thefourthvine: Two people fucking, rearview: sex is the universal fandom. (Default)
Keep Hoping Machine Running ([personal profile] thefourthvine) wrote2004-05-08 09:58 pm

Fandoms I Have Loved 4: Due South

This was a tough FIHL to write, because I have a level of love for this fandom that is almost unhealthy. It's my safety blanket in a cold world full of torture and incest and character death; it's the fandom I turn to when I've just finished two Buffy stories and a long HP that started with the war and ended with a mass funeral. So it's hard for me to take a step back and look at this fandom through the eyes of a stranger, as it were, which is really pretty comical when I think about how recently I became a DS reader.

Before I embarked on DS, I got helpful hints from Fametracker's Gwenyvere1, but I know nothing about the actual show. I've never seen an episode and I'd never heard of the show before I started seeing the name on FF. It took me a while to figure some things out, including, notably, the whole Ray K/Ray V thing, and some of the theories I formed in the interim were as strange as – well, as strange as the canon truth, in this particular case. And canon truth is, generally, pretty strange in DS. Also – surprisingly – fairly grim. Because despite the humor that apparently filled the series and certainly fills the FF, this is not the world's happiest canon, folks. Let's just take a little look at the characters, shall we?



Ray Vecchio, OK, he seems to have known where his towel was. But Ray Kowalski is angry, sad, lonely. This is a guy who went undercover because no one would miss him or even notice he was gone, a guy who seems to have no friends and no life except what he borrowed when he became Vecchio. That, to me, is not the essence of humor. And Fraser? Fraser's worse. Fraser is in exile, in disgrace, and permanently in waiting – in waiting for his life. He's got Dief, and while Dief is certainly an excellent companion, that's it. Fraser doesn't have a family. He doesn't have friends. He doesn't even have happy memories, for god's sake. His closest long-term human relationship is with a dead guy who had no time for him when he was alive. His most challenging task at work is to be a statue. He lives in his freaking office. He's this intelligent, talented, kind man who has no one, nothing, and nowhere. In short, Fraser is possibly the saddest character I've seen outside of Ethan Frome. And when you put Kowalski and Fraser together - well, Russian novelists would be depressed by the possibilities inherent in these two. Ambrose Bierce and Jean-Paul Sartre would be depressed by them. (Though I doubt anyone would be able to tell.) This is one canon with all the angst you need - as in, for your lifetime - built right in.

So, hey, the backstories are downers. But somehow that just makes the FF better; I rejoice all the more when Fraser and Kowalski end up together. And I'm always impressed at how much humor and comedy and light-heartedness people can work into stories about these two.

-Helpful Links for the dS Newbie-


If you don't know the canon, you can fake it with:

Kat Allison's Due South Fandom Intro on [livejournal.com profile] crack_van. This was the single most useful resource for me. (Once I found it. Which took a while, because I am remarkably dense.) Kat is writing for a FF-reading audience, and it shows. If you've read fan fiction but you've never seen Due South, this is the place to start.

Frequently Asked Questions about Due South. This is a gen site that answers a lot of questions; there's even a very brief summary of each episode.

Real Due South. Another gen site with incredibly detailed information. Need a transcript of an episode? It's here. Need to know how to survive in the Northwest Territories? It's here. Want to know everything there is to know about Ray Vecchio's car (a 1971 Buick Riviera that Kowalski and Fraser destroy – accidentally – by setting it on fire and then driving it into Lake Michigan)? Yup, here again. You talk about obsessive, folks – this site is it.

If you don’t know the canon, this won't help much:

You can also try to survive with just my summary. I wouldn't recommend it.

-The Characters-

CONSTABLE BENTON FRASER, R.C.M.P. is a demigod. Seriously. Because no mere human could be so perfect and yet have such a sucky, sucky life; you have to be, like, the son of Zeus and a mortal woman so beautiful she was cursed by Aphrodite to look like a caribou to end up in Fraser's brown leather boots. He has a magnetic attraction for women, but never has sex with them. He has unusual intelligence, but his primary job function is "statue." He has heightened senses and he lives in Chicago. See what I mean about his life sucking in ways that smack of divine planning?

Anyway, he's a Mountie, which means every sex scene he's ever involved in will feature one of the following.
  • A detailed description of removing his Mountie suit, proving the writer did her research.
  • A careful avoidance of the whole Mountie-suit issue, proving the writer doesn't want to spend her time with weird belts and weird pieces of leather and weird underwear (which sort of makes you wonder what she's doing in FF, no?).
  • Benton Fraser off-duty, in jeans and a Henley shirt, proving that the writer doesn't have a Mountie-suit fetish. This is less common than you'd think. Real Mounties must live in constant fear of ravishment.
Fraser likes ice, prepositional phrases, men named Ray, herbal unguents, and queens.

DIEFENBAKER is, I suspect, not just a demigod, but an actual god - the god of sarcasm and inappropriate eating habits. (It should come as no surprise to anyone that he is my favorite character.) He's incarnated at the moment as an incredibly adorable deaf half-wolf, but he reads lips in five languages, just so you don't forget he's really divine. And he's more devious and manipulative than any human three-year-old, just so you don't forget he's also a canine.

RAY VECCHIO is not a god of any kind. He was a Chicago police detective and Fraser's first Ray until he decided he was more suited to the profession of Mafia clothes horse. Don't worry about him. We won't be dealing with FF involving him until the advanced course.

STANLEY RAYMOND KOWALSKI is not a god, although some DS fans will tell you otherwise. He's actually a litmus test. If he's called "Stanley" or especially "Stan" in FF, it's crappy FF (unless Vecchio is talking). He's also the world's least likely Chicago police detective and the world's most persuasive advertisement for hair gel. Kowalski likes dancing, candy, experimenting with his hair, working under the covers, and Mounties. Is anyone surprised that he regularly won "Most Gay-in-Canon Slash Character" every year until Lord of the Rings came out?

SERGEANT ROBERT FRASER, R.C.M.P. (DECEASED) has achieved every parent's dream: he's found a way to continue to interfere in his child's life from beyond the grave. He's just trying to help, but in the process he makes his son act like a lunatic. This is the essence of the parent-child relationship, as far as I can tell.

-The Plot-

Crimes happen. Ray, Fraser, and Diefenbaker strike out on the trail of the criminals. Disasters happen. Ray and Fraser are endangered in wildly bizarre ways; Diefenbaker rolls his eyes and mutters under his breath, wolf-style. Arrests happen. Ray and Fraser exchange manly embraces and go out for pizza; Diefenbaker makes sure he gets half. The end.

Look, I've never seen the show, OK? If you want to know the actual plot, you'll have to ask someone else. But fear not; you'll never need to know it to read the FF; in this fandom, the writers supply their own plots. Novel idea, is it not?

Where to start with Due South fanfiction:

With Fraser/Kowalski. (For the record, the other somewhat common pairings in this fandom are Fraser/Vecchio and Vecchio/Kowalski. F/V features a big nose and pretty much has to end unhappily; it is not recommended for beginners. V/K is, well, kinky, just for existing. And just as you should try basic sex before you get out the riding crop, the razor blades, and the shower attachments you can only find in internet stores, you should try F/K before you get out the Ray/Ray.)

To reduce confusion, I suggest you start with longer F/K set during the run of the series; this fandom has a lot of post-series stories, and many of them are excellent, but you should see how the characters were before you see where people are taking them after the end.

Where I Started: Broadway Hotel, American Way, and The Teeth of the Hydra, by Resonant. These were my first three stories in the fandom (and what a way to start it was; by the third story, I was ready to marry Resonant and Due South), and this is the order in which I read 'em – you might want to start with Hydra, actually. Three nice, plotty stories, some funny, some angsty, that totally introduce you to the joy that is Kowalski/Fraser and DS.

If You Want to Go Right to the Heart of the Fandom: Juggling Act, by speranza. For me, this story really sums up the fandom – it's got pathos, humor, improbable situations, and clowns. And masturbating birds, and anti-animal-rights terrorists, and...well, just read it. Which is what I always end up saying about the best stories in this fandom, and that's why this is the heart of DS for me.

If You Want to Go Right to the Therapy You'll Need If You Pick up Another Fandom: Eight Sessions, also by speranza. This story has enabled me to being more people into DS than any other, and I'm not one to argue with results. It has, again, the perfect balance of angst and humor (studies indicate this is approximately a 1:3 ratio, in case you're curious), and it features some of the best therapy sessions you'll ever, ever read.

[identity profile] slemslempike.livejournal.com 2004-05-09 10:16 am (UTC)(link)
I think the first DS story I ever read was Ray V. Although that seems to be the only one, everything I've read since has been Ray K.

One thing I find quite strange is that although Fraser's the main protagonist (in canon), yet I haven't come across any fic where he's the narrator. Lots of Ray K first person, some Fraser third person, though. Maybe it's because no-one knows what Fraser thinks. Except Diefenbaker.

I have the first season DVDs, sat down to watch the final disc last week (I haven't seen the Victoria eps yet) and it doesn't work on my player. Luckily amazon.ca are sending me a replacement set, but it's taking a while. I need my Due South fix NOW.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2004-05-09 11:23 am (UTC)(link)
Actually, I love first-person Fraser, even though it is, you're right, much rarer than first-person Ray (which I also love; I'm such the FF slut, I guess). I think authors are, overall, less comfortable using Fraser's voice, whether it's because he's Canadian, or because he's somewhat formal and pedantic, or because he's a freak (your theory).

Anyway, here are some stories with first-person Fraser:

A Box of Pictures (http://pearlo.illuminatedtext.com/fiction/box.htm), by Pearl-O. Warning: character death story. A good Fraser voice, and the single most touching, saddest dS story I've read. The last line is a killer.

Could, Would, Will (http://www.ravenswing.com/~bas/slash/touch.html), by Basingstoke. This is a short F/*V*k, and I really like the way she does Fraser's voice here.

For Now (http://www.livejournal.com/users/estrella30/38586.html), by Estrella. I think this is an excellent use of Fraser's voice, right here. We get a real look inside Fraser's brain.

Four Virtues (http://www.trickster.org/speranza/Virtue.html), by speranza. This is speranza showing us her auctorial dexterity; Fraser's is only one of the voices she uses here. And it's good, of course.

Housekeeping (http://trickster.org/res/housekeeping.html), by Resonant. This is Resonant's auctorial dexterity story; she flips back and forth between Fraser and Kowalski and makes it look easy.

Merry Go Round (http://www.trickster.org/speranza/Merrygo.html), by speranza. Again. This is one of the longest uses of Fraser's voice in first-person that I've seen.

Scrabble (http://www.trickster.org/speranza/Scrabble.html), by speranza. Again again. And this is the ultimate dexterity story, because she gives you both voices simultaneously for the entire story. Yow.

And, arg, I have more, but squidge.org is acting up and we have to go do the Mother's Day thing. Hope you enjoy these! Fraser's voice is worthy of our love, yes it is.

[identity profile] slemslempike.livejournal.com 2004-05-09 11:33 am (UTC)(link)
Ooh, thank you. I really like the angst in DS, so I'm diving straight into the first rec.

[identity profile] imkalena.livejournal.com 2004-05-10 08:55 am (UTC)(link)
I don't remember any shortage of Fraser first person . . . but not all of it is memorable.*g*

Thanks for the wonderful rundown on the show! I even liked your "who should be fucking whom". Did you get the tapes yet? :)

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2004-05-10 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks! It's nice to know that other people are enjoying this; it makes it easier to rationalize my, um, obsession.

Nope, not yet. (Well, Ardent only offered 'em to me a few days ago, so it isn't like they're exactly late.) But I promise to let you all know when I do.