Year
2008
Chinese Title
"Jui Mei Lai Dik Dai Chut Teen" (translates to the most beautiful seventh day)
No of episodes
20
Cast
Kevin Cheng Ka Wing as Yau Chi Wing
Niki Chow Lai Kei as Ling Ka Yan
Bosco Wong Jung Jak as Don
Natalie Tong Si Wing as Sasa
Sam Chan Yu Sum as Dino
Eddie Lee Yu Yeung as Ken
Elaine Tong Si Wing as Jade
Charmaine Li as Jessie
Stephanie Che Yuen Yuen as Sasa's stepmother
Kiki Sheung as Yan's aunt
Foreword
This was one of my most anticipated series of 2008 as soon as I saw the trailer. Apart from starring my guilty-pleasure favourite couple, the good-looking but questionably talented Kevin Cheng and Niki Chow and the pretty cinematography in Japan, the description of the plot was more than intriguing. Not because it would offer anything new, but because I wanted to see TVB's interpretation of a tragic, terminal illness-related love story that has dominated mostly the world of Korean entertainment.
Review
History has shown that, somewhere out there in the universe, there is a solid fan base for the tragic, terminal illness love story because, well - if there weren't, Korean (and some other Asian) dramas would stop making these stories. So, would TVB, with its tradition of profession/corporate dramas partnered with a seemingly bottomless talent nosedive, fare well in its interpretation of this story archetype? Conventional wisdom suggests no. And in the case of The Seventh Day, conventional wisdom rings true.
The challenge with remaking a done-to-death storyline is that you have got to bring SOMETHING new to the game. Either have some new/refreshing/excellent acting or newcomers (hmm, for the life of me, I can't think of an example here), a new pairing, or an untraditional twist in the plot (Korea's ...ing). TSD has neither of these. The premise is interesting. Two guys with the same birthday (August 7th) encounter two girls and fall in love, though their relationships turn out dramatically differently.
Niki Chow is photogenic, bubbly, and has a likably tomboyish screen presence, but her acting needs some serious improvement. She tends to act with her eyebrows (as opposed to with her eyes), which distracts me from watching what her eyes reveal about her character's emotions. She also seems to be somewhat the same in every series she acts in. What I mean is, she injects a bit too much of her real-life personality in her performances, making each of them undistinguishable from each other. Crying is also definitely not her best asset as an actress. The voice she cries with is irritating and childish. However, she has great chemistry with Kevin Cheng (though she is a bit too tall for him). Her best moment was when near the end of the series when she seems to have given up on fighting her illness (before her second-last operation and after she has her baby).
Kevin is equally, if not more, charismatic and is still smoking hot (can you believe the man is approaching 40? He could pass for 25!), but his acting skills have only improved slightly since I last saw him (Hard Fate). There's something missing in this performance. He is a decent actor, but this was not an earth-shattering performance. Put it this way, I still remember Wong Hei's performance in Burning Flame I, Raymond Lam's performance in A Step Into the Past, and Julian Cheung's performance in Return of the Cuckoo, but I can assure you that I will forget about Kevin's performance next week. One exceptional scene, however, was when he confronts Yan about her illness. Kevin did a good job in that scene, with real tears and an emotional voice. But you see, one excellent scene can't make up for 18 episodes of so-so acting.
Natalie Wong is still as boring as ever. She can act, but she has no screen presence. I want to fall asleep whenever she's on the screen. And Bosco... what to say about Bosco. I might be shot for saying this, but this guy is not good-looking. He has a 'commoner' look and if I walked by him on the street, I probably wouldn't notice. Even though he showed acting potential back in War of In-Laws, he hasn't quite lived up to his potential yet. The problem with him is that he is an inadequate dramatic actor. His performance here is only saved by the fact that his character is a funny, comic one. Bosco does well in these characters. But put him in a character that requires a degree of dramatic acting (Heart of Greed) and he falls flat. Plus, of the four "siu sang" (Kevin Cheng, Raymond Lam, Ron Ng, and him), he is the least charismatic. It did not help that Don's plotline with Sasa was basically lifted from one of my favourite Hollywood movies, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days. I felt like I was watching a parody of the story with a yawn-inducing female lead (Natalie Wong) and only a slightly better male lead (Bosco). Most of the 'funny' scenes of the DDMK and Don/Sasa plotlines were just forced. And that kissing scene in the car?! It looked like Bosco was eating Natalie's face! Not impressed.
The rest of the acting is inadequate beyond words. Eddie Leung, Elaine Yiu, Charmaine Li, and Sam Chan gave forgettable performances in one-dimensional characters. I basically fast-forwarded all the DDMK scenes. And what did Sam Chan do to himself?! I could barely recognize him. One exception is Stephanie Che, who is a breath of fresh air and damn funny as Sasa's stepmother. The veteran who plays Yan's father and Kiki Sheung were also dependably good.
Double Vision?
You will recognize many faces in this series - it seems the casting director ended up recruiting everyone from Under the Canopy of Love. In addition to Kevin Cheng and Niki Chow, Stephanie Che, Elaine Yiu, the actors who play June, Kevin's friends, and a bunch of ke-le-fes have reappeared in this series.
To Watch or Not To Watch, That is the Question
Ultimately bland and uninvolving, this is strictly for Niki, Kevin and Bosco fans. Stay far away if you're anti-terminal illness dramas.
Rating
2 out of 5
28 August 2008
THEY KISS AGAIN [Taiwan]
Chinese Title
E Zuo Ju Er Wen (literally, prank's second kiss)
Year
2008
No. of episodes
20
Theme song
Mavis Fan (ending song - Ni (You) by Ariel Lin and interlude by Joe Cheng)
Based on
The manga Itazarou Na Kiss ("prank's kiss")
This is
Sequel to the 2005 smash hit It Started With a Kiss
Cast
Ariel Lin as Xiang Qin
Joe Cheng as Zhi Shu
Jiro Wang as Ah Jin
Zhang Yong Zheng as Zhi Shu's father
Cyndi Chaw as Zhi Shu's mother
Tang Tsung Sheng as Xiang Qin's father
Zhang Bo Han as Yu Shu (brother to Zhi Shu)
Figaro Ceng as Qi Tai
Aaron Yan as Ah Bu
Supporting Cast
Guan Cong as Zhi Shu's grandfather
Jason as Hao Qian
Tiffany Xu as Zi Yu
Cai Yi Zhen as Luo Zhi Yi
Jiang Pei Zhen as Zhang Ni Na
Xiu Jie Kai as Zhou Chuan Jin
Candice Liu as Liu Nong
Petty Yang as Chun Mei
Rui Sha as Christine
Lin Jia Yu as childhood Hao Mei
Meng Geng Ru as teenage Hao Mei
Cong Yang as teenage Yu Shu
* thanks to Wikipedia for the full cast list
Foreword
At Wonderland (an amusement park in Canada), there is a roller-coaster called The Fly. It does not dive, it does not dip, and it has no upside-down tracks. The attraction of The Fly is that its track is built in 90-degree angles, so that the rider is constantly jerked from turn to turn throughout the entire ride. Why, do you ask, did I put a description of a roller-coaster in the review foreword? Because watching this series was like riding that roller-coaster. After watching Zhi Shu be cold and indifferent for 19 out of 20 episodes in ISWAK, watching him be lovey-dovey and sweet as he goes through his character development in the sequel was like being on that ride.
Other thoughts? There are too many people in this series. And the fact that the series is now over is, for me, a tragedy of Greek proportions.
Plot
A nightmare of mine comes true when we are re-introduced to Xiang Qin (XQ) and Zhi Shu (ZS), who are on a plane on the way to their honeymoon. As soon as this scene registers in my mind, I think "sh_t, they're married?!" Even though the ending scene ISWAK was a wedding, I was hoping that they had never gotten married.
No such luck. Let me quickly state a disclaimer before I continue with the summary. I love XQ and ZS as a couple, I really do. They are a great example of how love can transcend backgrounds, interests and even levels of intelligence. But let's face it, XQ is really too young to get married. She behaves like a lovesick 15-year-old and is clearly not prepared for the reality and commitment that a marriage demands. The same can be said of ZS. The guy doesn't even know how to properly communicate most of the time, and now he's married? At least he realizes his problem, which places him one step ahead (again) of not-the-brightest-egg-in-the-basket XQ. On with the story.
After returning from their honeymoon (at the end of which they consummate their relationship), XQ unsuccessfully tries her luck at the teaching profession (god help us all x1) before settling on becoming a nurse (god help us all x2). In nursing school, their relationship is severely tested when ZS is faced with a formidable competitor - Qi Tai, XQ's classmate. We get to see XQ suffer like nobody's business as ZS begins to treat her in a much more frosty way than he ever did in ISWAK. However, when Ah Jin finally shakes some sense into him, ZS realizes his jealousy and just how much he cares for XQ. Cue a bunch of quick, somewhat meaningless subplots involving (again) XQ's stupidity and ZS' growing openness and expressions of his love for XQ.
At the end, the series takes a super melodramatic-Korean drama turn when it is revealed that XQ suffers from a possibly blinding eye illness. No, she does not become pregnant at the end of the series, though it does end happily. Watch the end for yourself.
Many may disagree with me, but I have always felt that ISWAK and TKA are built on a disastrously unrealistic premise. Girl of IQ75 falls and melts the heart of a smoking hot, cold-as-ice, genius IQ of 200? Um, sorry, not buying it. Especially given the fact that XQ dresses like a 12-year-old and she marries ZS?! Who are we kidding? But this is based on a manga, and mangas as know, are unrealistic. As long as teens out there don't get the idea that this is what life is like, I'm good.
Performances
Ariel Lin
It is very easy (too easy) to hate and be annoyed with XQ. She's a bit like XYZ in Huan Zhu Ge Ge II, unreasonable, dumb, immature, and annoyingly stubborn. The worst part is, she's lazy. ISWAK alluded to this briefly, but didn't explore this point enough: XQ is not actually not that stupid. She just refuses to apply herself in the more important things in life (in ISWAK, her education; and in TKA, it's her career). Even her career choice is driven by ZS. Watching her daydream days on end about ZS was really irritating. The fact that he's her husband and she has to still daydream about the sweet, romantic things he could do for her is just sad. I maintain up to the end of the sequel that XQ is still too young to be married. I also didn't like that only ZS went through a major transformation and character development, becoming more open and expressive about his love and feelings, while XQ remained pretty much the same throughout (i.e. stupid, completely dependent on ZS, etc.). The one scene that sort of showed that XQ was becoming (for lack of a better word) smarter and more independent in her thoughts, was when she challenged ZS in the ER when ZS wanted to conduct an operation on a patient without the required approval of the main doctor. Otherwise, ZS basically remained the only thing she lived for, literally.
If not for Ariel's winning, thoughtful performance, I would have stopped watching this sequel. From the very first to the very last scene, she is engaging and entertaining. She looks much prettier in this sequel (with a better wardrobe) although her weight seems to fluctuate a lot throughout. Plus, she has one of the most genuinely happy smiles I've seen on TV, which is fitting for XQ. Here Ariel was given the chance to stretch her acting chops - a refreshing departure beyond the dumb face pulling that characterized most of her performance in ISWAK. Her XQ is fresh, vibrant, and heartbreakingly sincere. One of Ariel's best moments was in episode 11 when she was banging on the door, sobbing: "Why am I the only one crying? In reality, you've never loved me!" Unlike some actresses who do the ugly face fake crying (TVB's Gigi Lai) or the mouth closed, slow tearing (a lot of Korean actresses), Ariel gave an emotionally wrenching performance in that scene. I am sure that I'm not the only one who had tears streaming down my face. She is also a natural comedian with an adorably goofy charm - a lot of the funny scenes in this series were actually NG clips that made it into the final cut. I find her performance in here flawless. Many a TVB actress can learn from this young lady. I'm looking forward to seeing where she goes from here.
Joe Cheng
I was looking forward to seeing ZS really suffer and realize the depth of his love for XQ in this sequel and not taking her for granted, but alas! The part where ZS was jealous of Qi Tai, he took it out on XQ, so she suffered instead. However, his character development through the series is a joy to watch - from the scenes where ZS scolds her to the ones where he piggy-backs her while she's drunk, the scenes where ZS expresses his love and concern for XQ are very, very well done (who else believes Joe is head over heels in love with Ariel?). It is also funny to watch how ZS deals with XQ's emotional vibrancy - he understands it, but doesn't agree with it (which explains his cold treatment of her sometimes). This makes him frustrating and endearing at the same time. His relationship with his father-in-law is also very nicely portrayed, although I would have liked more scenes with them together.
Usually one actor in a pairing is weaker but I'm glad that Joe's performance measures up to Ariel's. They have electric chemistry and this series boasts some of the hottest and most tender kissing/romantic scenes committed to film. Boy, can these two kiss! It is surprising that they are both so convincing in what they call 'reverse personalities' in interviews. Joe says that he's actually the chatterbox in real life, and that Ariel is like a Scorpio (her sign) - quiet, subdued, and more reserved. And I have maintained since ISWAK, I really do think they're a couple in real life (the unscripted romantic scenes are too natural and sometimes out of character for ZS/XQ). After watching this series, I've become a shameless Arjoe shipper.
Back to Joe's performance. One of his best moments was also in episode 11, when ZS opens the door to a sobbing XQ and tells her: "Calm down". There were so many emotional layers on Joe's face: the pain of knowing how hurt XQ is mixed with the feelings of jealousy that he is unfamiliar with (and does not know how to deal with). Another was when ZS allows XQ to draw blood from his arm - the look on Joe's face, a mixture of love, encouragement, and trust, made his performance in that scene marvelous. And like Ariel, he looks much more handsome in the sequel. His hair looked like a some old lady's in ISWAK. A brilliant, brilliant performance. Come on, TVB - recruit and promote some talented actors, for god's sake!
Figaro Cheng
He has one of the funnier English names for an Asian actor, it always reminds me of Mozart's opera, The Marriage of Figaro. Anyway, he has improved leaps and bounds, turning in a convincing performance as Qi Tai. Gone are the delayed reactions and occasional overracting from Devil Beside You, but will someone please cut his hair? His best scenes were the sparring moments between him and ZS and when he yells at XQ. I actually think Figaro's looks are better suited for ancient drama.
Petty Yang
I like to think of excellent acting as an equation of a lot of things: Right Casting + Looks + Charisma + Voice + Chemistry + Convincing Emotions/Acting. Add on versatility if the actor is an experienced one. Petty's look fits Chun Mei, she is a decent actress, she has chemistry with Arron but her voice completely killed the effect. Chun Mei is supposedly a shy, soft-hearted, gentle girl but Petty's voice is annoyingly high-pitched and whiny, making her Chun Mei seem like a spoiled brat. And she has much less screen presence than Candice Liu, who got the shorter end of the stick when it came to air time for XQ's friends.
Candice Liu
Underused as the feisty Liu Nong, but I will keep my eye out for this young actress.
Jiro Wang
An improvement from his performance in ISWAK and he is still likeably goofy as Ah Jin. He lacks chemistry with Rui Sha, though they do look nice together. As for his character, he has some interesting development here. What I like the most about Ah Jin is his commitment to XQ even after being rejected - for example, running to get ZS when it's clear that the XQ-ZS relationship is on the rocks. How sweet is this guy?
Rui Sha
I quite like her character here but Rui Sha as an actress was disappointing.
Arron Yan
Arron's look is completely pretty-boy-band - usually not a telling sign of good acting skills, so I was pleasantly surprised with his performance here. This guy has potential.
Cyndi Chaw
Her voice is irritatingly similar to the high-pitched Taiwanese accent that I'm averted to, but she gave a decent performance as the super wacky Jiang mom. And she sings one of the interludes.
Zhang Bo Han
Yu Shu is rude as hell. Aside from constantly calling his sister-in-law stupid, he is also unbelievably rude to her friends, which to him are basically strangers. If I were his mother, I'd slap him from here to eternity, but Zhang Bo Han turned in a fantastic performance as the rebellious but smart-as-a-button Yu Shu.
Cong Yan
At first I was furious that they re-cast Yu Shu, but I can understand that ZBH would not be physically convincing as a high school student. Cong Yan overacts at times, and I don't think he has the raw talent that ZBH has. And he severely lacks chemistry with Joe Cheng, which makes their brotherly scenes a lot less moving than Joe's with ZBH.
XQ's nurse school friends
Danson Tang, who played Gan Gan, had the guts to play a gay man, and quite convincingly (and humorously) so. His best moment was his recital of the nurse oath to XQ and when he tells her not to mess up at the nurse capping ceremony. Jiang Pei Zhen, who played Li Na, is pretty and has a certain something about her, but she had too little screen time. Xiu Jie Kai was hilarious as the oddball Chuang Ji, and Cai Yi Zhen was appropriately creepy as Zhi Yi.
Others
Both the young and teenage versions of Hao Mei were portrayed by very weak actresses. Much less air time was given to the two fathers, but Tang Tsung Sheng improved a lot from his awful, overacting turn as XQ's father in ISWAK. Guan Cong was great as ZS' grandfather.
Best Moments & Lines
- Episode 11 in its entirety
- When ZS is sitting by himself on the bench after his farewell to his family and XQ before departing for the military. The image of him, alone and looking/caressing XQ's picture on his cellphone was moving beyond words. I nearly bursted into tears.
- "I'm the king of the world! You jump, I jump!" - Ariel was damn funny in that scene.
- "She doesn't seem to understand just how much I love her" - Zhi Shu in a heart-to-heart with XQ's dad. I'm glad XQ overheard this.
- "Like a broken record, she kept telling me that she loved me...it was so annoying. But when this became a regular part of my life and I took it for granted, she suddenly told me she didn't love me anymore. I can still clearly remember the nauseating feeling I had [when she said that]...I can do 90% of the things in this world. The other 10%, she can do, in a way that no one else can." - ZS explaining to YS how he fell in love with XQ.
- "I can't imagine how you would live if I weren't by your side. That is probably why I'm so strict with you. I don't know how long I can be with you in this lifetime, so even if I'm not with you one day, you must live on bravely". - ZS' narration while leaving for the military.
- The episode where the past and personality of XQ's mom is revealed.
The Loot Bag
1) The love nest. The doped-up house is fantastic, I'd want to live there! And their blog actually exists in real life! A clever idea to market and promote this series.
2) The acting
3) There's at least one kiss in every episode, except the one when ZS treats XQ like dirt during their tension about Qi Tai.
4) A lot of funny scenes. The director is actually in a lot of them, plus he likes to include a lot of NG clips in the final cut.
5) Episode 11, which was an explosive episode in terms of emotions and character revelations. A lot of best moments were in this episode.
6) Incredibly creative connections to ISWAK without flashback overload. For example, in the finale, in the scene where ZS asks XQ if she's pregnant, he's wearing the same sweater he wore on their first unofficial date in ISWAK! I was also estatic with ZS' office decorations. I was praying that the bakery model that XQ made for his birthday would make a re-appearance and it did, along with the love letter and the good luck charm she gave him! Amazing! Finally something to show XQ that he was in love with her for almost as long as she was with him. And how frickin' cute was the button ring?!
The Barf Bag
1) Back in ISWAK, XQ was pretty uncomfortable whenever ZS teased her about physical intimacy (even though she was head over heels in love), so I found it shady that in TKA, they slept together on the last night of their honeymoon. I have to ask, would XQ have agreed to sleeping together if she knew they weren't legally married? The writers glided over this point and I can't shake the feeling that XQ might not have agreed to sleeping together if they weren't married.
2) How rude Yu Shu is. Terrible parenting skills displayed by the Jiangs.
3) The bastardization of the nursing profession. I understand that this is supposedly a romantic comedy, but is anyone going to trust a nurse after watching XQ and her antics in nursing school and the hospital? She cried in an operating room, for god's sake!
4) Too many soliloquies. I can't count how many times characters gave huge, long speeches as if they were about to die. One example was Ah Bu's speech about his love for Chun Mei at the hospital.
5) The brief but idiotic moment when ZS is introduced to Christine and says (in English) "Hi, I'm Joe. What's up?" and Christine replies "Good!". Who the hell replies 'good' to 'what's up'?!!? Who scripted this sad English? I almost died laughing.
6) How ZS still calls XQ 'idiot'. I find that verbally abusive and I cringed everytime.
7) People come in and out of the series way too quickly. I understand that the focus is on XQ and ZS, but the snippets of other people made other characters seem like caricatures, and didn't allow for some meaningful subplots. It's a good thing Ariel and Joe are such terrific actors, otherwise I would be begging for more subplots.
Eyes of a Hawk
In the episode where XQ goes to Ma Tzu to visit ZS and she falls down and he tends to her ankle - look - they're wearing matching shoes!
To Watch or Not to Watch, That is the Question
As I've said in my ISWAK review, TKA is a series with a demographic - the 14-25 age demographic. So if you're not part of that group, you may disagree with my passionate recommendation of this series.
Because I watched ISWAK literally right before watching TKA, I was able to observe a lot of plot gaps. However, because it's based on and is almost 100% faithful to the manga, I can't fault the scriptwriters for the odd pacing and meaningless subplots. You can also tell by the length of this review that I was able to catch a lot of details (and also flaws). Even so, I love this series way too much and find Ariel and Joe/XQ and ZS to be one of the most compelling and entertaining couples ever. This series brought me back to my teenybopper, I-live-to-watch-this-series days and I am experiencing major withdrawal symptoms now that it has ended. It will be some time before I'm so emotionally invested in an onscreen couple again.
Rating
4.5 out of 5
Through the Grapevine
Forums are abuzz about the possible real-life relationship between Ariel and Joe. What we do know is (and they've said in interviews) that they call each other "lao gong" (husband) and "lao po" (wife) in real life. Ariel has said in an interview that while preparing for this series, she watched an American TV show on doctors and quickly called Joe and said "Lao gong, there's a show on TV about doctors! Quick! Watch and learn how to be a doctor!" I find this both telling and interesting given the fact that the two characters in the series don't even call each other that - they just call each other by name. Recent interviews also indicate that they may just come out and admit their relationship very soon.
Other interesting facts
- Joe is a talented artist and Ariel is a very good singer.
- Ariel recently published a book about her travels in New York.
- The ending was re-shot a few weeks before it aired.
- Because the manga's author died suddenly before finishing the story, the finale is actually written by the Taiwanese scriptwriters. Otherwise, the story (both ISWAK and TKA) remains 99% faithful to the manga. Winnie (the director) said that he thought of going to Japan to beg the author's family to let him write an ending with closure to the story, since he knew that this is what fans would want. However, he decided in the end that he was going to respect the author and leave the ending as it 'ended' in the manga - abruptly.
- Figaro Ceng is actually deaf in one ear as a result of antibiotic overdose as a child.
- There are rumours that Winnie, Ariel, and Joe are going to collaborate in another series in 2008-2009. This one will (again) be based on a manga, although the two actors will be portraying completely different characters.
- Cyndi Chaw divorced from her husband during the filming of this sequel. She has said that the cast and crew were incredibly supportive during the hard time.
OVER THE RAINBOW [Kr]
Korean Title
"Obeodeo Reinbou" (direct translation / Korean loan words)
Released In
2006
No of episodes
16
Produced by
MBC
Cast
Ji Hyun Woo as Kwon Hyuk-joo
Suh Ji Hye as Ma Sang-mi
Hwan Hee as Rex / Rae Woo
Kim Ok Bin as Jung Hee-soo
Supporting Cast
Im Ha Ryong as Kwon Sang-bok (Hyuk-joo's dad)
Kim Hye Ok as Lee Mi-ja (Hyuk-joo's mom)
Na Hye Mi as Kwon Ji-hye (Hyuk-joo's younger sister)
Shin Hyun Tak as Oh Young-dal (Hyuk-joo's friend)
* Thanks to koreanwiz.org for the full cast list
Plot
Hyuk-joo is a poor high school student not doing much with his life until he encounters Hee-soo, the only daughter of a wealthy widowed man who aspires to become a dancer/singer. Through Hee-soo's inspiration, Hyuk-joo and his friends learn to dance, and form a dance group called Gangsters. Predictably, Hee-soo and Hyuk-joo fall in love, only to have Hee-so's ambition for fame end their relationship.
Rae-woo becomes a famous pop icon known as Rex but suffers from a frosty relationship with the Director of his record company, who wants to dictate everything about his career including the artistic direction of his albums and private life. Rex and Hyuk-joo have some past beef that returns when Gangsters auditions to be Rex's back dancers and also when Rex becomes interested in Hee-soo. Pushed by her ambition, Hee-soo breaks up with Hyuk-joo and tells Rex that she has feelings for him. By that time, Rex sees right through Hee-soo for her ulterior motives and rejects her. She then becomes determined to become a singer known for her vocals, though her talent in the area leaves much to be desired. As a result, the Director of her record company (Pride, the same as Rex's) only allows her to keep a 'sexy style' image.
The second female lead of this series is Sang Mi, one of Rex's fans who has followed his career from his debut. Sang Mi is a poor girl who works in the market, and encounters Rex when he accidentally hits her with his car. Instead of taking compensation money, Sang Mi asks to be a dance trainee at Pride. There, she befriends Hyuk-joo and the other Gangsters members. She later becomes Rex's assistant and even wins his heart... but in true Asian series style, she obviously falls in love with Hyuk-joo and vice versa. So Hee Soo and Rex are both left alone, while Sang Mi and Hyuk-joo have their happy ending.
Review
I originally watched this series because the premise sounded interesting. There is one major problem with this series: I don't care about the characters. Even with the most fantastic plot and premise, if you have unsympathetic characters or characters that the audience can't identify with, you're pretty much stuck with a flop. And this series is a flop.
We can safely assume that Hyuk-joo is the main character, since the series starts and ends with him. However, in the middle, his story retreats into the background, as he becomes passive, uninvolving, and completely uncompelling as a hero. It is also hard to feel sorry for him when Hee-soo breaks up with him since I predicted that it would happen from the fourth episode. On the other hand, the series seems to introduce Rex as a secondary character, but his story is actually the most interesting of the four leads.
In addition to the unsympathetic characters, the acting is nothing to write home about. The actors who play Hyuk-joo's friends are funny, as are his parents. Ji Hyun Woo, who plays Hyuk-joo, is the strongest actor of the four leads and one of the few Korean male actors I've seen who is able to cry like a man. Suh Ji Hye is incredibly photogenic, but her performance here is mediocre. Kim Ok Bin is saved by her interesting character and storyline, but I'm not going to be running for her series anytime soon. The worst is Hwan Hee (from real-life boyband Fly to the Sky), who smirks more than he acts.
As for the dancing... let's just say it's uninspiring.
You'll do better to pass on this one.
Rating
2 out of 5
IT STARTED WITH A KISS [Taiwan]
E Zuo Ju Zhe Wen (translates to prank's kiss)
Year
2005
No. of episodes
20
Theme Song
"Say You Love Me"
Cast
Joe Cheng as Jiang Zhi Shu
Ariel Lin as Yuan Xiang Qin
Cyndi Chaw as Zhi Shu's mother
Zhang Yong Zheng as Zhi Shu's father
Tang Cong Sheng as Xiang Qin's father
Zhang Bo Han as Jiang Yu Shu (brother to Zhi Shu)
Jiro Wang as Ah Jin
Tiffany Xu as Pei Zi Yu
Supporting Cast
Liu Rong Jia as Ya Nong
Yang Pei Ting as Chun Mei
Jason as Wang Hao Qian
Bianca Bai as Bai Hui Lan
Qian De Men as Chairman Bai
(thanks to Wikipedia for the cast list)
Foreword
Let's just say that I was originally very, very wary (rhyme intended) of watching this series. I had been recently misled into watching way too many sub-par series from reading praise-heaping reviews (War of In-Laws, Heart of Greed, The Drive of Life, etc.). My fear of once again being ripped off with this series (and its obsessive fan-ship) coupled with my general disdain for the 'idol drama' genre (I watched 2 or 3 episodes each of Green Forest, My Home; Love Contract; and Prince Turns Into Frog before giving up on all three of them) put me off from watching this.
But - and there is always a "but" - I did remember my rather pleasant experience watching Devil Beside You last year. Hell, I even enjoyed Meteor Garden, the series that pioneered the genre. So I decided to give Taiwanese idol drama another chance to reel me in. The result? I have yet another series to add to my guilty pleasures list. Boy, that list is getting long.
Plotline
I won't bother with a summary. Funn Lim has written a great one and many other reviews on spcnet.tv have good summaries. So onto the actual review.
Evaluation of Cast & Characters
Xiang Qin / Ariel Lin
Yes, I know Xiang Qin is supposed to be not-that-bright but her stupidity in the first half of the series was exasperating to watch. I kept asking myself when her idiotic behavior was going to stop. Her fantasizing scenes were very funny, she comes off as dumb but very loveable (as opposed to ditsy - which would have really put me off), but her I-live-and-breathe-for-Zhi-Shu attitude really didn't do it for me. I was personally raised to believe that girls should not let guys have it so easily, and Xiang Qin's moronic behaviour in the early parts of her relationship with Zhi Shu irritated me to no end. I really wished she would have grown a stronger spine and just told him she's sick of him running hot and cold on her and had moved on.
Ariel Lin is very cute but I don't find her pretty - her facial features look odd when she's standing still (she looks like a Teletubby from certain angles in the beginning). However, later on in the series - and on in-person interviews, she looks much better (lighting? camera angles?), and in the scene where she tries on her wedding dress, she looks beautiful. As for her acting, an excellent performance. She can do comedy and she perfectly embodies everything Xiang Qin is supposed to be. Maybe I should give Love Contract another chance.
Zhi Shu / Joe Cheng
One of the more intriguing characters written for an idol drama. We know he is the smartest, the most good-looking, the most skilled at everything, blah blah blah. But we also know that he is unhappy. He doesn't like his parents (his dad, specifically) telling him what to do with his life, which is why he keeps pushing Xiang Qin away though he has feelings for her too. Though he has everything anyone would want in a guy and can get anything he wants with his brains and looks, the truly sad thing about him is that he doesn't care about anything in particular. What I mean is, he has no ambition, no dream - at the beginning of the series, he simply goes about life aimlessly as he has nothing that drives him to work passionately for. This changes when Xiang Qing enters his life and proposes that he become a doctor. This is when Zhi Shu starts to really care about working for something in his life. He is also more emotional around Xiang Qin - he has a temper, he teases her, he laughs at her. These are all emotions that Zhi Shu never showed before Xiang Qin appeared. I like his character development in the series.
The mega-tall Joe Cheng is physically perfect for this role (except his somewhat scary resemblance to Edison Chen from some angles). His cold, distant look could kill. Some may interpret it as a performance without expression, but in no way was Joe wooden. Quite the contrary - he's perfected the arrogant indifferent stare but Joe also manages to show that there is much, much more under Zhi Shu's icy exterior. For example, his scenes with his younger brother are excellent. You can really tell he dotes on Yu Shu and the two brothers get along very well (especially when insulting Xiang Qin) despite their age difference. Joe did a fantastic job showing the gradual change that Zhi Shu undergoes with Xiang Qin's influence, especially in the brief-but-telling moments where he looks at Xiang Qin (without her knowing). He's also very funny in the fantasy sequences and his chemistry with Ariel is terrific. The main reason he was so good was because Zhi Shu is a complete 180 from Joe's personality in real life, and when you can be convincing in a character that is so completely different - that, my friends, is what is called good acting. A great performance.
Tiffany Xu
Very pretty actress who does the cold side of Zhi Yu well, but her emotional scenes look a bit forced.
Jiro Wang
Likeable as the silly, devoted Ah Jin but he doesn't quite have the charisma or raw talent that Joe has. However, Jiro has very good chemistry with Ariel.
Cyndi Chaw
A totally cartoonish performance with some dramatic moments done well, but this actress is a bit too wacky for my taste. Because the series is based on a Japanese manga, however, I think I can forgive the wacky humour.
Tang Cong Sheng
Bad. Bad. Bad. I think it's because this actor is way too young for the role.
Zhang Yong Zheng
Very good performance.
Zhang Bo Han
A super cute kid who is one of the strongest child actors I've seen. Great chemistry with Joe and Ariel and he is one of the main reasons to watch this series.
Bianca Bai
Pretty and gentle-looking, but a bit bland in terms of acting.
In general, the supporting cast (with the exception of Ye Shu) was mediocre but the general acting was saved by the two lead performances.
Deja Vu?
There are so many scenes in here that make this series seem like just another Taiwanese idol drama. And in a way, it is. Examples include:
- Rain scene: Taiwanese idol dramas seem to love using one dramatic scene that takes place in the rain. In ISWAK, it's the scene where Zhe Shu kisses Xiang Qin and they finally get together. In DBY, it's the scene where Ah Meng and Yang Ping are punching each other's lights out. In Meteor Garden, it's the scene where Shan Cai and Dao Ming Si break up. In Why Why Love, it's the scene where Huo Da gives Jia Di a ride on his wheelchair. Yes, rain scenes are definitely a pattern.
- First scene: The first scene in this series was identical to the first scene in DBY. In DBY, Qi Yue is also holding a love letter out, facedown, to her crush, and he just walks by.
- Cartoon parents: What's with the silly parents in Taiwanese idol drama? The worst has got to be Shan Cai's parents in Meteor Garden.
Memorable Scenes
A lot of fans like the aforementioned rain scene where Zhe Shu finally realizes it's Xiang Qin he wants and kisses her as well as the first time he kisses her when they get into an argument, but personally I like three other scenes that, for me, are turning points in their relationship:
1) Date scene: I find this scene very cute and very real. I love that it's actually Zhe Shu who takes the initiative and suggests they go out, and I also love how Xiang Qin just chatters away while they're in the paddle boat while Zhe Shu remains silent. The scene is also very representative of how Zhe Shu behaves when he's around Xiang Qin. As Xiang Qin notices, it's the first time Zhe Shu actually lets down his guard around her.
2) Bed scene: No, not that way. Halfway through the series Xiang Qin ends up staying at Zhe Shu's place and they end up sleeping on the same bed. Zhe Shu then tells her that he can't let anything happen between them because then he'd be falling in his mother's trap. This is when Xiang Qin realizes that he's not cold to her because he doesn't like her, but because he doesn't want to be falling for someone that his mother approves of.
3) Hospital scene(s): This is personally my favourite scene. I'm referring to the part when Xiang Qin brings Yu Shu to the hospital and Zhe Shu arrives. There is a brief 3-second scene where Zhe Shu basically puts Yu Shu in Xiang Qin's hands during a phone call when Yu Shu falls sick. The fact that Zhe Shu is willing to place the health of his beloved yonger brother completely in Xiang Qin's hands proves that he doesn't really think of her as dumb. He trusts her and knows that she will do anything to keep Yu Shu safe. The scene where Xiang Qin breaks down in tears when Zhe Shu bends down and says softly "Thank you" and hugs her - I was near tears during that scene. Not because the pair finally had some kind of physical contact after the early kisses, but because this was one brief moment where Zhe Shu actually thought of Xiang Qin not as a stupid girl who idolized him, but as an equal and where he actually expresses his gratitude for Xiang Qin's very existence. A poignant scene and very well-acted.
4) Career suicide scene: Yes, for every good memorable scene there is another memorable scene that's memorable for one reason and one reason only: it was a complete nightmare. The wedding scene where the bride/groom roles were reversed in terms of clothes was this close to completely killing this series for me. Many people found it funny, but I was in utter disbelief that the writers chose to end this series with something so completely ridiculous. Up until then I remained pretty entertained with this series... until the ending scene where the guys started coming out in wedding drag, that is. And where were Xiang Qin's friends? Why were her love enemies in her bridal party? What the hell?! I was praying that this was just another one of Xiang Qin's fantasies, but nope, no such luck. I am going to try to forget completely that this scene ever happened, but lord knows it won't be easy. I still can't believe this is how it ended. At least there's a sequel to correct this crap.
Through the Grapevine
I've watched several interviews of Ariel and Joe, and yes, I believe they are together in real life (especially after watching their performances in the sequel to this series). Just check out the ISWAK2 thread in the Asian Fanatics forum for in-depth analysis of their promotional pics, interviews, and unscripted kisses to know that it is only a matter of time before they make their relationship public. Ariel seems to be the more private, subdued one but Joe has been dropping hints about their relationship/feelings ever since the sequel's promotions began. And no, I don't think it's a publicity stunt.
Yes, there's a sequel, affectionately known as ISWAK 2 or by its actual name, They Kiss Again. Although, from what I've seen so far (only 7 episodes have been aired to date), it should be called "They Kiss Again, Again, and Again". So far there has been at least one kiss in every episode.
To Watch or Not to Watch, That is the Question
Highly entertaining and amusing, though with an unfathomable ending, this series is saved by the performances of the two leads. Recommended for the 14-25 age demographic, but anyone older than that may not appreciate this one.
21 July 2008
The Dark Knight
Released In
2008
Language
English
The Cast - Character
Christian Bale ... Bruce Wayne / Batman
Heath Ledger ... The Joker
Aaron Eckhart ... Harvey Dent / Two-Face
Michael Caine ... Alfred Pennyworth
Maggie Gyllenhaal ... Rachel Dawes
Gary Oldman ... Lt. James Gordon
Morgan Freeman ... Lucius Fox
Monique Curnen ... Det. Ramirez
Ron Dean ... Detective Wuertz
Cillian Murphy ... Dr. Jonathan Crane / The Scarecrow
Chin Han ... Lau
Nestor Carbonell ... Mayor
Eric Roberts ... Salvatore Maroni
Ritchie Coster ... The Chechen
Anthony Michael Hall ... Mike Engel
Summary
Taken from IMDB.com
With just one year passed after taking out Ra's Al Ghul's plan to have Gotham eliminated and the mysterious disappearance of Dr. Jonathan Crane AKA the Scarecrow, after the city was nearly plundered with his toxins, Bruce Wayne and his vigilante alter-ego the Batman, continue the seemingly-endless effort to bring order to Gotham, with the help of Lt. James Gordon and newly appointed District Attorney Harvey Dent, but a new threat has now emerged into the streets. The Dark Knight faces a rising psychopathic criminal called The Joker, who's eerie grin, laughter, and inhuman morality makes him more dangerous than what he has yet to unleash. It becomes an agenda to the Batman to stop the mysterious Joker at all cost, knowing that the both of them are in the opposite line. One with no method at all and seeks to see the world plunge into the fire he has yet to lit. One who represents the symbol of hope and uses his own shadow to bring the peace and order he has yet to accomplish on doing.
Comments
Watching The Dark Knight at the cinema the other day left me feeling ... incomplete. What I mean is there is a certain sense of sadness, a sense of what could have been, a sense of incompleteness if you get my meaning and it is all because Heath Ledger. He died, as you all know. He was never my favourite, never liked his performance in Brokeback Mountain but as the Joker he showed tremendous gutso at playing someone so evil, someone so ruthless, someone so ugly having his face hidden behind heavy makeup, almost unrecognisable. What could have been I wonder? Well all that is moot point and for that I felt rather sad when watching the movie. He was much too young as with all those who died much too young, from a death that could have been prevented. I was glad Warner Bros did not water down his role or the promotions surrounding the Joker. Those who thought this movie was a success riding on his death or the promotion sickening because the 2nd lead actor is dead must be totally delusional and disrespectful of the dead actor himself. What better way to celebrate the actor's accomplishments than to proceed with the promotions and the movie as if he had been alive? Christopher Nolan paid him the greatest tribute by leaving the movie as it is and whilst it is creepy to see him so creepy on screen when you realised he is so dead, I felt the creepiness was essential. Would the movie have made such huge bucks and garner such huge buzz if he had been alive? OF COURSE! Batman Begins was very successful and running up to the release even before his death the movie was garnering buzz after buzz, even the Oscar buzz. And the posters were gorgeous. I felt the marketing for this movie was brilliant.
The movie itself was strange. Nolan was eager, perhaps too eager to make Batman a possibility in our real world and in a way he succeeded. We see Hong Kong, so we are told Gotham City exists in the US in a real world. The buildings look real and any traces of the old Batman movies were wiped out and replaced with realism in its surrounding. The Joker was no caricature, he was in fact a real man hidijng his scars and identity behind the mask of a clown and frankly you may find it funny at first, I mean a joker as a terrorist? Can you imagine Al Qaedas in costume like cartoon characters? But Nolan made it believable that a man can fight crime wearing a bat suit and a man can be a scary terrorist even if under heavy make up looking like a clown and calling themselves the joker. The main cast returns except for Katie Holmes who insanely decided not to do the sequel and she was replaced by another actress, Maggie Gyllenhaal who plays the same character. We even get to see the Scarecrow in a brief scene.
Whilst Batman Begins was on mass fear and hysteria, the Dark Knight explores further into the notion of good and evil, hero and villain, fear and respect and what makes a good man bad and a bad man good and a human simply a human. It is a heavily themed movie that makes you question your inner concious self, which category you belong too. The movie relied heavily on the Joker as he was in every scene from the beginning till the end. The Joker is the clear cut villain. Batman is the not so clear cut hero since he sometimes uses illegal means to do good. In fact he was branded a vigilante which is strange since Lieutenant Gordon has a big huge spotlight on a rooftop to be used whenever Gotham City needd Batman. So I was wondering in the 1 year has passed, why Batman suddenly became a vigilante? Then there's Harvey Dent, an eager District Attorney who really genuinely is fearless in fighting crimes even at his own expense and he is the direct opposite of Batman. Whilst Batman is the Dark Knight, as in a hero who rescues people but literally and figuratively in the dark, the unseen and misunderstood good who uses tough measures to exact justice and so Batman struggles with his conscience, Harvey Dent is the White Knight, the gallant hero whose identity is known and his tactic is based on fearlessness and respect. Batman's method is based on instiling fear, much like the Joker, but the Joker did what he did simply to create chaos. He is not interested in money or even recognition, he just wants to see the world burn, like Alfred said to Bruce Wayne in one scene.
This theme of hero and villain has been explored to almost philosophical level by M Night in Unbreakable. Bruce Willis was the hero but he didn't know it. To have a hero, there must be a villain in the form of Samuel L Jackson. A hero exists because a villain exists and for as long as a hero thrives, a villain will continue to exist. The relationship is linked in that twisted sense I suppose and The Dark Knight continues where M Night left. In some way I thought the Joker was in awe of Batman. It explores further the difference between two types of heroes, one in the dark and in the open and what happens when the white knight is being forced into a situation that questions his faith in humanity? Will he thrive on like the weary dark knight or will be turn? What makes a hero a hero? What is the definition of a hero? This movie poses these questions and tries to answer it to some degree. At times the movie felt too slow, sometimes too quiet, sometimes a little too artistic, always very dark and at some point the story keeps having an end and then continuing with a twist and then end and begin again for several times. This movie is long though, that is for sure. Story wise, nothing much I could add to what you could read out there. However I like to add one thing though; this movie's theme is really about fear. Both Joker and Batman instils fear but from different angle using different means.
One of the best scene had to be Batman extraditing a criminal from Hong Kong. I wish all criminals are illegally extradited with such efficiency and style. I also like the scene where the Joker utters his two famous lines, "Why so serious?" and "Let's put a smile on that face!", which were scary and yet funny in a morbid way. I love the Batpod although many said it looked clumsy but I didn't like the sonar eyes for Batman, too clumsy, noisy and confusing. I love the scene where Batman jumped onto the top of the car, crushing it and he looked every bit as menacing as he is heroic. I felt Batman was more menacing than heroic though. I love the fact that Bruce Wayne gets hurt and Alfred gets worried because after all Batman is only human and could be killed. It makes every of his decision vitally important for own self preservation and how much he is willing to push himself to achieve something.
The next best scene had to be the one where Joker wanted to prove the world, the people is naturally hypocrites and therefore selfish. He seems convinced by this and he placed two bombs in two ferries loaded with people being evacuated from Gotham City. One has a shipload of criminals with guards whilst the other oridinary citizens. The question is simple; At midnight the Joker will blow up both ships unless one of the ship blows up the other first. Each ship has a detonator. Batman's faith in mankind was dwindling and so as he fought the joker, the people squabble. The prisoners forcing the warden to turn on the switch, in the other ordinary citizens said those are criminals, they had their chance. Near midnight, in the ship with the prisoners, one mean looking prisoner walked to the warden and convinced the warden to let him switch it on because the warden wanted to survive but his conscience stopped him from doing it. In the end with trembling hands he gave it to the prisoner who promptly threw it out of the window and into the sea. Quietly he sat down again, and so the matter has been solved. I loved this scene because even criminals have conscience, something Joker was proving otherwise. They too have compassion. In the other ship, one man volunteered to do it. He took the device, and then he couldn't do it. With trembling hands he put it down and sat down. Everybody else didn't have the guts to be a criminal, to be a murderer and so they sat quietly, hoping the other ship has compassion as they did or rather didn't want to kill a shipload of people. Past 12, nothing happened. Joker was disappointed, Batman's faith in the people of Gotham was renewed.
The third best which is a character is Harvey Dent. Golden blonde boy of Gotham, he is the White Knight of Gotham, fearless in his pursuit of criminals, a good guy. His fall from grace was terrible and very sad and Batman lamented Joker won in the end when Harvey Dent became Two Face and was so angry with Lieutenant Gordon because his men betrayed him and so incensed with grief with what happened to someone he loved that he lost sense of right and wrong and his ethics and moral compass was lost forever. I am not sure if his ending was his death because it wasn't explained and since Two Face will become Batman's nemesis, I suppose he didn't die. But Harvey Dent did and it was a sad sight.
The fourth is of course the batsuit which has less emphasis (no longer any long shots of the pecs and everything else) and of course the make up. Two Face's makeup was beyond excellent, it was scary as it should be. Notice the suit too, one side nice, one side burnt. Bruce Wayne's room deserves a mention. Great. And Bruce Wayne's cars, all of them were fantastic. We still have some way before we see the Bat mobile proper.
Finally, last but not the least is the absolute ending for the awful inadequate character of Rachel Dawes. I disliked her in Batman Begins, mainly because of Katie Holmes' Parkinson induced performance and also because Rachel Dawes was so judgmental towards Bruce Wayne. This time around I hated her mostly because of Maggie Gyllenhaal. She received much praise and I wonder why. Just because she is ugly doesn't make her naturally talented. Look, why is Christian Bale always stuck with ugly women as his love interest? Give him someone pretty and can act better. Looks may not be an issue (well when Joker said "Hello beautiful!" and I was like excuse me?) but her mannerism, the way she stands, the way she talks were all terrible. She talks with this whimsical girly voice in the most serious scenes and it was irritating. Her performance was lightweight, like be there, done it and go home. There's no seriousness in her performance and I hated it when she smirked more than the joker did. And what got me confused was her interpretation of this character. Rachel knows Bruce is Batman and yet when she saw those gossip fodders that Bruce was away with the entire bellet troupe, she looked... well she smirked as if saying "And here you go, Bruce the playboy!" but yet she knew, she knew Bruce was waiting for her because he said he is waiting for her to come back to him when he lets go of Batman. So isn't that a contradiction? And the way she stands with her arms crossing was annoying. She didn't look like she got the balls to even fight the mafia. She didn't look strong enough. I hated her performance and all those that praised her is simply blinded by their hatred for Katie Holmes or in awe of the movie itself. Maggie Gyllenhaal, sorry to say is an overrated actress that quite nearly killed this movie. And I was so happy when her character got blown up. Sorry for the spoilers but I must get it out and I am looking forward to a new love interest for Bruce Wayne. I find both the character and the actress irritating.
The worst aspect of this movie though is the ending. I am not talking about the movie but the comic book ending; as in Hero walking (in this case running) away and another character narrates the ending. In this scene it was Gordon who said something like "Batman is a hero that Gotham City deserves but doesn't need". I was like HUH? To call Batman a vigilante and still have that big spotlight calling Batman whenever he is needed only makes Gotham City ungrateful! I would say "Batman is the hero that Gotham City needs but doesn't deserve" and I will NOT ONE BIT AT ALL! That was truly awful way to end this movie.
Performance wise, surprisingly Christian Bale had little screentime in which we see his face. For those few moment even as Batman he was excellent as always but the focus was more on the Joker and Harvey Dent. Even Lieutenant Gordon got more emphasis. He looked handsome though but his Batman voice was a bit too low, almost too put on.
The old guys were excellent, Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine and Gary Oldman can just stand there and still be excellent. Eric Roberts was well, Eric Roberts. I really have no comment though I was surprised to see him in here.
Maggie Gyllenhaal as I have explained was awful.
Heath Ledger was really good but was he that great? I am not sure. I find his Joker manic, scary and sometimes twisted self righteous type of criminal. The new breed that we know as terrorists. But I didn't think he was that great to the point of super greatness. Oscar nomination? Probably. Personally I thought he was effective, funny at times and at most times menacing by playing the clown. In that sense I suppose he did give the best performance of his short lived career. The idea of where he could have gone after this performance is the one that made watching this movie sad.
The biggest surprise was Aaron Eckhart. Chiselled good looks, blonde hair to boot, he looked picture perfect as Harvey Dent the fearless knight of Gotham. I read Matt Damon was the first choice and I think Matt Damon would be a great choice too since he has this naturally good guy looks. But Aaron Eckhart is a fantastic actor and he played Harvey Dent with such earnestness and enthusiasm you can't help but be swept by his gallantry. And then he played Two Face with such pain and anger you can't help but feel sorry for him. In fact my feelings for his end was like how Batman felt about Harvey Dent; a great pity that he fell so hard that he can't pick himself up again. I do feel because all the attention is now on Heath Ledger's flamboyant Joker, Aaron Eckhart may not be given the attention he deserves for an excellent interpretation of this sad pitiful character. I hope to see him in the next instalment because Two Face is a very interesting villain.
For such a big movie, there are very few main characters.
Overall this movie is really good but is it that great? It was a risk to make a superhero movie so down to earth and I do think Nolan succeeded in erasing the memory of the campy terrible sequels of Batman movies forever and present with us a movie set in a world where a vigilante dressed as a bat and a terrorist dressed as a clown was a possibility. However I do miss Tim Burton's version of Gotham City because sometimes too much realism isn't my cup of tea.
Verdict
A really good and worthy sequel to Batman Begins with strong performances except for that one I mentioned. It has its weaknesess but overall the good moments erase the bad ones thus making this movie worth every penny I paid to watch it in the cinema. However I must agree with the minority; it isn't a masterpiece. But I have no doubt the next one will be.
Interesting Fact
I noticed in the list a Chin Han in the cast. Definitely not that Chin Han we know!
By the way I didn't see Edison Chan in here. In fact if the villain didn't say Hong Kong I wouldn't noticed it was Hong Kong!
Interesting Mistake (?)
One scene was confusing. Joker was irritating a policeman in the interview room and then it showed the policeman walking towards the joker menacingly. Next scene joker had a knife or gun or whatever to his throat dragging him out of the interview room. Where was the scene in between? What happened? Bad editing perhaps?
Interesting Posters
Each teaser poster was excellently made, never seen this kind since... since.. forever.