave! by
- By Any Other Name by
trascendenza
Changcheng meets Chu-ge's brother. - a litany of firsts by
cosipotente
More than anyone else, Guo knows his own faults, his shortcomings, and what he is and isn’t worth. It’s taken time, but Guo accepts himself for who he is. Sometimes, though, he reaches for things he knows he shouldn’t; things that aren’t meant for him. - That tender moment by
maggie33
They’re alive and Changcheng doesn’t want to wait another second to do what he wanted to do for some time now. (post-canon fixit)
maggie33's Chu Shuzhi/Guo Changcheng fic recs post and fanworks recs post
So -- what do you think? Is xiao-Guo admirable, embarrassment-squick pinging, or both? What are your favourite/the most telling xiao-Guo moments or scenes? What do you like best about xiao-Guo and lao-Chu's relationship? How is Changcheng different in the novel?
Please share links to related meta, picspams and fanworks, new and old! Self-recs are whole-heartedly encouraged. :-)

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the life you save
If Changcheng changed anything — if he stepped on a butterfly, or said the wrong thing to the wrong person — it could bend the course of history and undo their hard-won victory. (Spoilers for the whole show.)
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And I love his relationship with Chu Shuzhi, sometimes even more than Zhao Yunlan/Shen Wei!
I've read somewhere that he was supposed to be the one stuck in the lantern, but they changed the ending. Is that right?
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Both, absolutely. At the start I could barely look at him, he hit my embarrassment squick so hard. But he definitely started showing off his admirable qualities very early on, and when he threw himself bodily at an attacker to protect Shen Wei and Li Qian, he won me over - at least in the abstract. He still has some cringeworthy scenes after that, but thankfully nothing as bad as the beginning.
I need to think more about favourite moments ...
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I have a sticky note over my desk reading 保持鎮静, stay calm, the thing he writes in his diary when he's getting ready to face Zhao Xinci.
I especially love when he gets to play against type and be the calm one--when he takes Chu Shuzhi to lunch with his uncle and auntie, for instance, and Lao Chu is visibly tense and threatened and Guo Changcheng puts a hand on his arm--calm down, it's okay, they won't hurt anything. And it works. More directly, in the scene in episode 34(?) after they come back from Dixing, with Lao Chu in tears, Xiao Guo (even pretty well out of it still) is comfortable with the love between them (I read it as romantic, but you don't have to), and can ease Lao Chu through it. That's one way I feel they do balance each other well as partners in whatever sense, Chu Shuzhi's physical and active competence and Xiao Guo's emotional strength, and having achieved this balance means that in the very late episodes Chu Shuzhi can help him get through the struggle of his new power.
(my Guo Changcheng fic, kindly linked above, was written way too early in my canon watch and makes some dumb mistakes, but it was fun to write. I also made a short Chu/Guo post in this week's kissathon to go along with maggie33's lovely one.)
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And I really love that quote from episode 14 when he explains to his uncle what SID means to him. It’s one of my favorite scene of his. Another one is that time when he was able to resist Ye Zun’s mind control in Dixing.
And of course I ship him with Chu Shuzhi a lot and their relationship is the unending source of inspiration for my writing. :)
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Which means that it's been salutary for me to read this post and notice just how good he is even early on. I may still go 'aaarrrrrrghhhh' viscerally, but I have greater awareness now that that's not entirely fair. :)
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Part of that I think is the way he serves as the audience POV in the drama - he represents the ordinary person encountering, observing, and then participating in the SID for the first time, and I have a lot of respect and empathy for that representation - and part of it is what you and I talked about, that embarrassment doesn't exist in isolation: like so many human emotions, it's a two-way street, so if other people don't think poorly of Xiao Guo then he has little reason to be embarrassed (and we don't have to be embarrassed for him).
The rest of the team seems to treat him with only a small amount of initial disrespect, hazing him in a way that Zhao Yunlan reprimands them for. (Not that he doesn't participate in it himself, which basically sums up Zhao Yunlan's character: "do as I say, not as I do.") As the show continues, the team's acceptance of Xiao Guo makes it easier for him to be himself without cringing, but I don't think he was ever in danger of not being himself: he doesn't let other people's reactions stop him from doing what he thinks is right. He's the antithesis of peer pressure (or peer pressured), and I love him for it.
From the beginning, Xiao Guo consistently overcomes his own hesitance and anxiety to do what he thinks needs to be done, whether it's showing up for work at a strange place at a strange hour, trying to reassure people who are scared or hurting, or trying to physically protect people who appear to be in life-threatening danger. That's amazing. I look up to him and only hope I can be as good as he is in my daily life, let alone in crisis circumstances. ♥
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I think GCC is a really good kid. And I place equal emphasis on all the words in that phrase, including "kid." He still has a long way to go and a lot to learn (even in the epilogue, where apparently the thing he has to learn is how to tell blind dates set up by his aunt and uncle, "No, I have a boyfriend already!" XD) but he's a lot braver than he appears and he's always willing to learn, which are both rare and commendable traits.
I didn't find him all that embarrassing, honestly. For one thing, his early-episode shenanigans cracked me the hell up, and for another, I watch anime on a regular basis so I'm unfortunately very used to characters who're a hundred times more inept and/or annoying, so... But I'm still very glad he became less clumsy, awkward and prone to mishap as time went on - that was some good character development!
As for CSZ/GCC - I rarely read it myself, because I'll admit that I'm a shallow, shallow woman who can't read/watch romance-focused stories - especially of the explicit variety - if she doesn't find both characters involved physically attractive. And I really don't find either of them attractive, so. (Anyone who does and who reads this comment - I hope you won't take offence!)
That being said, I'm very fond of their canon relationship, and was happy that the epilogue made them a pretty straightforward established couple. To the point where I sometimes find myself nodding along in agreement with people who note that they seem "more canon" (in the drama only) than Zhao Yunlan and Shen Wei ever did. And I'll admit to a tiny bit of jealousy over that, haha.
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Don’t Sweat It!, 200w, Guo Changcheng/Chu Shuzhi
Summary: Changcheng and Chu-ge are called in to work in the middle of the night.
Sharpen Up, 1170w, gen, Guo Changcheng makes sense of the Mirror Girl case with Chu Shuzhi's help
Summary: “I don’t understand.” Changcheng tried not to sound as aggrieved as he felt. Why was everyone being so cryptic about this case?
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I love non-powered characters being brave in the face of super-powered situations.
Yes! And Guo Changcheng has that in spades, bless his adorkable heart.
I was doing some rewatching today and I had forgotten that Ya Qing told Lin Jing at one point that she agreed with the rumor she had heard, that he (Lin Jing) was the most useless person at SID. Which means that even the Yashou rumor mill knows that Little Guo ISN'T!
I love the arc of his relationship with Chu Shuzhi (I TOTALLY ship them), and I definitely agree with the "moral of the story": even if you're inexperienced, scared, klutzy, and prone to motion sickness, you can still be a hero!
Recommendation: The first time I saw this MVD vid, I was kinda "meh" because I was expecting Chu/Guo from the description and there wasn't a lot. The next time I saw it, I forgot to read the description--and as a GCC-centric vid that happens to include his interactions with CSZ, it's really well done! The Name of the Game. She also did another gorgeous Chu/Guo vid from CSZ's POV that touched my heart: As It Seems.
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