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20 March 2009

THE ULTIMATE CRIME FIGHTER [TVB]

Written by Funn Lim


"Kevin Cheng is interesting in here. He was becoming boring, irrelevant and uninteresting until the role of Aaron came about."


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MAJOR SPOILERS ... MAJOR SPOILERS ... MAJOR SPOILERS


The Title Deciphered
Re my post previously posted HERE. Reproduced here for your convenience.

By the way it is not ULTIMATE CRIME FIGHTER but THE ULTIMATE CRIME FIGHTER. I made the mistake many times. The Chinese title is similar.


There comes a time, rarely that there is a title that you just love for no reason whatsoever. The title may be ordinary, simplistic and even meaningless in the scheme of things but somehow, like true love, you just fall head over heels, no rhyme nor reason.

I am absolutely and unequivocally in love with the title, ULTIMATE CRIME FIGHTER which I am watching right now over at ASTRO. Even the Chinese title sounds great, and translated into the English title which I just mentioned. There are just so many ways to say the title, from the whispering ultimate crime fighter to the theatrical ULTIMATE Crime Fighter to the accented Ultimate Crimeeee Fighterrrrrr to the WWF like UL-TI-MATEEEEE CRRRRRRR-IMMMMMMEEEEEEEEE FIGHHHHHHHTERRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!!!!!!!!

I just love this title even if looking at the content of the series, the title makes no sense because well there aren't any ultimate crime fighters in there! But still... such a simple title, so many varied ways to express oneself. My favourite amongst all the ways?

Ah-tee-mate Kime Fai-ter.

Does remind me of Fighting Nemo... I mean Finding Nemo!


Released In
2007

What? So long ago and only now broadcast on ASTRO?

No. Of Episodes
37

Cast-Character
Yuen Biao - Yuen Fo-Sung
Moses Chan - Wai Chun-Lung (John Loong)
Gigi Lai - Wong Jing-Ying (Jing Jing)
Yoyo Mung - Keung Nga-Yue (Ginger)
Kevin Cheng - Chong Man-Hei (Aaron)
Maggie Siu - Lam Chor-Yuk (Janet)
Marco Ngai - Sing Chi-Him (Hugo)
Natalie Tong - Ngai Sze-Ka (Yan Yan/Ka Ka)
Bryan Leung - Wong Bo
Sam Chan - To Wai-Keung (BT)
Matthew Ko - Lai Ji-Kin
Fala Chen - Ada Wai
Ben Wong - Chong Man Hong
Lau Dan - Mr Chong
Law Koon Lan - Mrs Chong
Mark Kwok - Cool Man
Carlo Ng
Rain Lau
Savio Tsang
Ai Wai
Annabelle Lau

And many more ...

The Story So Far ...
Taken from Wikipedia. I must add the sypnosis below is so totally NOT the story proper at all. How can the writer mess up the story? Is this the official version from TVB? So does it mean TVB doesn't know its own story? You can also go to the same site to get the low down on each major character but be forewarned, not accurate also. So if you want to know the story proper, read my summary.

Famous for his unparalleled kung-fu skills, Police Officer Yuen Fo-Sung (Yuen Biao) has cracked a large number of difficult cases, which makes him very popular within the police force. Despite the recognition he has achieved, Fo quits his job to become a monk. But later, as luck would have it, he gets back to Hong Kong again, where he experiences a series of mysterious, supernatural events…

With the assistance of Fo, Wai Chun-Lung (Moses Chan), an undercover police officer, manages to solve the most complicated cases. Fo believes that there is a special bond between him and Lung. Lung and his bosom friend Keung Nga-Yue (Yoyo Mung) have been very close to each other. Feeling so upset, Lung’s girlfriend Wong Jing-Ying (Gigi Lai) starts going out with her boss Chong Man-Hei (Kevin Cheng), which leads her to the point of no return…

To seek revenge, Lung has shown his complete disregard for law and order. He is ready to sacrifice himself and even Fo to reach his goal. Things are happening as Fo predicts. Will the long-running feud between them be eventually settled? Fate will decide…


My Summary
Whilst the story may seem to centre on For Sir, the actual series centres on 5 major characters. For Sir with his deep Buddhist philosophical view of life and his relationship with a formerly rich lady abandoned by her irresponsible husband, Janet and For Sir's relationship with a girl called Ka Ka. Then there John Loong as well as Jing Jing and Ginger. Then there's Aaron and his relationship with everybody mentioned above as well as his own family.

For Sir used to be a hot tempered cop married with one daughter. His wife (Hong Wah) could not take his hot temper anymore and so decided to leave, taking along his young daughter whom he loved very much. After some time the wife disappeared and For Sir lost all contact with his daughter. Feeling miserable, he went to seek guidance and found the Shaolin temple monks who taught him Buddhist philosophy of life and he realised he was not a good husband. Determined to change his ways, he became more zen like and look like from a renewed vigour. He returned to HK and after a brief employment as Janet, a rich woman's chauffer cum her son's bodyguard he was reemployed as a CID under the command of a young policeman named John Loong. For Sir has the unique ability to see the future which is pretty accurate and often this special sense has helped him in numerous cases and life threatening situations. Working with John Loong he felt a kinship with the usually jovial young man.

John Loong worked as an undercover cop where he got to know his neighbour, a nice but not very pretty girl named Jing Jing. When he became a cop again and was given a promotion to head a team of CIDs, Jing Jing fell for him. Being a ladies man, he didn't quite accepted her advances although he liked her. But after a while he gave in and became an item with her much to the displeasure of Jing Jing's father who felt his daughter was never home when she started dating him. However they quarrelled and broke up numerous times because Jing Jing felt she did so much and yet John Loong didn't seem to care or love her whilst John Loong felt she was too clingy and expected too much. The final break up was when he thought she was pregnant and he proposed and she knew he did it because he was a gentleman and not because he loved her and so they parted ways. John Loong threw himself into his work and his mood worsens, comforted only by his close friend, Ginger who was a tough cop who retired to become a lawyer because her mother was afraid she might get hurt. Ginger herself dated Hugo, a successful lawyer briefly until she realised he was a scumbag and so she left him. Ginger felt closer and closer with John Loong and became his confidante.

Meanwhile Jing Jing got as new job as a doll fashion designer and worked with rich but temperamental man, Aaron. Aaron was moved by her sincerity and enthusiasm in her work and often sided with her. However Aaron carries a dark secret of his own; when a body was discovered where the man was murdered 5 years before, Jing Jing found out that dead man was once Aaron's lover. Aaron was a closet homosexual and could not let his father (Lau Dan) know the truth because his father could not take the public humiliation. Same time Aaron is feuding with his older half brother and often led to angry clashes.

With the discovery of this body which led to more investigations, John Loong was convinced Aaron was the killer though he didn't know the motive. He warned Jing Jing who was at that time pretend to date Aaron to save him from further questions about his sexuality with his parents but Jing Jing didn't believe John Loong who became more and more aggressive in pursuing the case. After sometime, Jing Jing realised despite everything, she was still in love with John Loong and John Loong realised he loved her too and so secretly they were seeing each other again. Aaron found out and being severely depressed, he began to drink heavily and urged Jing Jing to see him. John Loong who was obssessed with cracking the case neglected to see Jing Jing for that day and so she went to Aaron and found a pen belonging to the dead guy who was blackmailing Aaron about his sexual orientation. Jing Jing suspected Aaron must have contributed to that man's death and called John who wasn't at his place and so she left a cryptic message. Aaron found out she was holding the pen and out of anger, he pursued her to the pond, pushed her in and drowned her. Then he pretended to have tried to save her. The one person who saw what he did was his estranged brother who decided to use this knowledge to blackmail him to give him money to pay off his debts.

John Loong was overcome with guilt and knew Aaron was the killer. Aaron said she accidentally fell and he was trying to save her. His father believed him but everybody else didn't. Prosecution was mounted but eventhough a video tape was found that showed him drowning Jing Jing, the case was compromised by John's overzealous participation, a bad witness in the form of Aaron's brother (who agreed to testify because he thought Aaron tried to run him down but in actual fact it was John who tried to run him down) and so Aaron was let off. John took the photos and the tape to Aaron's father who confronted his son and suffered a major heart attack. Aaron being angry decided to retaliate. However he was later kidnapped by his own brother and during the rescue mission, Aaron was badly hurt by his own brother who was badly hurt himself. John Loong decided to take matters into his own hand and killed Aaron and put the blame on the brother. The brother ran away but John wanted to kill the only witness as well.

Ginger who was by this time in love with him and had a drunken one night stand with him and pregnant as well and For Sir wanted to save John Loong but through different methods. For Sir wanted him caught and repent, whilst Ginger wanted Aaron's brother to leave and so John can go on without being caught. John didn't know Ginger was helping him and he ended up pushing her down the stairs. For Sir, angry with what happened desperately tried to persuade John to turn a new leaf but in one of his hindsight, he knew John would shoot him. As John got news the brother was at a certain location, For Sir ran after John. John shot the brother despite pleading from the brother and so For Sir pointed a gun at him as he pointed back. When For Sir suddenly opened fire, John fired and shot For Sir. But For Sir was shooting the brother who was trying to attack John from behind. Overcame by guilt, John realised he was wrong and took For Sir to the hospital and turned himself in.

For Sir survived and forgave John. He ended up with Janet and would be promoted to Sargeant. John will go to prison for an unspecified number of years. In prison he read the buddhist books sent by For Sir and became deeply phisolophical and realised the errors of his ways. Often visited by Ginger who gave birth to a boy and lost her license to practise as a lawyer because she helped John, Ginger promised to wait for John Loong as she raised their son. Later Ginger became a journalist writing about life whilst John became a published author whilst in prison. In prison he found peace and sees himself free at last with Ginger and his son by his side and he waits for that day when he will be reunited with them ...

The end.

Comments
I didn't know what to make of this series. It has the title of a detective series, the contents of a family drama and love story and in the end became like a story which questions to what length would a man exact vengeance; is it to the point where he destroys everyone he cares about, including himself? The ending is deeply philosophical and to some may seem rather silly way to end it since we get the appearance of Buddha (how on earth Buddha can appear in this modern series? Just watch the series). But this series surprised me with that it has a proper and thorough ending for some major characters with narration in words telling the viewers what happened to them. That is new since TVB has a tendency to end it with a question which can be very tiresome after a while.

But this series is weird. It has no proper theme, and it is the type that finds its theme as it goes along and somewhere along the way there should and will be an ending and whatever that may be, the story will go towards some direction you would never expect.

Some reviews describe the story from the viewpoint of For Sir and his uncanny ability to see the future and the notion of superstition cases and stuff. Yes there is that ability but to describe this series as a weird X-Files type series is very wrong. For Sir is one of the major character but he is not the only major character. The story can broken into 3 stages; 1st of the story is heavily about John Loong and Jing Jing whilst the 2nd is heavily about Aaron and John Loong and the end between John Loong and For Sir. John Loong is the main guy here but again he is not the only important character. This is like an ensembled cast; one can't work without the other.

So what is this series about? I can't say with certainty. I was baffled by its content. First few episodes did talk about investigations of unrelated cases and whilst it may be intriguing at first, it quickly became confusing because when I thought this series is about detectives, it changed course into something deeply personal.

What is certain is this series is careful to show the main characters. However silly Jing Jing may be, towards the end of her character, you will probably like her because much time has been invested on her. The way she was murdered was an injustice that John Loong is rightly angry about. Some time was also invested on Aaron who appears half way into the series who seems like such a gentleman at first but turned out to be a killer without a conscience. He is a deeply selfish man who would kill to cover his tracks and as he cover more of his tracks he killed more and more and in the end revealed himself to be a monster. John Loong in his grief and guilt killed Aaron to which I cheered since I hated Aaron by that time but to cover his tracks, tried to kill and kill and in the end almost lost his humanity. In a nice twist he saw himself as Aaron when he looked into mirrors and it shows he was slowly morphing into the monster that Aaron was.

For Sir is a uniquely pleasant character that seems like the usual quittesential compulsory good guy. But he's more than that. He is the beacon of hope in the times of despair, he saw reason when no one else could and he wanted to help John but using the right way. Someone with practical sense like Ginger tried to help him the wrong way and ended up suffering herself but For Sir, knowing his life may be at risk decided saving John is far more important than his own life. There is no denying the differences between John and Aaron is that John is beneath it all a good man. Driven by guilt, grief, a sense of injustice and ultimately almost insane sense of self preservation, he almost turned into a monster Aaron was. Aaron may seem like a good guy, but deep down he is deeply disturbed. He does not hesitate to kill, eventhough minutes before he professes to love but in the end his tendency to kill to cover his tracks outweighed whatever is left of his humanity. Although he had a crush on Jing Jing, after he killed her, he felt no remorse, no pain but fear that someone might know. Despite how well Jing Jing treated him, to him Jing Jing was an obstacle to his life of freedom which in the end makes him a monster.

The best scene of this series had to be when Aaron was seriously injured, with a steelbar impaled through his stomach thanks to his half brother. He taunted John Loong, saying he will live but for once John saw sense and did not fall for his taunts since he thought Aaron was dying anyway. Then they heard sirens and Aaron laughingly say "It took them only 2 minutes to reach here... 2 minutes!! I will live. How do you feel about that? Having to be a cop and do the right thing when all you wanted was for my death but you can't get me! How does that feel!!" and John was so angry he pushed in the steelbar and thus killing Aaron. Whilst what he did was wrong, being a cop and all, with Aaron being so irritating and for killing effectively 3 people, one of whom did not deserve to die and that was Jing Jing, I cheered at John's actions. I felt the fact TVB wrote such an end for Aaron is bold and refreshing. Justice was administered since the law utterly failed Jing Jing. I felt like for once TVB is giving me something different, something unexpected and something so sinister and yet so just. Kudos to the writers for writing this scene in.

Of course all that was spoilt by the fact that story doesn't seem to end just there and went on for a few more episodes. Whilst you may complain about the encounter between For Sir and Buddha, as someone did scoffed at the silly scene, it was a pivotal scene for For Sir who was a buddhist. His will to live was spurred by the sounds of Janet calling his name and his brief enlightening encounter with Buddha making that scene deeply philosophical. The idea that there is nothing to fear of death, that everyone encounters it, that it is ok to die but not before your time, that one should appreciate and make do with the time we have before we become one with the earth again makes this series at this point a rather uniquely religious one to which I welcome this scene. What's so interesting about series after series about squabbling family when once in a while you get this kind of scene?

That weird but interesting scene does show how unique this series is. Earlier this series contained a very good twist in the story that made me sat up and paid attention. That was the story of For Sir and his long lost daughter Yan Yan except the girl claiming to be Yan Yan was actually Ka Ka, Yan Yan's best friend. What is touching is how For Sir reconciled with the fact he will never see Yan Yan again since Yan Yan died missing her father and how Ka Ka, deprived of a good father adopted him as her father. Their relationship is one of the strong point of this series, the warmth and playfulness between these two makes the relationship all the more poignant and great to watch. There is also the relationship between Janet and her young son who was angry with his mother thinking she abandoned his father when in truth he abandoned them and how For Sir united the mother and child. The interactions between For Sir and the young boy is also another highlight, and is one of the less dramatic moments. I also like how Janet was forthright with her husband that she wanted a divorce and how her son in the end reacted to that fact. All very positive. Truth is after a while I was tired of Aaron's deceit, Jing Jing's naiveness and John Loong's anger and it is interestingly For Sir and his adopted family that provided the lighter moments.

The story of Ginger and Hugo is almost pointless until John Loong went insane with vengeance and revenge. Ginger then actually had something to do and her steadfast loyalty to John Loong is again a good twist to the story in the sense I thought it was pretty realistic. If this was Forensic Heroes, probably Ginger would advice John to surrender and accept the punishment of the law with one huge smile. This Ginger is more true to life; she rescued Aaron's brother from John with the sole purpose so that John doesn't commit another murder and so that the brother can leave Hong Kong and John will be a free man. I can't disagree with her intentions and I also can't say I disagree with For Sir's take on how silly her actions were. But these actions are practical and true and not some politically correct bullshit that we see in some series such as Forensic Heroes where everybody is on a high horse and nobody is actually thinking about "WHAT ABOUT THE VICTIM??" because everybody's sense of justice is following the law to the last letter. This series constantly reminds us of Jing Jing and the injustice that was inflicted on her and frankly I may not have done what John Loong did but love, grief and guilt will sometimes drive a decent sane man into doing crazy stuff.

One part of the story I hated though was the whole prosecution of Aaron. It shows following the law will lead to injustice. I am not sure the HK judiciary or police force will be too happy with what is portrayed of them; basically imbeciles. It shows how the facts can be ignored, twisted and that the entire law enforcement, from the judges to the lawyers to the law to police and to the forensic experts are all total and complete imbeciles when it comes to catching a real criminal. I thought Aaron's case was pretty solid; a motive, scars on Jing Jing as well as a video showing him actually pushing her head into the water which totally debunked his story that he was trying to lift her head up to rescue her. There was also Jing Jing's last recording which implicated Aaron.

Let's examine the facts.

Aaron does not deny Jing Jing was at his home, that she fell into the pool, that she drowned because she could not swim, that he tried to save her, that the marks on her neck were caused by his effort to lift her head up.

Isn't that just stupid? Even if I am not some big shot forensic expert, I can tell you with certainty there is a difference between marks left by someone holding someone's head up from water and marks left by strangling someone. And no one, and I repeat NO ONE would rescue a drowning victim by holding their neck above water with their bare hands. You use forearms, you lift the shoulders, etc. The marks on her neck is pretty obviously left by someone clasping their hands around her neck and squeezed. Could Aaron have been so stupid that he thought strangling her is rescuing her? Then the video tape. The prosecution removed the tape from the judge's consideration, so basically the judge and jury never saw the tape. How stupid is that? You just don't remove evidence. Defence wil object, judge will review the tape, but at the end of the day the judge will decide if the prejudicial effect will outweigh the beneficial effect. Questions were raised that since the Thai dude who recorded it (but didn't actually witness the event) handed it to John Loong, known sworn nemesis of Aaron the Defendent, therefore the evidence is tainted. My question is so what? Get an expert witness to testify it was not tempered with. This is not US courts where rules of evidence are stricter, this is HK court where rules do make sense at the end of the day. But the funny and stupidest part is the prosecution killed their own case by removing the evidence, not the judge denying the admittance of that evidence. There is of course a question of motive. Why would he kill Jing Jing the love of his life? That John Loong would falsely accuse him because John was jealous Jing Jing was with Aaron now. How dumb can that be? Can't the prosecution call the two best friends of Jing Jing to testify Jing Jing never stopped loving John? Call the dad to say she was seeing him again? That would lead credence to the argument that Aaron was with jealous rage when he acted the way he did. Moreover, as for motive, the last recording pretty much implicated Aaron. So maybe the evidence of 2 previous unconvicted murders can't be introduced but the tape shows Jing Jing had doubts about Aaron about certain deaths. Coupled with the pictures of Aaron with another man, the 1st victim, I thought the case was pretty solid.

I just thought the entire prosecution business is just so badly written it defies logic and common sense.

Of course another stupid scene(s) would be putting weak witnesses on the stand. Man Hong as a witness I understand since he saw what happened but his crediblity is weak. Why put John Loong on the stand? He ended up shrieking like a lunatic.

So maybe Aaron may not be convicted at the end of the day but at least the writers should make an effort to make his acquittal a bit more convincing than this lazily written trial process.

However much I do not like the case or the individual investigation cases which always leads to accused confessing everything and anything they can confess too, I actually like the practical raw emotions when it comes to how certain characters reacted to the catalyst that is Jing Jing's death. I find it very realistic to have John posting the gay pictures of Aaron on the internet, thus TVB is acknowledging the power of media, in this case the internet. I like the fact that Aaron fought back and John didn't lay low and took it like a coward. I like the fact that these two men pretty much destroyed each other and then themselves because that is realistic. I also like how the other characters reacted around them with represents the 2 different polar opposites of a sense of justice and closure; some may feel For Sir was way too nice whilst some may feel Ginger was too foolish. But these 2 represent the same ideal; they'd do everything to help Man Hong not because they wanted to save him but because they wanted to save John from spiralling out of control but then John was too insane to realise that sooner.

But my complaints about how it all ends primarily rests in how John so easily woke up from his insane grief or cover up jobs so soon and so easily. Shooting For Sir was a reason, knowing Ginger was pregnant with his child was another. But so simple, that perhaps For Sir should have just let him shoot him sooner. By then the series was already 37 episodes, about 7 episodes too long already so they must stop somewhere somehow. Of course as I write this I do wonder; since For Sir could see himself being shot, why on earth did he not wear some protection? And since everyone knew how out of control John was, why didn't the force just suspend him? Take away his gun?

Another aspect I wish to highlight that was badly written was others' reaction to Jing Jing's sudden death. Everybody was ok but not much was shown on the 2 best friends. They should be more involved in the aftermath since they were so involved before. I sat with total disbelief how John's sister reacted. This was the same sister who liked Jing Jing, approved of her and even helped her to woo John and her reaction was "Let's see it this way brother. Jing Jing's death was fated, and it happened as preordained by the heavens. You shouldn't blame yourself or feel too sad about it". This is TVB with its PC crap. Jing Jing didn't die of some illness or a car accident or even suicide. She was blatantly murdered, young, vivacious, full of life and now plain dead. The sister cried a little but she should have been choking back tears when she said those PC crap to the brother. Where was she when her brother went bonkers with grief and revenge? She should be more involved, more raw emotions, more realistic reaction to a death nobody expected.

Some reviews I read online has been pretty misleading, simply because the synopsis is pretty misleading. If you think this series is about For Sir and his ability to see the future, you're only 20% right. That ability is to facilitate the last episode I suppose, to create some tension, some fear of the inevitable rather than fear of the unknown but it doesn't dominate this series and it doesn't look as silly as it sounds. The entire series which began without a theme and went on to have multiple themes at the end is about to what extent one is willing to do to cover one's tracks and forgiveness which includes forgiving oneself. What Aaron did for the 1st murder was an act of passion. What he did 2nd time was an act of cover up. By the 3rd murder Aaron was a cold blooded murder who murdered as he sees fit. As for John, his killing of Aaron to me was justified and perhaps is the best scene in this series. It could have been a perfect crime. In a way I felt if he wasn't that insane as to kicking Ginger down the stairs or shooting For Sir, perhaps everyone should give him a break by just letting his murdering Aaron go without breathing a word to others. That would be wrong of course; murder is murder whoever you murdered and why. Of course when it comes to Aaron who annoyed me when he was taunting John, I just pretty much thought why don't John just push the bar further into his stomach, which he did. Almost a perfect murder.

As for the performances, there were some breakthroughs for certain actors.

Yuen Biao impressed me. I never thought he was that good an actor more so when it comes to romantic scenes, but the quiet romance he had with Maggie Siu's Janet was effective. His scenes with Natalie Tong and the little boy were effective and touching and he was at his best as the father to these 2 characters. His confrontational scenes with John were not very well acted since heavy drama is not his expertise so to speak but for all intents and purposes, and having seen a lot of his movies back when he was younger, I feel his performance as For Sir is his best in his career, thus far. He convinced me in some scenes how zen like he was, quite quirky like Charlie Crews in Life (oh how I love Damian Lewis), the way he spoke about Buddhist philosophy was very convincing and eventhough his meeting with the Shaolin monks and the Buddha himself may be a ridiculous plot in terms of this modern series, somehow he made them possible and believable. I enjoyed his performance and may I say, Yuen Biao looked very good for his age. Body also looks good too with a well toned body. The younger generation should look to him to know how a man's body should look like.

One of those who gave a breakthrough performance is the boy who played Maggie Siu's son. He shared great chemistry with Yuen Biao and everyone else and the scenes where he deliberately ignored Maggie's character were perhaps some of the best and most realistically written.

Marco Ngai also gave an excellent performance as the vindictive and petty womaniser Hugo. So again a streotypical portrayal of a successful lawyer with a huge ego but Marco Ngai looked the part even if his English had me taking a double take as to what he actually meant. When he wanted to say SEXY he actually said SASSY!! Both almost the same meaning but still, what is wrong with his Xs? Anyway I pity him though. He is a very good actor, same face, same tone and yet could be nice or could be despicable. I thought his Hugo was outwardly despicable but inwardly a romantic guy with the way he pursued the hard to pursue (and why would anyone be attracted to her anyway) Ginger. In the end he was actually a lying fake hypocrite which kinda disappointed me. I was hoping that he actually turned out to be a gentleman even if his job requires him to act like a jerk.

Ng Ka Lok, whom if I am not mistaken is called Carlo is fun to watch as he went all out as the effiminate best friend of Gigi's character. Enjoyed his banter with Rain Lau even if towards the end they pretty much disappeared from the story the moment Jing Jing died even if they should be given more role.

Moses Chan is someone I am not sure how to evaluate. He is great at comedies but weak at dramas and yet he is in one drama after another and often really serious drama series. I have always said and will maintain that he is never quite the leading man in his series, as he always shoulders the leading man responsibility with some other equally or more famous actor(s). I still think he has yet to prove his mettle as a leading man per se like Bobby Au Yeung type. Will people watch his series if he is the real and only headliner? The thing with him is he always gets the meaty roles. His John Loong is another difficult character to play, who is flamboyant to dead serious and to OTT insane. His performance showed all that of course so kudos to him BUT with extreme sudden changes, not gradual which gives me an impression his John Loong is crazy. Of course he is not crazy, he is just driven and merciless and obsessed but not crazy as in insane. I hated it when he speaks with a whisper. He always whispers in dramatic moments and the only time he ever speaks loudly and clearly is during comedic moments. He truly shines in lighter moments which is why he should be in more comedies and his worst moments are towards the end when his character has crazy eyes, talks crazy and as I said, suspiciously but not really crazy. He just seems well, inadequate in conveying his character's more tormented moments, his guilt, his anger, his impatience, his unreasonableness, his descent into somekind of but not quite madness driven first by his grief, then by his guilt, then by selfishness and finally his need to survive. This is one multi faceted character that would have been better acted by a more drama-competent actor, someone who can show more than blank crazy eyes acting and gear towards a full blown angry man type of acting. I miss Kong Wah. He can give this role a sense of urgency, a sense of grief, of bereavement, of pain. Or Bobby Au Yeung who of course does not fit the handsome eligible bill that Moses can. But to be fair to Moses, this is one of his finest performance of a character that seems to be going everywhere. I mean the writer seems at lost what to do with him until towards the end with one broad stroke of his pen, quite literally wrote the demise of a potentially good cop. I didn't quite like that but all that befalls him do make for a very good character study. Did anyone feel the writer is trying to draw similarities between his John Loong and Aaron? I felt it was interesting but a bit forced. I didn't see them as similar at all.

Kevin Cheng is interesting in here. He was becoming boring, irrelevant and uninteresting until the role of Aaron came about. Again this character seems at lost in the plot until towards the end when his purpose is revealed. Also a bit cruel twist of fate for what seems to be a nice guy in the beginning who turned to murder out of desperation and became a full blown monster towards the end. And a very irritating monster and frankly kudos to Kevin Cheng for shedding his gentleman image and just go ugly. His Aaron is handsome but towards the end he just seems ugly to me and so I suppose that is one good acting from Kevin. Whilst I appreciate his attention to details, such as pacing as he was taunting Moses or body hunched foward when threatened or using his gestures to great effect when trying to threaten someone, I feel some of his actions a bit more deliberate than natural. He is trying hard, I can see that but yet maybe much too hard. Maybe it is because there is no mean bones in Kevin Cheng perhaps? No doubt his performance in here is one of his best for portraying one of the most irritating and monster-like character, so much so I was cheering when John Loong killed him. The way he maddeningly taunted John Loong, laughing as he heard the ambulance approaching the scene was enough to make any blood boil. However let's face it; Kevin Cheng is always those cool type of dudes that doesn't seem to have a proper volcanic temper, much like Moses himself. So to see him out of his comfort zone (one of the favourite words used in American Idol and which is very applicable here) is interesting and welcoming even if it may not be very effective. What I am saying is truthfully, Kevin Cheng is not that a fantastic actor. A better actor can give this role more manic appeal and yet perhaps show to the viewers his vulnerability. After all Aaron was very desperate to keep his name clean so he did what he did but towards the end maybe it just became easier. It just seems so easy for him to kill that after a while to cover his crime he became comfortable with the idea and the act of taking a life and he took the most innocent of them all, Jing Jing. The rest maybe in some ways deserved their end but not Jing Jing. And to cover that up, he lost his human decency so he became in the end as I kept repeating, a monster. You know a few years back I would say Deric Wan would be perfect for this role. Now I can't quite name any since TVB's new crop of actors aren't exactly brimming with natural acting talent. So to be fair to Kevin, this is one of his finest performance but if there was a better character actor (like Nick Cheung or Roger Kwok perhaps) taking this role, I am afraid he may pale in comparison.

Yoyo Mung is infuriating. She was terrible as a policewoman in Forensic Heroes and in here again as a policewoman and then a lawyer, she was not convincing in either role although she seemed awake as opposed to her sleeping distracting performance in Forensic Heroes. So that is a plus point. Her character, Ginger is an interesting character. First of all, was the writer serious in calling her Ginger? Somehow that name just doesn't sound right for a tough woman like Ginger. And Ginger is a tough woman. She can take care of herself, she has an opinion, she is steadfast in her duty, she believes in justice and yet foolishly for love she did what would finally destroy her career but showed her as a human being and not like those robots in Forensic Heroes. So this is one character goldmine for a female actress, more so it seems at first like all characters in this series, her character seems rather aimless. Towards the middle you know her purpose but before that you wonder; what is she doing in here anyway? I know as Moses' love interest but how (that was before I knew what happened to Jing Jing). Yoyo Mung has killed most of her own credibility in her recent performances and frankly I find her inadequate in here even if she does say words or act in such a way that is unladylike, the way her character is. But I am not convinced. I just find her still sleepwalking in here role but at least half awake now. She should forever be banned from playing policewomen or lawyers. She should just stick to the obligatory girlfriend roles. Who could have done better? Everybody else who can act can do better. Sorry to Miss Yoyo, until and unless you start to do some major real acting, your time is up. I am getting impatient with her.

Gigi Lai has retired, married and is happy at last. Good for her. Sad though because this, as Jing Jing is one of her finest performance apart from what was that series with Moses where they were siblings where Yoyo Mung was actually a good actress? Anyway in here she had to make herself less pretty and more plain and so she had to wear glasses, have bad perm and really buck tooth type of teeth. So she was over the hill, so she was overacting, so she was overreacting but you do become fond of her Jing Jing after a while because she is such a nice person. Gigi can try to fool us all that her Jing Jing is unattractive next to Moses' John Loong who is supposed to be a ladies' man, but Gigi is a very beautiful woman. So I wasn't convinced, looks wise. Acting wise, she got better as her character becomes less silly and more serious. Her chemistry with Moses and then Kevin is great and I enjoyed her scenes with Rain Lau and Carlo Ng. Her ending was very sad. Ok, so this is full spoilers right? Ok, she died. Killed quite terribly by Aaron. Hers was an unexpected death and that threw John Loong into his descent towards self destruction. Her Jing Jing is quite sad too because she loves John Loong, did everything for him and yet he seems uninterested eventhough we know he loves her but not as much as she loves him. She wants affection and she can be needy and clingy but she is a really nice girl. Gigi portrays all that aspect very well even if I find her Jing Jing quite annoying when it comes to promoting her fashion doll called Ah Wu. I was like can we move away from Ah Wu please. To think that I was beginning to like her and suddenly she is retired. I shall miss her heavy breathing.

Natalie Tong is extremely thin which made me concentrate more on her twig like legs and arms rather than her performance. If you can get pass her skinny frame aka lollipop body, I would say she did a good job. She shares a very good chemistry with her onscreen father Yuen Biao and I enjoyed her part of the story which is touching even if it didn't really fit into the whole storyline per se although I will say it does from the forgiveness part as in Yuen Biao forgiving himself and her for what happened to his real daughter. I didn't expect that twist frankly and her story is the highlight of this series when the whole Aaron-Jing Jing-John Loong stories got tiresome after a while.

Ai Wai plays Natalie Tong's despicable father who lives off women. How can a man looking like that live off women? Well just watch this excellent actor's performance. Very convincing and I shall say this; he deserves an award for any role, any role whatsoever.

Ben Wong is a revelation. He was the good guy in Kindred Spirit but since then he has excelled in playing the hypocritical villain, his best was in Safe Guards. Here he was pretty good as well as the bad guy but not as evil as his brother Aaron. His Man Hong is just despicable and stupid but not necessarily evil.

Lau Dan did a fine job as the morally upright patriach of the Chong family whose value and expectations did in some way drove Aaron who could have been the perfect son to murder. I enjoyed his confrontation scene with Kevin about his murder of Jing Jing which was explosive and one of the best scene. However I dislike his character when he found out John Loong killed Aaron and he felt Aaron's death was an injustice. I mean so his anger that he killed an innocent girl like Jing Jing was in the end a hypocritical way of expressing a non-existing anger perhaps? That after all a son is still a son despite him being an evil monster?

Apart from Yoyo Mung for the worst underacting in this series, Law Koon Lan has the dubious honour as the worst overacting in this series. When she was calm she was ok even if she overacts. But when Aaron died and she thought Man Hong had a part to play in his death, that confrontation at Aaron's burial site with her angrily and literally hopping up and down to scold Man Hong was really to me the hallmark of really really awful acting, especially from a veteran like her which is unforgivable. But I am not surprised since she has been this awful before. She can be good but she is always over the top, almost theatrical in her acting that just doesn't translate well onto the small screen. Which means being a veteran and acting in hundreds of series or movies or theatre does not make one a good actress. The only time she was subdued and was actually good was in Burning Flame but after that she seems to bunny hop everytime she is very very angry. Why?

Maggie Siu is very subdued in here and at times I wonder what is the point of her character as hers doesn't fit into this series' grand scheme of things. But every character serves a purpose, all big and small and hers is as Yuen Biao's love interest. I like their love affair, a very cordial and at times romantic storyline and I love her interaction with the boy who played her son. Maggie Siu is a fine actress so not much complains here.

Annabelle Lau as Moses Chan's sister? Quite a good casting actually. But I would thought she as the older rather than the younger sister. I have no complaints about her except after Jing Jing's death the plot should also involve her instead of her suddenly missing. After all her character was close to Jing Jing, in a way. And I feel her worst moment was her reaction to Jing Jing's death. Wayyyyyy too unemotional.

I am not even sure what is Vivian Yeo, our very own Malaysian girl doing in here. In fact what is she doing in HK? Was she even in this series? Her name was listed so I list it here but I can't remember her at all.

Fala Chan, up and coming star of TVB is well, just a guest star. Except for her accent, I think she is competent. I have yet to see her in a more fleshed out role other than Steps.

I am not sure if this is her name but the actress who played Kevin's cousin, the one with the bitchy look is I think called Yvonne Ho even though I can't recognise her. Looking at Wikipedia she has been in a lot of series! Never noticed her. Correct me if I am wrong, please. Anyway no comments. Except maybe this actress is way better than the under and overacting queens of this series.

There are many more guest stars in this series that I feel distract the viewers from the main storyline. Frankly it will take half the series to know what is the main storyline since this series tries to be everything; from detective to supernatural to love to revenge to forgiveness to redemption to well, everything. You can't pinpoint a single theme as this series is like shooting a lot of arrows where one is bound to hit the target. Well it did towards the middle of the series. I ended up liking this series, especially when it accelerated towards the ending. The story dragged a bit in the middle with the relationship problem with Jing Jing and John Loong and other never ending predictable investigation stories. But what I love about this series is certain realism, like the police shoot outs where people do get hurt, where criminals run instead of dropping to their knees and confessing within seconds of "Stop! Police!" is shouted. I also like the idea that not all policemen are perfect, law abiding fearless supercop. Although certain aspects are downright stupid, like the whole trial thing, the series more than made up for that huge blunder with really good confrontational scenes between Aaron and John Loong which are realistic. Nobody take harassment lying down and certainly nobody expects justice to be served automatically. This series portrays the system as failing the good and so the good turns nasty to take matters in their own hands but like all morally good story, in the end vigilante will not serve you well. So the ending is a bit sappy, a bit disconnected with Jing Jing's story but I feel it serves it purpose well.

I must stress though; I have read reviews that said the ending was John Loong was released and reunited with Ginger and their son based on what was shown on the screen. As far as I can tell, he was and will be in prison for a very long time and in his time he envisioned the moment when he was at the beach with his wife and son, a vision of the impending freedom and peace of mind, that in the end he was at peace with himself. Not sure if the narration said he was released when he writes a book about philosophy though. I like the ending because for once it was actually an ending.

Verdict
Whilst seemingly a detective series at first, and it seems to go on and on and on to a pointless end, it does have a good story and very intriguing characters. Fans of Moses, Gigi, Kevin and Yuen Biao won't be disappointed even if I mentioned the performances part is good if you restrict it to the actors portraying their respective roles. But overall this is one surprising series with a few good surprises and twists in the plot, all of which I have revealed in here and so maybe it won't be that surprising to you anymore. Watch it for the characters and I am sure you will end up enjoying this series. The plot description in TVB site or Wikipedia site does not do this series justice. This is a series that offers much more. A must see in my opinion, even if just to see the moment Kevin Cheng's character dies. That to me is the ultimate best scene in this series, and one of the most justified killings even if it is not right to do so.

Interesting Fact
NO THEME SONG!! Yippee!! But the opening musical score is a tad too long with all the swoosh sound effects.






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24 February 2009

THE GEM OF LIFE [TVB]

Written by Joanne Lee


"Having worked in jewellery, I have a real fascination with the stuff and they had some really nice pieces on the show. Which you couldn’t forget was sponsored by MaBelle, since the word came up every ten minutes, which is OK, since I like MaBelle."


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SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS


Released In
2009

Number of Episodes
82

Cast
Hong Family
Maggie Shiu – Sylvia Hong Nga Yin
Gigi Lai – Constance Hong Nga Tung
Ada Choi – Jessica Hong Nga Sze
John Chiang – Hong Ching Yeung
Louise Lee – Hong Bak Siu Yau

Ho Family
Elliot Yue (Ngok Wah) – Martin Ho Fung
Moses Chan – Terrence Ho Jit Lam

Shek Family
Wong He – Shek Tai Wo
Bosco Wong – Will Shek Tai Chuen

Sung Family
Chan Hung Lit – Philip Sung Sai Man
Helen Ma – Margaret Sung Kwok Yuen Yee
Linda Chung – Elise Sung Chi Ling
Queenie Chu – Mandy Man Wai
Queena Chan Dan Dan – Charlie Cheuk Yi

Others
Bowie Lam – Calvin Ko Cheung Sing
Kenny Wong – Sunny Yau Yat Tung
Eddie Kwan – Derek Chan Kai Fat
Rebecca Chan – Melissa Yan Wai Ting
Florence Kwok – Catherine Shum Ji Tang
Lau Dan – Suen Wai Tak


Summary
A series with a phenomenal cast (both in size and quality), the story goes through just about everything in its 82 episode run. The story revolves around the story of the three Hong sisters Sylvia (Maggie Shiu), Constance (Gigi Lai) and Jessica (Ada Choi), as well as those who are connected to them through family, work or romance. Their father (John Chiang) works in the diamond industry for boss Suen Wai Tak (Lau Dan), and their mother (Louise Lee) is a housewife.

All three sisters start the series as married women – Sylvia is married to pilot Tim, Constance is married to artist Frankie, and Jessica is married to rich businessman Patrick. All three end up separated and living at home within the first few episodes. Tim has another family, Frankie is cheating on Constance with their close friend and Patrick fakes his death to avoid debts. Jessica ends up shouldering the debts, declares bankruptcy, and the rest of the family rally around her.

Sylvia begins to work for Calvin (Bowie Lam), and eventually they strike up a relationship. His business starts to fail, so Sylvia marries Sunny (Kenny Wong) so that Calvin will then forget about their relationship and be free to marry Catherine (Florence Kwok) who has a big company that is capable of saving Calvin’s comparatively small company.

Constance initially doesn’t get along with Terrence (Moses Chan), but they soon become friends. She rejects his advances because he is a renowned player, and she begins to date Derek instead who is a lying bitter man, but undoubtedly quite in love and obsessed with her. Derek has a misunderstanding with Suen Wai Tak and tries to sue him, with the financial assistance of Calvin who hopes to benefit from the payout. Derek is eventually jailed for vandalising property and Constance later marries Terence.

Jessica begins to work for a PR company owned by Melissa (Rebecca Chan). She schemes to meet and strike up a relationship with Melissa’s good friend Martin (Elliot Yue), who is Terrence’s father and extremely rich. She eventually marries Martin and lives the life of a rich wife once again. Shek Tai Wo (Wong He) has known the three sisters since he was young, and he has always been in love with Jessica. He is happy to help anybody and doesn’t feel the need to be very rich or successful. His brother Will (Bosco Wong), on the other hand, is highly ambitious and ruthless in achieving his goal. He ends up working for Melissa and eventually inherits the PR firm from the widowed and childless Melissa when she dies.

Sung Sai Man (Chan Hung Lit) is a rich businessman with several wives. He always takes advantage of his friend Martin, much to the disgust of Melissa and Terrence. He loses his company to Martin after it turns out Martin has been patiently plotting many years to gain his trust so that he can bring down Sung Sai Man in such a way that he has no chance of reviving his losses. Martin takes advantage of Sung Sai Man’s weakness for women and bribes Charlie (Queena Chan Dan Dan) to seduce Sung Sai Man to help his cause. Everyone deserts Sung Sai Man with the exception of his first wife Margaret (Helen Ma) and his granddaughter Elise (Linda Chung) who is a bratty rich girl.

Later in the series, Jessica takes control of the company and goes head to head with Terrence who thinks that Jessica is brainwashing his father Martin. Will has his own company, Calvin has his company, and the remainder of the series revolves around business wars and love triangles. That’s just the glossing-over summary of the series, but with 82 episodes, it’s difficult to go into too much detail.

Characters
Hong Family
Sylvia Hong Nga Yin – Maggie Shiu
Sylvia is headstrong and business-like. She is a total workaholic and she likes things to be right and just, which is why she constantly goes head to head with her mother who is happy to bend the rules if it is advantageous to her and her family. Sylvia was my favourite character at the start, but she became very weak and even a little irrational towards the end. She got slightly ‘evil’ even; her love for Calvin drove all her decisions and she seemed to lose herself, which was disappointing because she started out so strong. Maggie was great; can’t think of much to fault in her acting. There were some questionable clothing choices, but on the whole, she was very glamorous and classy.

Constance Hong Ngai Tung – Gigi Lai
An upright moral character who sometimes took her morals too far. She was nice and sweet, and she stayed that way until the end, but she didn’t really know how to look at the big picture most of the time. She was the classic ‘nice’ character, but I found her to be teetering on boring. She whinged a little too much and was too holier-than-thou. Gigi was very pretty in the series, and there was nothing wrong with her portrayal of Constance at all; I just didn’t like the character very much.

Jessica Hong Nga Sze – Ada Choi
Probably the character with the most storylines and screen-time. Jessica wasn’t necessarily a bad person, but she was very selfish and ambitious. She couldn’t live without money and she did everything she could to attain it. She didn’t hesitate to use others, but sometimes you could see that she did feel bad afterwards. With a character like that, Ada had so much to work with. She captured every facet of Jessica nicely and really carried the series along, especially around the middle to end parts when it was heavily focused on her.

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Hong Ching Yeung – John Chiang
Ching Yeung was an honest working man who loved his family dearly. He did everything his wife or daughters requested of him, and he rarely took charge because his wife was the one who did that. At the end when his wife was affected with dementia, he took hold of the situation and gave his daughters abit of a dressing down that was sorely needed. Not much for John Chiang to do, but he carried the character naturally and without trouble.

Hong Bak Siu Yau – Louise Lee
An extremely clever woman who knew what she wanted and would happily scheme to make it happen. She did what she thought was best for her daughters, and while her methods were questionable, her motives were usually on the right track. A brilliant character; the daughter who most resembled her personality would have been Jessica, but Siu Yau was always calmer and thought things through even better. Louise Lee was awesome! She had such a character change from the smart scheming woman at the beginning to the dementia riddled woman at the end, and she did all of it perfectly. The character was so much more fascinating than the characters she won praise for in Heart of Greed as well as Moonlight Resonance.


Ho Family
Martin Ho Fung – Elliot Yue (Ngok Wah)
At first he seemed like a nice businessman who was willing to be taken advantage of on a business-level in order to avoid trouble. Then you realise that he had been scheming for decades to rid himself of his rival Sung Sai Man. He was more ruthless than Sung Sai Man ever was. He was later kidnapped which turned him into a paranoid hermit. He gave instructions to Jessica on how to run the company, and he later died of a heart attack. Elliot Yue, faultless.

Terrence Ho Jit Lam – Moses Chan
Rich son of Martin, he ran his own smaller company. A credible businessman, Calvin always despised him for being born into wealth without having to earn it. He, like his wife Constance, had big problems looking at the big picture and did everything he wanted to do without restraint. He was ridiculously unreasonable at times. He would do something wrong, and he would deny it. Then, when it was obviously that he had to have done it, he loudly declared “OK, so I did it. So what??”. And then he would start blaming other people. Like when he slept with Elise, it was apparently entirely her fault. And he didn’t understand why Constance was not supportive of his decision to completely destroy her sister! And the character became unredeemable to me when he neglected to save Derek from the burning car because he saw him as a competitor for Constance. I thought he was a terrible character who was probably supposed to be good but turned out annoyingly bad. In terms of acting, Moses is also probably the only main lead I wasn’t happy with. Nothing to do with my dislike of the character, either. I’ve always found Moses to be hit and miss. I really like the guy, and I like his series. He’s great at screwball comedy, but I think he comes up lacking for dramatic situations. Sometimes he still has a way of speaking unnaturally, which really breaks up romantic scenes and ‘everyday life’ scenes.


Shek Family

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Shek Tai Wo – Wong He
The perennial nice guy. Helpful to all and very likeable, although sometimes a little nagging. His love for Jessica was touching, if not a little blind and stupid as well. You had to feel for the guy who was just so incredibly nice and didn’t get anything in return. Wong He is so good at being pedantic characters, and his crying scenes were top notch.

Will Shek Tai Chuen – Bosco Wong
Very ambitious guy. Overly ambitious. Needs money and power, although he does care for his brother who brought him up and put him through higher education. That care and concern stops there, however, and doesn’t extend to the Hong family who he has actually known since he was quite young and should be quite close family friends with. I’m undecided if he was a protagonist or an antagonist, because he wasn’t *that* bad, but he wasn’t good either. Very cocky and a grudge holder. In a cast full of veterans, they had to choose someone young and I’m glad it was Bosco. Of the younger generation in TVB, I think quite highly of him and he didn’t disappoint.


Sung Family
Sung Sai Man – Chan Hung Lit

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Initially the most evil of them all, he loses everything and he becomes someone who only always had a big mouth. He comes back for revenge, however, but then he never does succeed. He’s a character you’re supposed to hate, but then he has his good moments where he’s with Elise. He really seems to hate his son though. Chan Hung Lit can do comedy (not that there is any for him to do here, but he was hilarious in Best Selling Secrets), he can do drama. His accent still baffles me sometimes, but I do like how they sometimes had some of the characters (Sung Sai Man, Elliot Yue and Helen Ma) speaking in Shanghainese (I think?) – it just kind of gives you the feeling that these people have known each other forever and ever, which makes everything that happens a little more meaningful.

Elise Sung Chi Ling – Linda Chung
Elise starts out as a bratty selfish rich girl who knows how to suck up to her grandfather. She’s just so despicable in the series that you want to slap her. When her grandfather loses everything, she goes back to studying and becomes quiet and submissive, which is a role that I’m more used to seeing Linda Chung doing! All credit to her for handling the character during the character change though – I had my doubts whether she could pull off the bratty and cocky character without coming off as annoying and snobbish, but for the most part, she’s done pretty well. She’s improving consistently, and working with so many veterans has probably helped her a lot as well.

Others
Calvin Ko Cheung Sing – Bowie Lam
An awesome character! He’s bad, but he’s so good at it. He gets under everybody’s skin and you can’t help but laugh at how he does it. He had a rough upbringing where his mother worked as a prostitute to support the both of them, so he vowed to be rich and successful. Despite all the bad things he does, he cares deeply for his mother. And he clearly stated that he would do anything, no matter how low it is, if it will be good for him. However, he won’t go around hurting people if it is of no advantage to himself. That’s a selfish person talking, but I like that he won’t feel the need to destroy other people out of petty revenge – like Terrence always wanted to do. Bowie never lets me down.

Sunny Yau Yat Tung – Kenny Wong
Like Wong He’s character, Sunny was just a good guy. I was incredibly surprised when he came out as a homosexual though because I really didn’t see it coming and I was so annoyed that they got the most muscular and ‘man’ of the cast to be the gay character! Very caring and friendly, and like Sylvia, willing to do anything for Calvin. I’ve always liked Kenny, even back in the 90s when he had some truly terrible hairdo’s. His acting hasn’t really improved, but it’s always been passable.

Derek Chan Kai Fat – Eddie Kwan
An irritating character at the beginning who was greedy and malicious. He turned into a bitter character who wasn’t greedy anymore, and finally to a really nice guy. The turn was so dramatic that it didn’t even seem like the same guy anymore. It’s been ages since I’ve seen Eddie in a series, it was good to see him on screen again.

Melissa Yan Wai Ting – Rebecca Chan

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A successful career woman who seemed to be in love with Martin. She didn’t re-marry after her first husband died. She is very smart, so she has high expectations of those around her. I felt bad for her when Martin betrayed her and she found out that he looked upon their long friendship so lightly. The character wasn’t overly developed so I don’t think Rebecca had to do much aside from look serious most of the time. I’ve never really seen her give a bad performance, so this one really wasn’t any different.

Catherine Shum Ji Tang – Florence Kwok
A rich woman who was forced to take charge of her brother's company when he passed away. She was a weak, pathetic woman who had little confidence in herself. She was there to come between Calvin and Sylvia to create the relationship square that they had with Sunny. I think her storyline really was just one of those things that made the series stretch to 82 episodes – it wasn’t entirely necessary. It’s odd seeing Florence play a weak character, she’s always playing those strong successful types. She did alright considering the character was a bit of a useless person.


Chemistry
Hong Family
None of them look anything alike, but they make for a pretty good looking family. Sylvia’s relationship with her parents was a little underdeveloped, but the relationship between the sisters was done very nicely. The end where the mother got dementia was very touching, and the effect that it had on the rest of the family was also sad to see. The servant, Ah Ying was also a nice addition – she always had words to add to a conversation even if they’re not the nicest of things. My favourite couple in the series would probably be the parents!

Bowie/Maggie/Kenny/Florence

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Nice friendship between the four characters. It was great until it turned awkward with Sylvia marrying Sunny. Calvin and Sylvia started their relationship in a brilliant way – the one-liners were so good, and the courtship was so…sassy. It just all went downhill with the unnecessary love-square, and then Sylvia became a little needy. The very end was nice though, with the promise that Sylvia would wait for Calvin after he serves his jail-term. Maggie and Bowie have loads of chemistry, but Kenny and Maggie look so good together.

Elliot Yue/Ada

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Despite the obvious age gap, I think they were pretty good together. The characters shared the same ideas and they cared a lot for each other. They even had chemistry and it was altogether believable. Throughout the middle, when Jessica went on a power trip, there were doubts whether she truly loved him, but at the very end you knew that she did. Ada was really cute and girly when she with him.

Moses/Gigi/Eddie

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Moses and Gigi have cooperated before so they look pretty natural together. At the start of the series, I hated all three characters so it’s fair to say that the triangle didn’t interest me in the slightest. At the end, when I liked Eddie’s character, I was hoping that he would end up falling in love with someone else because he could do better than Constance. Plus, there wasn’t much chemistry between Eddie and Gigi.

Wong He/Linda Chung/Bosco Wong

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A really odd triangle, although it wasn’t much of a triangle since none of them got past ‘liking’. There’s a bit of an age gap here with Linda and Wong He as well, but like Ada and Elliot Yue, I didn’t mind it at all. Wong He and Bosco were good as brothers, Bosco’s character was at his most decent when he was with his brother.

Chan Hung Lit and the wives
Chan Hung Lit and Helen Ma were fine together, believable as a long time married couple. Chan Hung Lit and Queenie Chu were also bearable, but Chan Hung Lit and Queena Chan just didn’t work at all. Queena Chan needs acting lessons and she really needs to learn how to speak naturally.

Overall
I wanted to make this review short and to the point, but I failed. With the huge amount of cast and 82 episodes, it just feels impossible to cut it down. I did like the series overall, but it was way too long. It’s so difficult to maintain that amount of focus for four months. The only other type of show that goes on this long is usually a soap opera, or TVB’s situation comedies, and they’re usually slower-paced or much lighter in theme. Gem Of Life was just go-go-go the whole way through, and it’s so easy to find your interest waning. I think had it been written as 40 episodes, it would have done better. The ratings weren’t so fantastic, although apparently it is partly due to High Definition ratings not being included. The last Chik Kei Yi series that was this long was At the Threshold of an Era, which also didn’t do well at the time but had many watchers during the reruns a few years later. I wonder if Gem of Life will have that kind of hype in a few years time?

The storyline had too much about business. It was confusing to follow the various take-overs and contracts that they were all negotiating and fighting for. The story and the anti-climactic ending spoilt the series, but the acting redeemed it. Disregarding the storyline, it was a stellar cast of veterans who I can’t sing enough praises about, even though I’m sounding like a broken record. There was so little that was wrong with it from the acting standpoint, which is so rare in today’s TVB series.

The inspiration for the Hong sisters was the famous Soong sisters from the early 20th century. It was said that "one loved money, one loved power and one loved China". I’m supposing Jessica loved money, Sylvia, being the workaholic, loved power and Constance would be the one who loved family (since it’s not a political series…)?

The ending. I’m unsure whether to call it a happy one or not. The very ending scene was a happy shot of the Hong family. Throughout the series though, the majority of the main characters did something ‘bad’ and the only one who gets any kind of retribution is Calvin, who would be heading to jail. The actual good guys, Shek Tai Wo and Sunny, end up going blind and in a coma respectively. Then all the fighting stops because everyone suddenly claims that they’re tired. It was all a little rushed and unexplained.

The themesong was sung by Shirley Kwan, and it was so very suitable. It sounded rich and grand, just like the grand setting of the series. The opening credits, however, were terrible. It looked messy and cheaply done.

The series was filmed at several overseas locations, and the scenery at some of the places was breathtaking. It’s obvious that quite a lot of money and effort was put into the series, as well as promotional events – did they over-hype it? The filming took over a year, the promoting began around the same time as the filming – I think they gave it way too much expectation to live up to.

And finally, one of the best things is the jewellery and diamond theme. Having worked in jewellery, I have a real fascination with the stuff and they had some really nice pieces on the show. Which you couldn’t forget was sponsored by MaBelle, since the word came up every ten minutes, which is OK, since I like MaBelle. But the glamour didn’t end with the jewellery; the clothes, cars and yachts were very high society. If nothing else, the series was really good to look at.

Rating
4 out of 5








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20 January 2009

STEPS [TVB]

Written by Funn Lim


"I have no idea how to describe this series other than it is really a series about nothing in particular and since it is nothing in particular, nothing IS particular in this series."


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SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS


Released In
2007

No. Of Episodes
20

Cast-Character
Steven Ma - Ching Ka-Chun
Bernice Liu - Lee Sum-Ying (Samantha)
Wayne Lai - Lee Lik-Keung
Claire Yiu - Yau Lam-Lam (Donna)
Kate Tsui - Yeung Sze-Man (Victoria)
Matthew Ko - Mai Dik-Sang (Dickson)
Fala Chen - Ching Ka-Man (Carmen)
Stephen Huynh - Cho Wah-Lun (Wallace)
Mannor Chan - Ching Dik Bo-Bo (Bobo)
Samuel Kwok - Yeung Hon-To (Tom)
Wu Fung - Yeung Sing (Patrick)
Stephen Wong - Yau Shang-Tat
Kok Fung - Mr Yeung

Summary
Taken from Wikipedia

Full spoilers!

Dance lover Lee Sum-Ying (Bernice Liu) is going to audition for a place in the Hong Kong Dance Company. Before the audition starts, she bumps into her brother Lee Lik-Keung (Wayne Lai) and his colleague Ching Ka-Tsun (Steven Ma) at a supermarket, where she is accidentally run over by Tsun’s trolley and hurts herself. Due to her arm injury, Ying does not perform well in the audition and fails the assessment. At the invitation of Tsun’s mother, Ying goes to teach Latin dance at a local community center, in the hope that she can save up enough money for further studies abroad. Ying has a very warm personality and is well-liked by many of her students. Her popularity eventually lands her a teaching job at a dance workshop, which makes another dance tutor and Tsun's younger sister, Ching Ka-Man (Fala Chen), incredibly jealous. Man dislikes Ying so much that she means to make things difficult for her in every possible way.

Yeung Sze-Man (Kate Tsui), the daughter of Tsun’s boss, is appointed to take charge of the company. In order to improve staff morale, Man has announced a series of reforms. She needs her staff to learn dancing so that they can get more physical exercise. Ying is hired as the dance teacher of Tsun and his colleagues. Tsun, who has some knowledge in dancing, has soon resumed his interest in this expressive form of art. Ying and Tsun have gradually developed a close bond with each other and even decided to take part in an international dance competition as partners, but the pair’s relationship is put to the test when Tsun and Keung later fall out over business matters. The discord between the two men has put Ying in dilemma.

Not long after, one of the employees, who has worked at the company for long time until being fired by Sze-Man, told her father about the reforms and his being fired. As a result, Sze-Man was relieved of her duties. Sze Man's life took a turn for the worse when she found out that her boyfriend Dickson has married already. After some time, they broke up. But during the relationship, Keung's brother-in-law has a crush on her but didn't know how to say it to her.

Meanwhile, Keung and Tsun were still mad at each other. This makes Ying and Tsun's relationship difficult. But when they found out about the fired employee's plan to take over the company, they worked together to bring him down. In the end, they got along. However, Sum-Ying's eyes were damaged due to a previous injury and had to take surgery.

Before the surgery even began, she was set to be in a dance competition with Tsun as her partner. But during this time, Ka-Man was as angry as ever with Ying for two reasons. One: Ying "takes" Ka-Man's spot in the company commercial. Two: She thinks her mother thinks Ying dances better than her. After an altercation with her brother Tsun and her mother (by which it ends with Tsun slapping her in the face for pushing their mom), Ka-Man leaves the home.

When they found Ka-Man, they also found out that she is the student of her mother's rival, who has a dislike against her. The mother and rival started dancing to see who is better, but the rival intentionally stepped on Tsun's mother's leg, making her unable to dance forever. Tsun and Ying enters the competition to not only avenge Tsun's mother, but also to help Ka-Man.

At the competition, Ying and Tsun enter the competition along with Ka-Man to advance to the finals. The rival however has ordered her to use damaging dance moves to kick them out of the competition. The incentive of this, however, is to see her rival suffer with a family spat. But Ka-Man, seeing that Ying is injured, relents. When the rival disowns her as her pupil, Ka-Man accidentally pushes her down (actually if you watch carefully, Ka-Man didnn't push her down but the rival just trip over herself anyway) the rival's leg was damaged. As a result, Ka-Man was sent to jail, but Tsun and Ying forgive her.

Some time later, the company held a party. During that time, Tsun (with the help of Keung, Sze-Man and the others) proposes to Ying and she accepts. The series ends with everyone dancing to Papa Loves Mambo.

Comments
I watched this series intermittently, never quite paid any attention except whenever I see Wayne Lai and Steven Ma together, to which they make a great couple .. I mean friends. They played off each other well and quite frankly without them, this series isn't really happening.

You know when someone says "It's not happening" it doesn't mean something is expected but nothing seems to come out of that expectation. It just means it isn't happening. Like nothing is really going on at all. This series is a series with a theme, that is dancing or rather Latin dancing or to be more precise Latin and Ballroom dancing. The trouble is it doesn't have a story that fits the theme. I don't see the connection between a herbal drink company and dancing and as the series went on, the writers themselves seem to struggle with the connection. In the end it is a 2 story within 1 series; one part is about dancing and the competition and the other is the herbal drink company and the power struggle. No not those crush you I shall power struggle but briefly there is some get out of my way power struggle. Throw in love, friendship, family and rivalry, what you have with this series is a story with so many branches from its theme that none of them ever really do well at all. It is by no means an awful series or those over the top type like a certain series about car manufacturing but in the end as I finished the series I kinda realised this is one example of a series that really has no story. It throws everything in the hopes of having one but it comes off as touch and go, more go than touch if you ask me. It goes on for some time and once it hits 20 episodes, that was the end. The beginning and the end doesn't quite match and although the dancing is a theme, in the end it seems more like a gimmick; you know something different but totally irrelevant to the story. This is a series you will either enjoy or find it terribly boring and without a purpose. I didn't think it was boring, I just thought it was weird, in a non-purpose way like I am watching a series that is filmed as I was watching it. However I must admit somewhere in the middle I find it very very dull.

The problem is like I said without a purpose this series had to hit out on something just so to move the story along. From the beginning we are shown the close friendship between Chun and Keung and then suddenly they quarrelled and their friendship put to the test for most of the story. It became quite irritating to watch how Keung would insult Chun and Chun not doing anything much although it is fun to hear how many names can you call someone you think betrayed you. Keung at least had a dozen such names for Chun. And quite as sudden they patched things up towards the end.

The love stories are also quite sudden. Sum Ying didn't quite the more flamboyant Chun at first but suddenly she was really in love with him, so much so she pursued him. Actually that was the funny part and quite as sudden they shared a kiss and then they were a couple. The same for Sze Man and Dickson pairing and in some ways Donna and Keung, which I failed to see at first why Keung liked Donna so much. The pairings in this series is pretty much that's it. Not much love lost except for Sze Man and Dickson where they broke up so that Tat can pursue her. Rather predictable stuff.

Then there was the rivalry of this series; between Carmen and Sum Ying. Carmen hated Sum Ying with a passion because she felt her own mother a dance instructor favoured Sum Ying more than her. There was no rhyme nor reason, no background story, she just hates the sight of Sum Ying. As is typical of all such rivalry story, Sum Ying meant well but inadvertently took Carmen's place as Spokesperson for Hei Yeung Yeung, the company owned by Sze Man's dad. I kinda enjoyed the cat fight eventhough it was all very silly, especially how the mother meekly accepted the daughter's unreasonableness and didn't quite just well, slap that Carmen to stop bullying Sum Ying. The truth is there isn't any rivalry since Sum Ying is such a nice girl she really meant well. Somewhere along the way Carmen made a huge mistake to which she learned her lesson and quite suddenly became a nice girl, eventhough there is still some jealousy in her. And towards the end suddenly she teamed up with a dance instructor from hell (hell for me because she was such an awful actress although I suspect she is dancer first, actor second) and became bitchy again. But she learned her lesson again and went to jail. You may ask why she went to jail? She went to jail for NOT pushing that hellish dance instructor who ACCIDENTALLY fell and I suppose broke her leg. Where is the crime element? Why is she even in jail? One conclusion is in HK there are no lawyers and everybody confess to crimes to which aren't crimes in the first place. At this point the series turned stupid but luckily it was already the last episode. Anything beyond I am afraid it could become moronic.

As you can read what I wrote above, you can sense that this series doesn't have much to the story. There is no true villain, no true redemption, no true heart stopping moment. Even when Sum Ying got knocked by a car, she fainted during competition, etc I knew she would be fine. This series isn't about tragedy. It isn't about intriguing love since everybody settled nicely with everybody else. It isn't about business rivalry also.

You see one interesting segment had Sze Man trying to strike out in her own herbal soup business because daddy refused to change his traditional over conservative business strategy and I thought finally, something exciting. But halfway through Sze Man was defeated in her attempts by an absconding partner, not by daddy and they patched things up!

So what's next? Before that there was the story of a bribe taking director in the company very trusted by the father. When Sze Man tookover she investigated him and forced him to retire. He went to a rival company and the father mistaking Sze Man as being prejudiced and incompetent in her decision making ability believed the errant director and so the relationship between Sze Man and the father worsened. And then? Well the errant director tried to cause chaos through his lover who was spying on his behalf in the company. And then in a rather good scene where his employer wanted Chun to work for him and Chun refused to consider since he didn't want to be in the same company as the errant director. The company investigated and discovered lost money and so fired the errant director. Errant director got drunk, tried to rundown Chun (but knocked Sum Ying instead), ended up in hospital and then ... well nothing. The lover continued to work there until she unwisely tried to seduce the boss and got fired and tried to persuade Sze Man to give her her job back and then ... well nothing. You see the trend? A story starts, goes on and abruptly ended.

All these just seems to show that the writer or director or whoever seems at lost with the material given to them. They didn't know what to do with it or maybe the script was just plain awful and badly written. A pity since we have a few capable actors in this series that somehow held it together. Like I said, I like Wayne Lai and Steven Ma and they were the reasons why my eyes were glued to the TV even if as I watched the series I realise and I shall repeat again, this series is really about nothing.

And so the dancing. Bernice did most of the dancing with Steven Ma trying to strut some moves and failing spectacularly and Fala Chen doing the 2nd most dancing although she stopped midway. Fala has the body of a dance, Bernice is a bit bulky eventhough she looks healthy and strong. Both were graceful I must admit, the problem is neither can convince me they're dancers, more so Latin or ballroom dancers. Worse of course was Mannor Chan (is that really her name? Mannor?) who is supposedly the expert here but when she did dance in the end in the dance-off with hellish dance instructor, you could see she can't dance at all, or at least not ballroom or latin dance. Of course you might say they did reasonably well since they're actors, not dancers. But not in a competition with a real pair of dancer where you get no. 3 overall. You must convince. Bernice as Bernice was good but Bernice as Sum Ying was awful. Earlier on she demonstrated I think the 5 Latin dances, Cha-Cha-Cha, Paso Doble , jive and the other 2 I can't remember. Samba, ramba, mamba, 2 of these 3. She did show some differences but not very clearly. I know the lack of time sometimes just made the actors look bad but you know, I am just not convinced. In the end the entire series seems stuck in cha-cha-cha dancing routine and nothing else. The dancing was ultimately boring, un-inventive, no passion and for a series built on the theme of dancing, I don't see any of them dancing with passion, sweat or vigour.


Of course someone suggested the actors danced the best they could, they're good enough. Let me ask you this; if in a kissing scene they have to kiss for real, in a bed scene they have to roll around on the bed feigning passion and looks real (well as real as any TVB actor can act out on prime time TV), shouldn't the same attitude be applied to dancing scenes? If sex has to be feigned to be so real or piano playing or sports playing or even a death scene had to be authentic with blood and gore, how come the same principle is not applied to the dancing aspect? Of course they did the best they could but was it good enough? Was it convincing enough to win competitions, join Olympics, open dance studios, etc? Which is why it is very important to find a suitable actor who knows how to dance and hopefully can act as well. Maybe those who are trained. I am not sure if Bernice is a trained dancer but she does not strike me as a trained or even have learned ballroom or latin dancing. These two dancing, especially the latter does not only involve swaying your hips left and right in dramatic fashion as demonstrated by the actors in this series. Moreover, the whole choreography was just boring. If you could catch an episode of Dancing With The Stars you will see what I mean. I don't even see sweat.

But none is worse than the so called dirty tactics, how Carmen tried to kick high and low at Sum Ying as she danced with her partner in a competition. Or those stupid tactics like using the elbow to punch your rivals, etc on the dancing floor. And Carmen even got I think no. 3 or no. 4. She wasn't last I tell you. I was like you mean the dance judges are all blind? Stupid? Incompetent? Carmen should have been kicked out of competition or at the very least penalised when she went off dancing on her own leaving her partner exasperated. It is moments like these that kills the series' credibility. Then there was the showdown between the mother (Mannor) and the evil teacher who is teaching everything wrong to Carmen. It was laughable, because it was very obvious one can dance, the other can't. And the so called showdown looked more like a warm up to an exercise routine that never happened. And I simply must not forget to mention the good bye dance between Sze Man and Dickson. Sze Man broke the relationship when she realised Dickson's ex wife and sick child needed him more and he still cared for the ex wife and next scene, there they were, in the middle of the grass I think and did some latin moves and all, with Sze Man over pouting her lips and over flinging her short hair and Dickson looking glum. And then she left. A bit too Bollywood for me. Simply put, the dancing was terrible across the board.

So the acting must compensate for the lack of good dancing. Sorry to say, the acting were mostly average with an exceptional few.

The exceptional few is of course Steven Ma and Wayne Lai who both shares great chemistry together, more so when they were fighting and not together. I am particularly impressed with Steven Ma, who since what was that series where he played a bodyguard in the ancient series? Anyway since then he seems like a new man, who exudes charm, likeable and most of all, come good acting chops. He also sounds less breathless and could complete a sentence without sounding a need to breath for a while. And it took me a moment to realise Wayne Lai was also in the same series! Ah Wayne Lai, that man can do any everyday man role and in here he is hands down the best although his character seems petty after a while since the rivalry went on far too long. But it was funny seeing him in dream sequences wearing hideous looking costume and dancing. He can't dance but he sure can act.



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Kok Fung as usual is great, and he can do comedy, especially this character that is essentially a nice boss and a great father but is strangling his daughter's creativity by being terribly old fashioned.

The young 3 guys who plays Dickson, Wallace and Tat are 3 different varying degrees of bad acting. The worst is Wallace played by Stephen Huynh who simply has the worst performance for the least amount of screen time. Matthew Ko as Dickson looked way to suffering and too serious for me to like him, more so he shares zero chemistry with Kate Tsui who looks far more masculine than him. Tat played by Stephen Wong is bearable but next to acting god like Wayne Lai, he was obviously lacking and next to charming Steven Ma, he lacked that likeable factor that would make him different and refreshing. All 3 guys are I also believe either dark or deeply tanned. Same hair colour too?

The girls seems to share same hair dye that for sure. Bernice Liu will always be Bernice Liu. She will always talk funny, she will always look very pretty and her acting will always be wooden. In here she has the added responsibility of dancing and she has to be an expert at that. Sadly, her dancing is worst than her acting but for once, her acting is not terrible but still wooden. Whilst outwardly she doesn't seem to have any chemistry with Steven Ma, but somehow I feel convinced by their togetherness. I find both of them cute together and her best moments are always either with Wayne Lai or Steven Ma, especially when Wayne's character forbade her to see Steven's character again and I can tell you, possibly her best acting moment has to be those exasperated faces and her unnaturally fluent delivery of her lines. Is this Bernice's best performance? I don't think so. I don't think she has any best performance and for me I am still waiting for that moment where I bite my tongue and give up saying she's awful. She is however such a sunshine especially when she smiles and easily is the TVB actress with the most sunshine smile and personality. Her figure is in awesome shape and she looks healthy and pretty. What I don't get though why her character seems so fond of looking dowdy most of the time with her hair tied back and wrapped in layers of clothes with that sling back always by her side, no matter where she goes, what she does or where she is even in her own house. What's with the obsession with holding on to handbags in TVB series anyway?

Kate Tsui impressed me the most in here. You see in all her previous performances she was either ok or awful, and one common thread is she always is crazy ok or crazy awful. There is something unsettling about this actress and when I say unsettling, what I mean is she always gives me this impression she is born to play a crazy person. She looks like capable of being crazy in a moment's notice. And her hair always seems wet and to tell you the truth, I thought she was over pouting her already pouty lips a bit. So yes I find her scary and I am waiting for the day to see her in a drama as a mental patient. And I mean really mental patient. In here, she plays a soft spoken lady like but ambitious and intelligent Sze Man. I thought her performance was really good until the writer decided to basically write off her character by making her overly ambitious and useless without her father. It would be nice to see her work somewhere else and make her own name and return to bask in her own glory but for whatever reason, maybe running out of ideas, deviating from the core story or running out of episodes, her character suffers from her own confidence and fell down really hard. I just thought Sze Man would be far too cool to make such mistakes you know? Her pairing with that Dickson guy was terrible and I suppose her pairing with any other young guys in the series will be terrible. Playing Bernice's best friend would be a stretch of imagination since Kate looks far younger but I do like their scenes together. I like it when she plays serious, donning her glasses and giving business instructions because she is convincing as a career woman and so she could play a professional as well, if smartly written. However even in those scenes there is something unstable about her, like she is trying very hard to be serious when her mental self is trying to break out. I tell you, TVB take note of her when casting a mental patient. She is it.

Claire Yiu who plays Lum Lum was ok eventhough I can't see why Keung was so crazy about her in the first place.

I am watching Ultimate Crime Fighter now and Fala Chen is not who she is in that series when she is in this series. Her cantonese is of course more bended then Bernice, skinnier but I thought in Ultimate Crime Fighter she improved much and acted better. But then that character is a walk in the park for any actress, totally unchallenging and way too easy. The character Carmen is far complex. Spoilt brat is how I see her, unnecessarily competetive and ultimately an idiot, her ending though is totally unjustified. Her acting however was terrible. She looks bitchy but she plays nice I wasn't convinced, so maybe it is in her interpretation Carmen was never nice though she tried. I just realised perhaps why she was awful is because her character was so badly written that she has no purpose. Villain? Not quite. Dancing foe? Not quite. Romance? None. Rivalry? Maybe. Family drama? What drama? Her Carmen is just like a filler character, no impact and no purpose. Her ending was awful and the series' worst moment.

Akina Hong, I really do pity you. She is actually I think classically trained as a dancer but her talent is underused in here. She is pretty, but is relegated to the role of that sneaky secretary who is having affair with the boss. And that is her role. She should have been given a better role because she can act very well. Although I was tired with her character, I feel she is one of the bright sparks in this otherwise pointless and dreary series. I really really do pity her.

The worst acting across the board belongs to the evil teacher. Don't know her name, but she is tall and has a dance physique but unfortunately can't act to save her life. I was particularly annoyed with her sneering mouth.

I must note though; all the girls have killer bodies with Bernice winning the best body. She and Fala Chen had to squeeze into tiny dancing costumes and I can tell, back and front profile, male fans will be the ones to appreciate the awful dancing scenes because you get an eyeful.

Verdict
A pointless series I suppose to fill in the voids left by big productions series or those personal intimate ones. From the start the plot was going nowhere and eventhough dancing was the central theme, somehow the herbal drinks company theme tookover leaving the dancing theme rather weak. I have no idea how to describe this series other than it is really a series about nothing in particular and since it is nothing in particular, nothing IS particular in this series. The love stories were not complicated and was straight forward, the rivalry was childish and badly written, the competition reminded me why TVB should never do mock competition and the business aspect died its own death somewhere along the way. Except for fans of the actors in the series or for those wanting to admire the beautiful bodies of Bernice and Fala, sorry to Wayne Lai and Steven Ma, I can't bring myself to recommend this series.



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13 January 2009

I AM HAPPY [TV][Kr]

Written by Bridget Au


"Some very compelling relationships, extremely well-written characters, and overall very entertaining."


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SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS



Korean Title
"Haeng-bok hamnida" (directly translates to happiness)

Released In
2008

Also known as
"Happiness" and "Bliss"

No. of episodes
58

Cast
Lee Hoon as Lee Joon Soo
Kim Hyo Jin as Park Seo Yoon
Lee Eun Song as Park Ae Da
Lee Jong Won as Park Sang Wook
Choi Ji Na as Ha Kyung
Gil Yong Woo as Park Seung Jae
Lee Hwi Hyang as Lee Se Young
Chae Yeong-in as Ji Sook
Ha Suk Jin as Kang Seok
Shin Da Woon as Jong Ah
Kim Chul Ki as Lee Young Jae
Ahn Yong Joon as Lee Joon Young
Kim Jong Suh as Lee Joon Ki
Lee Kye In as Lee Chul Gon
Kwok Ki Sun as Ahn Mi Sook

Foreword
After watching 4 below-average Korean series in a row, I was ready to take a K-drama hiatus. However, when I saw this brand-new series that boasted the comeback of one of my favourite Korean actresses (Kim Hyo Jin), I decided to give this one a chance.

Plot
The Park family owns SJ, a successful company in Seoul, and have three grown children. Sang Wook, the oldest, has married Ha Kyung, a woman from a high-class family, to solidify his status as the heir to SJ. However, Sang Wook is in love with Ji Soo, an orphan "adopted" into the Park family and who works as the family secretary. Ji Soo even gave birth to Sang Wook's child, who is four years old when the series begins. When Ha Kyung realizes she cannot bear children (after an unsuccessful attempt at in vitro fertilization), she successfully fights for legal custody of Sarang. She also frames Sang Wook for insider stock trading when he tells her that he will divorce her to marry Ji Soo and raise their child. Eventually everyone figures out her lowly deeds, and she ends up agreeing to a divorce. Sang Wook then returns to Ji Soo to raise their child together.

Seo Yoon is the second child, a daughter who has been rebellious and disobedient since birth. She has worked at SJ for four years, starting at the bottom of the corporate ladder to prove she's not there just because of connections. Seo Yoon falls in love with Joon Soo, an employee at SJ, and is finally permitted to marry him after facing off with her mother several times. She experiences some funny challenges in having to cook and clean for Joon Soo's family after their marriage, and also when one of her family's servants becomes her mother-in-law. Later, when Ha-Kyung gets her downfall in her quest to secure Sang Wook's position as SJ heir, Seo Yoon and Joon Soo are offered the opportunity to take over the company, but turn it down.

Ae Da is the youngest, a ballerina studying in university. She is her mother's favourite, and causes her even more grief after Seo Yoon's marriage when she falls in love with Kang Seok, of an even lower class - an orphaned boxer who grew up in poverty. Ae Da has a much tougher time convincing her mother to bless the relationship, since she is less rebellious and outspoken than Seo Yoon, but eventually musters up enough courage to run away with Kang Seok until he realizes they are too different and sends her home. Tragedy strikes when Kang Seok participates in a Boxing Newcomer challenge, wins the championship, but succumbs to his injuries. She ends up making up with her mom, who realizes she can no longer dictate her children's lives.

Review
The most compelling plotline of this series is definitely the Sang Wook-Ji Soo-Ha Kyung triangle. I seriously do not understand what these two beautiful and intelligent women see in Sang Wook. The man is a complete coward and a sorry excuse for a man. Ji Soo had a much better choice waiting for her in the form of Young Jae, while Ha Kyung could have easily re-married with her beauty and social status.

Choi Ji Na gives the strongest female performance of this series, followed closely by Lee Hwi Hwang, and then Chae Yeong-in whose acting is somewhat overshadowed by her Dracula-like features and makeup. Of the younger generation, Lee Eun Song gives the best performance. Of the men, Lee Jong Won was excellent as the spineless Sang Wook and veteran Gil Yong Woo was very good as the no-nonsense but compassionate Mr. Lee.

The relationship between Ae Da and Kang Seok is for the diehard romantics and teens watching this series. They were my second favourite plotline to watch because they are two pretty people who can act and they had fantastic chemistry together. Ha Suk Jin will probably be Korea's next new heartthrob. He can act but his problem is that he mumbles his lines. I'm not sure whether this is just his interpretation of his character, though. Lee Eun Song is pretty with character, and does a very good job as the damsel-in-distress for someone her age (she was 19 at the filming of this series). Of course, I'm pissed the hell off that the writers killed off Kang Seok, but I can't blame the actors for that.

The supporting cast also turns in some fine performances. All the actors in the Lee family are perfect for their roles, as is the actress who plays Mrs. Ahn. My favourite supporting cast member, though, was none other than Shin Da Woon, who is absolutely hysterical as Jong Ah.

I was surprised that the Seo Yoon-Joon Soo relationship was pretty boring. With few Asian series exploring the mundane but revealing things about married-couple life, I thought this would have been a fun, or at least, intriguing couple to watch. Their plotline dramatically suffers because the two actors have zero chemistry with each other, despite the dozens of scenes they have together. It also doesn't help that Lee Hoon, though he can act, has absolutely no charisma. And the character of Seo Yoon is just wrong for Kim Hyo Jin. She is playing 5 years older than her real age and screeches too much in this series. Though she does well with the rebellious side of her character, she has a hard time convincing the audience that she's actually 28 years old. And what happened to her!? It seems that she went through a growth spurt of 4 inches and lost 20 pounds at the same time. She looks painfully thin.

As for the non-romantic relationships, I most enjoyed watching the scenes between Seo Yoon and her mom. On the surface it seems that they are sworn enemies: her mom sees her as a complete brat who has no clue what she needs, and Seo Yoon sees her mom as a shallow, manipulative b_tch. They actually remind me a lot of Lorelai and Emily from Gilmore Girls. What makes Seo Yoon's mom interesting is that deep down, she really isn't a bitch. She loves her three children and truly thinks that because they've grown up in luxury, they won't find true happiness with someone of a "lower" class. Sure, she thinks it would be great to have arranged marriages with other big conglomerate kids to help the business, but in reality she isn't that involved with SJ and just acts like a mom: she actually truly feels that someone like Joon Soo won't be able to give Seo Yoon the happiness she deserves. Because her own happiness is based on shallow things like shopping and getting massages and pedicures, she automatically assumes that it's the same for her daughters.

The father, however, makes much less sense as a character. The series establishes early on that he doesn't believe in playing favourites and won't just hand over the company to Sang Wook just because he's his son. And yet, he plays favourites with his own kids: it's pretty clear that Seo Yoon is his favourite. The father gives a promotion to Joon Soo without knowing much about his past performance and supports Seo Yoon's impending marriage in the face of a screaming wife. Then when his youngest daughter, Ae Da, runs off with her boyfriend, he doesn't say much to support their relationship. One can argue that because Seo Yoon chose to start at the bottom of the SJ ranks, the father has more admiration for her and therefore sees her as his favourite. But for a man who supposedly doesn't play favourites at all, this is a weak argument.

I also like the early contrast between the two sisters. It is obvious Ae Da envies Seo Yoon but also idolizes her for something she herself doesn't have: the courage to stand up to her mother. When later, Ae Da grows her own spine and speaks for herself, it is heartbreaking but also catharthic to watch the mother having to deal with the fact that none of her children will be her puppets anymore.

By the way, the women in this series are the most well-dressed of any women I've seen in Korean drama. I didn't see Mrs. Lee, Seo Yoon, Ae Da or Ha Kyung in the same outfit twice. That's 60 episodes of different outfits for 4 women representing 3 generations, with a different outfit in every single scene. Amazing.

Most Hated Character
Sang Wook, jerk / coward of the century

Most Annoying Character
Lee Se Young, although you have to feel sorry for her at some point because all three of her children ended up with people she never wanted them to marry

Favourite Couple
Ae Da & Kang Seok

Favourite Pairing
Ji Soo & Ha Kyung and Seo Yoon & her mom

Favourite Character
Lee Young Jae

Best Scenes
1. The catfight between Ji Soo and Ha Kyung when the latter realizes their affair. There is nothing quite like watching two grown women glaring at each other, openly fighting for a man, and slapping each other/pulling each other's hair out.

2. The wedding between Joon Soo's father and Ms. Ahn, when Joon Ki serenades them with a song he wrote for his father.

3. The "elopement" scenes between Ae Da and Kang Seok.

4. Any scene with Jong Ah. Shin Da Woon has brilliant comic timing.

To Watch or Not to Watch, That is the Question
Some very compelling relationships, extremely well-written characters, and overall very entertaining. The series starts to drag at the 40-episode mark (as with many lengthy series), but at least it's something that doesn't have a target demographic.

Rating
4 out of 5




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MOONLIGHT RESONANCE [TVB]

Written by Bridget Au


"But I do have one small question - how many people in this cast (or even the general Hong Kong public) even know what "resonance" means?"


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SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS



Chinese Title
"Tong Sum Fung Bo Zi Ka Ho Yuet Yen"

Theme song
"Mo Sum Hoi Lei" - Susana Kwan (Don't Intend to Hurt You - opening); "Ngoi But Gao" - Raymond Lam (Love Not Enough - interlude)

Year
2008

No. of episodes
40

Cast
Lee Si Kei as Hor Ma
Ha Yu as Jo Bao
Susana Kwan as Ah Sa/Sa Yee
Michelle Yim as Yan Hong
Wayne Lai as Lin Zi Yong
Linda Chung as Yu So Chau/Sum Lui
Moses Chan as Kam Wing Ka (Ah Ka)
Raymond Lam as Kam Wing Ho (Goon Ga Jai)
Tavia Yeung as Kam Wing Yuet
Chris Lai as Kam Wing Yuen
Fala Chen as Kam Wing Hing
Vincent as Kam Wing Zhong
Kate Tsui as Ka Mei
Bosco Wong as Ling Ji Sun/ Ling B
Astrid Chan as Eliza
Louis Yuen as Yan Chee
Claire Yiu as Wing Lam

Foreword
I am not ashamed to say that I watched this series purely for bandwagon reasons. Despite being one of the few who was less than impressed with the overhyped Heart of Greed, I knew this was a series not to be missed, given the hugely talented cast with every popular TVB actor under the sun. But I do have one small question - how many people in this cast (or even the general Hong Kong public) even know what "resonance" means?

Plot
Moonlight Resonance (MR) comes back to confuse us all by making a convoluted storyline even more convoluted by inviting every single cast member from HOG I and adding a few more to the party. Hor Ma and Jo Bao were once married with six children and owned a mooncake bakery business. They divorced after Jo Bao began an affair with Hong, a worker in the bakery. When they divorced, a court decision "divided" the six children and sent three to each household - Ka (the oldest), Yuen (5th) and Zhong (youngest) went to the mega-rich Jo Bao household, while Ho (2nd - nicknamed Goon Ga Jai), Yuet (an adopted daughter), and Hing (a mute) to the poor Hor Ma household. Predictably, the three kids who grew up in the Jo Bao household ended up being educated and successful, while the three kids who grew up with Hor Ma never went to university and spend their days helping out in the one bakery that Hor Ma owns. Despite this fact, the Hor Ma household is actually a tighter-knit, happier family. Lesson #1 from MR - money can't buy happiness (isn't this some song lyric?).

Ah Hong has a daughter from a previous marriage, Chau, who has a sibling-like relationship with all the Kam kids except for Goon Ga Jai, who she had some kind of puppy-love thing with when both were teenagers. Chau returns from studying abroad in England and has become a doctor. She gets stuck in a love triangle with GGJ and Ling B, another doctor who works at her hospital. Of course, Chau ends up with GGJ. Lesson #2 - history means something when deciding between two guys.

Other people peppering the plot include the super-annoying Ma Ma, Jo Bao's mother who despites Hor Ma and supports Hong; the even more annoying Sa Yee, who finds pleasure screeching at anyone bothering to listen to her; and Ka Mei, Sa Yee's daughter who first dates Ka until getting together with Yuen.

I'm not going to spoil the ending for you, as this is still a new series, but suffice to say that the ending is similar to HOG's.

Evaluation of Cast and Performances
Ha Yu
Why must he always portray these stupid, cowardly men? I really want to see him in a role like Damian Lau's in The Point of No Return and see how he fares. But anyway, he stopped his exaggerated hyena laughing and turns in a much better performance here than in HOG. However, I keep thinking he's missing that extra something... maybe he just needs to get away from the whole HOG stuff and portray a well-written character for once.

Michelle Yim
Donning the absolute worst haircut and scariest makeup known to man, I could not take Michelle seriously for the first half of the series. Her whole look belonged in a horror movie. Why did wardrobe give her this look? Poor woman. Normally she looks like she didn't age past 40 and here she is looking like the female version of Dracula. Her performance here is commendable. I knew she could depict a villain from watching The Brink of Law, and in MR she turns in another fine performance. Of course, I thought it was completely stupid that her character reverted to a good person in the last 10 minutes of the series, but that's just bad writing.

Susana Kwan
If you thought Flora Chan's Belle from Triumph in the Skies and Myolie Wu's Eleven from War of In-Laws were annoying, brace yourself for Susana Kwan's Aunt Sa, who is, quite possibly, the most annoying character in Asian entertainment history (and this says a lot, judging from the amount of series I've watched). I understand that Aunt Sa is supposedly a classless drama queen, but watch Susanna with your volume on mute and you'll know what I mean when I say Susanna delivered a super-annoying, deer-in headlights performance. I feel sorry for this woman because something tells me she can act, but would someone please give her a character who isn't mercilessly irritating?! This woman can sing, though, that's for sure.

Lee Si Kei
Same problem as Moses Chan - she gives the same interpretation of basically the same character from HOG. She comes off as less snotty than in HOG (but still as preachy as ever), but she severely lacks chemistry with the actors who play her children, which make the whole "I respect my mom sooooo much" lesson kind of forced in this series.

Moses Chan
Maybe he didn't get the memo that MR is a HOG sequel in name only (it only has the same background music and cast), because Moses' performance basically echoed his interpretation of Triple D in HOG. And though I liked his Triple D, I was hoping he would offer something different in his portrayal of Ka. Sadly, he didn't. He doesn't have much chemistry with Tavia Yeung, either. A below average performance.

Raymond Lam
I can't believe I'm saying this, but this guy needs a breakthrough character. He always gives compelling and solid performances and he is the most versatile out of TVB's twenty-something actors, but I want to see this guy play a villain. He's done everything under the sun except play a villain. I don't want him as the villain-turned-good (even he's done this before). I want Ray to tackle the b_stard-to-the-end, like Sammul Chan's character from The Price of Greed. I am positive he can do it.

As for his performance in MR, I'm getting tired of repeating how good this guy is. His performance reminds me of his Ben from Survivor's Law (one of my favourite performances from Ray) - controlled yet emotional, laid-back yet compelling. He has chemistry with Linda Chung and they actually look like a couple - which says a lot b/c I've hated every Ray-TVB starlet pairing before Linda came onto the scene. Anyway, he gives GGJ a sense of wholeness as a character - a great performance. Rumour has it this series is going to give him his much-overdue TVB Best Actor Award, and he'll be one of the very few over the last few years who will actually deserve it.

Tavia Yeung
Is it just me or is Tavia looking more and more like a drag queen as time passes? I'm not sure what it is, but something about her facial features has changed since she started out as a Maggie Cheung lookalike. Is it her makeup? Maybe she's lost weight? Maybe it's the new HD technology that's amplifying all the actors' flaws (I could spot a lot of Ray's pores, for example). In any case, her face has gotten a lot more angular and almost masculine.

Don't get me wrong - Tavia is a very good actress and her Yuet is strong and determined. I hope TVB continues promoting her, because lord knows she's the only actress under 30 being promoted who actually went to acting school instead of pageants.

Fala Chen
Super photogenic and though I can't stand her in interviews, Fala can add her name to the very short list of pageant queens who can act. Her performance is good because she takes on the role of a mute here, so she needs to emote without talking (which means the emotion has to come from her face and her eyes). Best scene was definitely the wedding where she tearfully thanks her family. Zero chemistry with the guy who plays her husband though. She comes off as a total bitch in interviews, but when you've got senior management promoting you like no tomorrow, who needs fans?

Linda Chung
I will say here right now that I've become a quick fan of Linda since HOG...more so as a person than as an actress (for now, anyway). She comes off as very genuine, very girly (but not whiny) and sincerely kind-hearted. For those of you who have watched the youtube clip of Ray being asked to prank call her and her reaction - you will understand why she is very well-liked by people in the business. As for those who say she's won awards or promotion because she's so obedient - that's not her problem, it's TVB's for rewarding obedience rather than performance. It doesn't mean Linda isn't a sincerely kind-hearted girl. Oh, how I wish she and Ray were actually together.

After watching HOG, I would say she has potential as an actress too. But MR is a step down from her performance in HOG. She's still girly and sweet, but her character is not as well-written as Seung Joi Sum from HOG, plus her crying scenes her are more whiny. I just can't stand stupid characters like her - being super nice and friendly despite being the daughter of one conniving b_tch. TVB tends to write a lot of these dumb characters, and Chau is just another one. She's also one stupid girl (unlike SJS) when it comes to love. Whereas SJS was romantic yet decisive, Chau is just some blind girl who couldn't see what was good for her. She also cries way too much in this series...although that's more of her character's fault than Linda as an actress herself. We know Linda can cry. She needs to take on a tomboy character now, which she's actually doing right now filming another series (she chopped her hair off too... sad).

Linda also had no chemistry with Bosco in here, so I really didn't care about her relationship with Ling B. Her best scene was the one where Chau confronts her mother in the last episode. Linda showed there that she can have a temper onscreen (something missing from her previous performances).

Kate Tsui
I think I'm the only person who thinks this girl can act, but oh well. She has improved from her first overracting/underracting performances, and in MR she is good in her crying scenes. The problem with her acting is that she tries too hard - it's not a natural thing with her. However, since she's only really been in about 4-5 series, I think she deserves a chance. Her best scene is when she gets whipped by Aunt Sa. She has zero chemistry with Chris Lai, but when you have only 3 scenes with the actor who plays your lover, I guess chemistry shouldn't be expected.

And the others
Uh, yeah... so I forgot about Bosco Wong and Chris Lai. Oops. I guess this says enough about how memorable they were. While Chris Lai gets a less well-written character than in HOG (this seems to be a pattern in MR), Bosco at least gets an interesting one... so the fact that he still isn't memorable as an actor says a lot. I'm getting tired of repeating that Bosco has potential but he isn't living up to it. Will this guy give us something, anything? The Chinese have a proverb that goes something like "if you're not improving, you're getting worse" - seems they were talking about Bosco. Wayne Lai made more of an impression with his 5 scenes than Bosco did with 50.

As for the guy who portrayed Zhong (Vincent something?), he definitely gave the worst performance out of all the cast - he had no facial expressions whatsoever. But this is his first performance, so it may be too early to stick a knife into his premature career. Veteran Chow Chung gave the second worst performance with his overracting and bulgy eyes.

Claire Yiu and Astrid Chan manage to make an impact in this enormous group of actors, while Louis Yuen is starting to get on my nerves (and his pairing with Susanna is beyond creepy). Veteran Lee Heung Kam was fantastic as the b_tchy Ma Ma. If I forgot anyone, sorry, but there are just way too many people in this series.

The Loot Bag
1. Classic "in your face, you stupid bitch" scenes. The wedding between Hong and Jo Bao when the kids toasted to Hor Ma instead of Hong - I was laughing my a_ _ off at the look on Hong's face. The whipping, the slapping, the pushing old ladies down the stairs. I gotta admit, I love the all-out drama of this series.

2. Good acting. Veteran Ha Yu finally stopped laughing like a crazy hyena, Michelle Yim was fantastic, and some of the young guns (Tavia, Ray, Fala, Linda) deliver. The supporting cast, led by Wayne Lai and the guy who plays Ah Gong, ranged from very good to brilliant.

3. The sibling scenes. You can tell the younger actors get along really well with each other because their offscreen friendship translates onscreen.

The Barf Bag
1. The portrayal of the doctor profession in this series wouldn't matter so much if it hadn't been hammered into our minds that Chau and Ling B were doctors. Their story is worse than the god-awful Healing Hands trilogy. At least HH had scenes in an operating room or working with patients. Aside from wearing white coats every now and then, Linda and Bosco don't do anything even remotely related to their profession. Chau is too busy crying in every other scene and Ling B is too busy deciding between two women. I wouldn't wish these two on my worst enemy if they were the last two doctors on the planet.

2. Over-preaching and use of the series in the title. Yes, we know it's called "Ka Ho Yuet Yuen". We can read, though we're not sure you can.

3. No character/plot development. The episode after Ka breaks up with Ka Mei, she goes and decides to marry Yuen. She sure got over that one quickly.

4. Bad hair days, every day. The center part seems to be popular here (Linda and Kate sport it and it ruins their good looks). I've said what I had to say about Michelle Yim's. Bosco's hair doesn't know what it's doing and Chris' looks like an old bag lady's. Vincent's an ugly mullet, and poor Ray needs some product. Were the writers responsible for the hair too?

5. Too many dinner scenes. Good god, it's a miracle they don't weigh 400lbs with all the time they spend eating dinner.

6. The violence. Kids, slapping people and pushing old ladies down the stairs is wrong.

7. Aunt Sa. She should have been whipped like her daughter.

8. Hor Ma - as in the overly preachy, saint-like character. Booooooorrrring.

The Burning Question: Is It Better Than HOG?
The problem with HOG was that the premise made absolutely no sense (2 women sharing the same man and everything was happy). Sure, it had some very well-written characters, some superb acting, and pretty people - but let's not confuse this with a good plot, folks. The ending was also stupid. I was hoping Susana Kwan's character would get killed off. Character self-redemption is booooorrrringgggg.

The problem with MR is a different one. While HOG had at least developed an overarching storyline, MR is basically a bunch of squabbles. So for people who are impatient and cringe at the thought of 40 episodes, this is good news. MR is much like some North American TV shows where squabbles start and get resolved within one episode. Now, for those who prefer at least some sign of a developed plotline, you'll need to look elsewhere... because the writers who wrote this thing clearly have ADD.

On second thought, MR is even worse than North American TV shows - because there is no difference between main and supporting characters here. This is why this series has no plot/character development - because there's not enough time! Everyone has an almost equal amount of scenes.

To Watch or Not To Watch, That is The Question
To be honest, I don't really know what to think of this series. While I love the drama and like the actors, the script is garbage. I can't really decide whether the great scenes and generally good acting make up for the problematic plot. What I am sure I hate is the whole hype around the HOG/MR series, encapsulated in the special finale show. Dinner with the audience in a mall to watch the last episode? The poor actors had to go up on stage like clowns, trying to be funny and most of them can't even speak live. I half expected Stephen Chan to go up on stage with a swinging watch chanting "You will love this series... you... will.. love... this...series!" What a farce TVB has become.

Rating
2.5 out of 5

Through the Grapevine
It's always interesting to hear what actors have to say about each other, so I did a search and this is what I came up with. Straight and verbatim from the actors in interviews:

Ha Yu on who he thinks has the most potential
- Male: "Raymond Lam. He is good-looking and is a talented actor. I think he still needs a few more years to grow and improve, but I think he has the most potential out of the younger actors today".

- Female: "Linda Chung. She is hardworking and such a good and well-behaved girl. If I had a daughter, I hope that she would be as well-behaved as Linda. Linda doesn't gossip and form cliques like many other young actresses today. She just focuses on her work".

Lee Si Kei on Raymond Lam
"I think he's a 14-year-old on the inside. Whenever he doesn't have to film, he sits in the corner and plays video games. I ask him 'Are you a child? Why do you still play video games'? He ignores me and just keeps playing".

Tavia Yeung on Moses Chan and Raymond Lam
"Moses is like a big brother, a good man. Yes, Moses is a good man to the core! I hope one day to find a guy as good as Moses. Ray is a serious professional but also likes to play when it's downtime. He's very rational and like a big brother to me. When I have a problem, I often go to him and he's able to analyze it objectively for me and make recommendations on what I should do. When he works, he comes to the set knowing exactly what he wants to do. He's very mature for his age".

Linda Chung on Tavia Yeung
"My good friends in the entertainment business? Tavia Yeung is one of them. She's a great girl".

Raymond Lam on Linda Chung
"She's funny. Because she grew up overseas, she sometimes messes up her lines in the script because Cantonese isn't her first language. So we end up with a lot of funny NG clips. She's a very kind-hearted girl, very cute." (note: Ray used the term "duk yee" in Cantonese - which is directly translated as 'cute', but more of a girly/kiddy cute rather than the usual way we use cute as in 'pretty'... although he has called her pretty before)

Linda Chung on Raymond Lam
"We're good friends. He's a very good and filial guy and cares about his family and siblings. Like sometimes when we're taking a break filming, he'll run off to buy a purse for his mom".

Michelle Yim on Kate Tsui
"She got so much prettier! In The Brink of Law, she was a somewhat chubby, very cute girl. But since she lost weight, she has been looking a lot more fit and very pretty."

Predictability at Its Best
MR is nominated this year (2008) for Best Actor/Actress, Best Supporting Actor/Actress, Most Beloved Male/Female Character, Most Improved Actress, Best Series and probably some others that I can't think of at the moment. And you thought the 2007 TVB awards were a sham.



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