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14 April 2013

SAVING GENERAL YANG [Mov][HK][2013][O] Funn Lim

Written by Funn Lim

"But somehow, in the end the movie does feel 2D instead of 3D in terms of character."


SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS





Just saw this movie.

My reaction;

1. Someone made notes from The Two Towers and 300.

2. Looks epic but not at the epic scale of Return Of The King. It is Two Towers in essence.

3. hated the maze like fort.

4. For all the hoopla about everybody including and especially Raymond lam, Raymond was only the one next to the secondary. The main one was Wu Chun actually and I thought wow, Linda Chung in drag! But no one ever mentioned the main idol here, that is Adam Cheng. Adam Cheng's 1 scene could out act everybody in this movie, EVERYBODY.

5. Dubbing was terrible, even actors dubbing themselves, like Ekin who sounds bored. Raymond however did well in my opinion but too little.

6. All sons had little personality, no time to develop on them. But I shall scream if I see another obligatory each son 1 shot whenever they fight, run, pose, whatever.

7. Death scenes were done very well, very sad. BUT the story is amazingly underdevelop. I wonder why? Not enough time? 

8. Ekin is perfectly cast as eldest son, heroic, serious, etc and he is the lead by poster definition BUT if only his acting can match that look he has. And I don't get why everyone is so eager to die in this movie. In the end rendered pointless because of what the father did. Was it worth it? I don't think so.

9. Love some original fighting scenes; like the fight in the fields, the last fight between 6th son and enemy where he used al his brother's and his father's weapon to fight the bad guy. I thought that was the best and more representative scene of this movie where not one son is volunteering to die but rather worked together as one albeit through weapons. That scene alone made this movie wonderful.

10. And the the stupid ending stupify it all. That mother hugging the dead husband never once asked... "Where is eldest? Where is second? Where is third? Where is fourth? Where is fifth? Where is seventh? Where are my sons?!" and just touched the husband tenderly. Like to hell with my sons as long as I get my husband's body back. Very cold.

In summary, this could have been a great movie. I mean it looks good, the costumes look good (how come villain's ear's not pierced?, Most actors were good despite lack of development and personality and none of them look alike as brothers except for 6th and 7th,. Death scenes were heart wrenching although I hated the 300-ish meeting with the soothsayer scene and the whole father I am dead I am in your dreams then I argue with my alter ego dream like scene which takes away the harsh reality of the fact that his sons were facing imminent death just to rescue him alone, and female characters who were non existent and the worst casting of the mother. I thought she was Cheng Pei Pei and then I saw she wasn't. Why not FIND Cheng Pei Pei? I will pay to see her sit on Adam's lap! Although it is a bit borrowed from some big Hollywood movies, I appreciate the effort to make the movie look epic and cinematic. And I love the first throw bags into air and shoot with arrows and throw with fire and burn all enemy scene.

But somehow, in the end the movie does feel 2D instead of 3D in terms of character. The story is flawed too. Yue Fei dying I understand but the sons and father dying didn't make enough sense to justify tear fest. But it is in the end one of the best chinese movie of recent years because it looks like a movie.

SADDEST DEATH SCENE
Ekin eventhough his eagerness to sacrifice himself is troubling. If he had known 7th have died, would he stop and think maybe that fortune teller dude needs to be trashed?

MOST SHOCKING DEATH SCENE
Not sure which son, the one aka Legolas.

BEST FIGHT SCENE
The 6th and enemy man to man fight with his brothers and father's weapons/.

CHEESIEST DEATH SCENE
Was it 4th and 5th off the cliff? If yes, that one. Quite funny.

BEST PROP
The horses and they were real

WORST PROP
The women. You see them, but they have nothing much to do.

MOST USELESS CHARACTER
The Emperor

MOST CLIFF HANGER OF ALL CLIFF HANGERS
Did 5th and 6th die? My friend said in another version 5th became a monk, 6th married the enemy's princess? Is it true? In fact my friend said 7 will go, 6th will return when actually  3 didn't die, out of which 5th became a monk and so stopped being Yang and 4th married the enemy's princess and so stopped being a Yang and only 6th came home. True?

MOST EFFECTIVE INEFFECTIVE VILLAIN
That chancellor? Minister? We all know he's a villain but he is just there, nothing to do

MOST OVERLY USED MOMENTS
The posing scenes. Each has his own focus. And the top off scene. For some unknown reasons a son suddenly take his top off and fight the air. But a lot were like pose and pose and pose. Most poses came from the Legolas dude and dear 5th son (often close ups)

MOST FAVOURITE SON
For me, was Ray the 5th son? Because he can fight AND he is ready to die AND he died with a smile AND he is a doctor AND GOD DAMN IT, this is one of Ray's less pretentious performance!

BEST PERFORMANCE
Adam Cheng. The rest can just hang around him as posse as they are.

WORST ACTING
The mother.


VERDICT
Highly recommended but definitely not as great as some fans say it is. But it is better than a lot of other Chinese movies out there.

P/S 
I notice different country different person at the front of the poster. In Malaysia Ekin is at the front. Taiwan? Probably Vic Zhou? I couldn't recognise Zai Zai!
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19 March 2013

REALITY CHECK [TVB][2013]

Written by Funn Lim


Don't miss this one but do be patient with it and you will be rewarded with some very emotional moments and great dialogue that shows to us all, TVB can make a series with heart in it.




SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS



Released In
2013

Chinese Title
心路GPS, literally, Heart Road GPS

No. of Episodes
3 episodes too long - 20 episodes

Cast-Character
Louise Lee - Lau Chui Wan
Ruco Chan - Summer Ha Yat Cheung
Mak Cheung-ching - Leung Chung Shun
Priscilla Wong - May Hui Mei Fung
Rebecca Chan - Ha Siu Han
Stanley Cheung - Wong Wai Hong
Hero Yuen - Sky Cheung Tsun Kit
Rachel Kan - Mandy Chan Man Wah
Owen Cheung - Chan Man Chung
Vincent Lam - Simon Wong Sai Man
Jenny Lau - Chloe Au Ho Yee
Kaki Leung - Peggy Fong Pui Kei
Meini Cheung - Wai Lai Fun
Chow Chung - Leung Tung
Teresa Ha - Cheung Ki
Yoyo Law - Leung Ka Yang
Yu Tze Ming - Ho Chi Cheung
Law Lok Lam - Kit's father
Chan Wing Chun - May's father

Absolutely unknown
Most cast at the rural village scene in China but their names can be found here whilst the more important ones as follows (thanks to llwy12 of Jaynestars for the tip):-

Au Wai Kuen - Uncle Lau
Yuen Hoi Kam - Auntie Lau
Ho Cheuk Wai - Keung Jai (Uncle Lau’s oldest son)
Pang Gan - Zhuang Jai (little boy who plays Uncle Lau’s youngest son)
Dai Lo Yiu - Ching Ching (little girl who plays Uncle Lau’s daughter)

Plot/Summary

Taken from Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reality_Check_%282013_TV_series%29)

In preparation for filming a brand-new reality show, senior TV producer Summer Ha (Ruco Chan) is ready to document a Hong Kong teenager Sky Cheung (Hero Yuen), who goes back to mainland China from the city in pursuit of the realm of returning to nature through his experience of the rural life there.

However, the TV station has a drastic shortage of manpower, so Summer recruits a rookie May Hui (Priscilla Wong) as his assistant, and his best friend Leung Chung-shun (Mak Cheung-ching) as the photographer. During the filming, each of them witnesses the significant change of the hero’s personality when this typical Hong Kong Kid is confronted with the culture conflicts in the countryside. In addition, everyone’s blind spot in daily life has also been addressed. Summer, who is always subjective and persistent, starts afresh to review the love-hate relationship between him and his foster mother Lau Tsui-wan (Louise Lee) as well as his biological mother Ha Siu-han (Rebecca Chan). Being diligent and sincere, May works so hard to recover her self-esteem and the long-lost paternal love. Male chauvinist Shun's quarrel with his family members over trifles stirs up a great disturbance, resulting in his family being torn to pieces. Will the GPS Guide for the Soul eventually help them out of their predicament?


Interestingly, the plot summary is sorta on point. I have nothing more to add.

ENDING REVEALED
I shall put this first because the ending is actually what you probably would have guessed before watching this series. It is a happy ending. And when I say happy ending, those who deserves their comeuppance got their comeuppance, forgiveness everywhere and smiles in the end. What is not revealed is the process to that point which is the real pleasure of watching this heartfelt emotionally moving series with some of the best performances by the veterans and the young ones alike.

COMMENTS
It is easy to dismiss this series as one note and I do agree, at some point it was dangerously close to being one note repeated on perpetuity. There are a few elements that didn't fit, eventhough such elements are the main central theme of this series, mostly because I couldn't believe Louise Lee is a gambleholic. And the issue of her being a gambleholic comes and goes as and when it serves the story which makes it seems fleeting, not as serious as it ought to be and probably badly edited script or end production. I also can't see how May's chauvinistic father fits into the story as a whole because again, it was fleeting and it ended unconvincingly as it began. I felt more can be said about her father through the angry phone calls she had with him rather than meeting him face to face, which was anti-climatic in my opinion. There is no love story between 2 strangers, so you won't see May and Summer's love story eventhough it ended with one of the most romantic scene where they were on a small boat/sampan with the cave and lake forming a very romantic backdrop and these 2 sorta flirting with each other. Now I take a big liberal interpretation to the term flirting but there is no denying, if this series went on for another 5 episodes, we would have seen a love story between these 2. I also have major issues with the sudden change in the children; from good to selfish to good again. Again if the series went on for another 5 episodes, no doubt when money rolls in, the children will be rotten to the core again. I have nothing much to change about the ending, which I thought was beautiful except for the sudden bad luck of the children to became good again in 1 episode when they spent a good 15 episodes or so being so rotten, they can have fist fights with Lee Chi Hou of Kindred Spirit as to who is the WORST son/daughter ever on TV screen. I'd rather they remained rotten which would make better sense, a better ending even if a very depressing one for all mothers. But how can any mother trust their own child after what these children put them through, after what Chui went through, how can she ever believe anything they say ever again? I think this series did address this issue, off camera I suppose by her accepting that it is a fact her children was rotten, it is a fact that she probably has some part to play in it and that it is not really her fault alone.

To save you time, in case you hate reading long winded reviews, my opinion is this is perhaps one of TVB's best series for 2013 but since it is only March and way too early to say so, I will settle for one of TVB's best series in 2013 and probably one of the most heartfelt in a long long time. This is one series that does not depend on shock tactics of killing off characters with almost gleeful joy or headlines of how many minutes an actress had to go through in a rape scene. In fact there isn't much scandals so to speak in this series, except perhaps a woman's gambling addiction but that does not maketh a shocking headline even of Louise Lee is the one having that addiction which is to me, one reason to be shocked. In its simplest form, this is the usual TVB family fare. But simplicity can be a misleading term for a series as complicated as this in its character and dialogue driven script. The gem is not in the so called one note storyline but rather as the series goes by, we see each character being unravelled. Once a bad guy, we see the good side. One a confident guy, we see their insecurities and temper tantrums. Once an egoistical guy, we see what is actually a man deeply in love with his wife but unable to communicate with her. Once a guy lacking in confidence is actually a talent waiting for the right time to blossom. Once a good guy but is actually rotten to the core when bad times come. This series flips each character and plays with our emotions and I don't know about you, there were times I was carried away by that emotion, mostly from Summer's point of view. This series shouldn't be called Heart Road GPS because then it can be interpreted as what everyone needs is a navigation system. That is not the series' content since their hearts are misled. If your GPS is badly tuned, how then can it lead to the right location? This series to me is all about Pride And Prejudice. Each character is flawed, and if the script has not tried to reach a perfect end, it would have been perfect in showing not all characters are redeemable. Unfortunately, TVB wants and tries and will destroy any perfect script and in this series, makes every characters redeemable to varying degrees. That I hate and I am sure the hate for this series stems from the conventional end.

At the very core of this series, this series is a love story, but between a son and his 2 mothers, between a son and his aged parents and young wife, a grandson and his troublesome grandfather, a daughter and her chauvinistic father, a student and his master, a spoilt but lonely child and his misunderstood father. Which is which, I shall let you discover for yourself. That is the joy of this series.

In the story of Summer and his 2 mothers, Chui his foster mother and Han his biological mother, the gambling addiction of Chui merely serves to drive the series some where, but not the entire storyline. Yes her addiction is the weakest link in this series. I couldn't  believe how many episodes were dedicated to her self pity and after the 3rd or 4th time she went back to gambling when everyone tried to help her, I felt more disgusted than pity. I believe that is the purpose. An addiction is ugly, and one that hurts your loved ones and is the basis of your self pity is probably the worst of all addiction. At that point I was frustrated with where the series WAS NOT GOING and it went on and on, and then it stopped for us to take a breather and then came back to it again. That was the repetitive part and it may turn off some viewers because it felt like Chui was whinging it so to speak. Probably you may ask "So what's her problem? She got a good friend and a good son and her own children also disowned her and she still gambles?!" which is a valid question. I asked that many times. But as the story reveals itself, her addiction stemmed from her loneliness after her husband died very very suddenly, it spiralled out of control when her children abandoned her which made her question many times, "Was I that bad a mother to have raised 2 rotten children?" and compounded by the fact that she felt this immense guilt that she was the wedge between Summer, a boy she raised and loved but not as her own son and Summer's biological mother, Han. She never wanted to replace Han as Summer's mother but when she realised she unexpectedly did so, she herself felt herself to be this rotten evil woman and there she goes, gambling again. I expected her to kill herself way before she actually wanted to kill herself. So when she did finally curbed her addiction, to many viewers probably quite suddenly, in actual fact 2 of her biggest driving force towards gambling were solved; she recognised the fact that her children were rotten and it was not her fault AND she finally accepts that she has a got a good son, that is Summer who finally reconciled with his biological mother. Her guilt lifted, her loneliness gone, her pain disappeared and so does her need to gamble. It is in the end psychological and yes, why can't she see a doctor about that, correct? But then that will be  A Great Way To Care instead of this series.

Summer to me sometimes is such a prejudiced character. He hated his mother, to the point that he doesn't give a damn about her illness. That was a very realistic dialogue he had with May, where May chastised him for not caring about his own mom whilst running everywhere looking for someone else's mom but he replied sarcastically that Han can die and he doesn't care and he meant it, with enough venom to make you wince. Another actor would have made me fly kick him but Ruco did that scene with that terrible dialogue with such grace, I sorta wondered "Why man, why you hate her so?" instead of you know, "You bastard!". Automatically I assumed the mother must have been rotten but changed over the years. The truth was far simpler. She gave birth to Summer when she was 16, she was young, she didn't know how to care for a child, and she thought by giving him a father, and a family, was the best way to show how much she loved him. Unfortunately in Summer's eyes, these were her exact failure as a mother. He had very very low opinion of her, even when Chui advised him to forgive his mother, he was not ready to forgive. This series will trace that pain, the forgiveness, the final reconciliation to much joy I hope to the viewers. I certainly felt very emotional. We have all met mothers like Han, who had the right heart but not the right sense and we have met sons like Summer who wished another woman was their mom instead of their real mom. I felt the dialogue between Summer and Han and Chui were almost like a love/hate sonnet. Poetic, real and yet surreal at times. One of the most surreal scene which could have been a confession of love was Summer bemoaning to Chui "Why I am not yours?". I can't remember the exact dialogue but it was almost like you can replace the words mother to another girl's name and it can be a love confession. No doubt Summer is so close to Chui, he can even flirt with her. I like the ease he is whenever he is with her, and I also like the tension between Summer and Han. After a while it felt like Han is the third party in the relationship between Summer and Chui. And believe me, Summer is hard to like when he treats his mother like shit, he seems like a petulant spoilt child but in the end he is just a very insecure man. He derives his love from Chui's stability when he was growing up and when Chui rejected him, he felt hurt, he felt like that child that nobody wanted prior to living with Chui. He has issues and he directed his entire anger at Han. I like how realistic when he literally pushed Han out of the door. Oh that was a brilliant and cruel scene. But this relationship has a very very happy end. In one of the last scene where Summer reads a note he made and kept in a time capsule, in it was his dearest wish a year ago and it was "To call Auntie Chui mother". Deep down, that is what he wanted. In the end, as he was dancing with Han and Chui and Han asked cryptically "Have you said to her yet?" and he was a bit blur when Chui smiled and said to him "You can call me mom" which is something at that point we know he had wanted to say in his entire life and that is how the series came full circle at the very very last scene of a happy Summer standing between the 2 most important persons in his life, his mother and ... his mother. I seriously love that very last scene. Eventhough Summer's closeness to Chui is unbreakable, you can see the warmth and closeness with his real mom, Han.  It was a great ending to a very emotional ride.

And that is what this series is ultimately about. It leads you everywhere, it goes everywhere but in the end it ends where it should end. I mean, what more can you ask for in a TVB series these days?

There are other stories as well. The first 4 or 5 episodes were brilliant as the story slowly builds up with the story of an obnoxious kid called Kit and how he ruined everyone's life in the village. Well, sorta. We all know he will end up a nice kid but I never expected to be so captivated by the rural village sequence where we have unknown actors who were genuinely sincere in the way they performed their roles. It could have felt fake but it felt genuine to me. I love that few episodes and how Kit changed eventhough he still had an attitude, he became a better man for what he went through. It also spent time showing the other characters, and so when they all returned to HK, it felt like I knew Summer, May, and everyone else. Yes, thereafter things sorta went a little downhill where it seems so usual TVB fare but then the story actually starts when Han's husband died suddenly and we see for each family, things are not as simple as we think they are. I predicted, very wrongly that Shun's wife, Fun will run away with another man, thus the emotional arc for this character. Yes, I was thinking the cheap shock tactics again and this series turned out classier than I thought. She didn't run away, she stayed but the almost breakup of this marriage was at times rather funny to watch thanks to the antics of Hong's very nosy grandfather and Fun's sometimes misunderstood parents in law. These set/couple is the comedic element in this series and it can be very very funny. May's story is the most underdeveloped and at times I feel she was too judgmental of Summer and too opinionated but again the heart is in the right place. The good thing about May is she doesn't annoy even if she frustrates so that makes her character easier to accept. I also love the very funny story of Kit and his cafe owner father. I never thought I see Law Lok Lam in a lighthearted role but it happened in this series!

Frankly, I can find a lot of faults with this series in terms of storyline or editing or the script but you know what? Who cares! As long as it makes good sense, I can accept the flaws. I suppose my expectations are lower these days. Truth is I went into this series having zero expectations and was very surprised to have watched every episode and loving it. If you're someone who finds nothing from a character driven series, then this series is not for you. And what a pity if you missed it because then you won't see the awesomeness of some really fantastic performances.

RUCO CHAN
Ruco Chan must get his TV King title soon but I know he won't because by the time the nominations are in, this series will be long gone and forgotten. So let's hope AOD viewers remember him, so that he will come to Malaysia and get his award for Malaysia AOD's TV King and since TVB is rarely original in anything, they may then copy AOD and give him their TVB TV King award. I look forward to seeing Ruco in Malaysia! Anyway he looks very good physically. He looks slimmer, more toned, the earring adds a bad boy vibe to him instead of "sissy-fied" him. His jeans looks tighter, shirts tighter, everything tighter. What I am trying to say is he looks really good. And he was convincing as the supremely "arrogant" Summer as well as the overly "insecure" Summer. The only time he didn't do too well was at the beginning of the 2 foster sibling's betrayal and I thought he was too nice to them in his tone. But of course eventually he did shout at them and even punched the foster brother, to my delight and if you look at Chui's face, to her delight as well. He was flirty with Louise Lee and this lucky bastard got to hug Louise and Rebecca many many times. He got a lot of female attention in here I tell you! For all those who sees him as a siu sang, oh puh-lease!! He is a veteran now! He is beyond Siu Sang. And don't give me that crap that he is most improved. He is lead actor quality. As in he can really act. But can he really lead? I believe his legions of fans will agree. I was impressed with him after The Other Truth, where he didn't feel like the serial killer accountant vibe anymore. I felt his best performance todate was in Three Kingdoms RPG because that character was meant to be one layered character but he injected into the character so many emotional layers that to me, he was more layered than the one note Zhuge Liang. But it was really No Good Either Way that made me sit up and notice him. However Reality Check convinces me he has that leading quality vibe backed up with what I feel is an evolving acting skill, which is evolving for the better. He can do better of course, he is not Bowie who can do drama and comedy and be sexy and dangerous as he can be dowdy and uncle-ish. He is also not Roger Kwok or Gallen Lo or one with a commanding presence like Bobby Au Yeung. But he has better acting skills than most you see onscreen today and he does his emotional scenes well. And he has better chemistry with his knapsack than Jason Chan had with his. Seriously, when I saw Ruco holding his knapsack with such conviction, I was like "Give him an award!!" because dear Jason really screwed up badly with his knapsack which probably just sued Jason for ruining its career prospect with his unconvincing way of carrying it.

BEST SCENE
The best being that scene where Chui rejected him and that hurt in his eyes, oh that hurt, I feel like hugging him and go "Now now don't cry, she doesn't want you, I want you". What more can I say? I have been Ruco-fied and enlist me into Ruco Chan Fan Club please!

MOST HEARTBREAKING SCENE
When Chui left HKD200,000 to Summer instead of HKD1m for each of her biological child as payback for him for taking care of her during those few months and then ran away and hide, May said to Summer "I feel more unfair for you that you did so much and yet she gave you not an equal sum she gave to those 2 rotten children" but Summer quietly said "If you really see someone as your loved one, you will not say you pay them back for the months they helped you..." which means, in his broken heart he felt that Chui never really saw him as her own son and that was why that scene was very heartbreaking, for Summer.

UNINTENTIONALLY FUNNIEST SCENE
The one where he overheard Chui and Han overemphasising on "We must never let him know", "We must lie to him", "Yes, we must lie to him .. forever!". I thought how can anyone not misunderstand the meaning with so much "we must lie to him..." dialogue in one scene. It sounds almost evil.

ONE HUGE QUESTION MARK
I don't get it! Why when Summer was beaten with bruises on his face, very prominent bruises and NOT ONE even said "Oh dear what happened?" but when he was coughing and sorta sick, suddenly all 3 women (Chui, Han and May) all went into panic mode like "Oh you're sick, you must rest"? I mean poor guy, good looking face punched and yet no one cared, no one asked, no one wondered and one cough, woah all the women rushing to him. Doesn't make sense at all.

LOUISE LEE
I consider her a complete miscast as the gambleholic Chui. This is in part because Louise is too elegant to be a believable no-shame-gambleholic. However she was fantastic as the woman driven mad with guilt over Summer's rejection of his real mom, that good woman and good mother sort of role. That I can't critique and she shares the best chemistry with Ruco. They can be lovers and I will be convinced. Anyway I didn't catch the age difference but I do think Chui should be about a decade older than Han. Or maybe a bit more. We do know Summer was 8 when he went to live with him. Han was 16 when she gave birth to Summer. It was 3 years after Summer moved in that Chung was born. Mandy presumably only a few years younger. None of these matters, just for comparison sake. Anyway Chui's husband is the often seen ke-le-fe veteran but never quite in prominent roles like patriarch of a family. So when I saw him I thought "Wow, either he has been promoted since he is now husband of Louise or Louise is demoted with a nobody husband so to speak". And then of course he died so that settles the whole promotion/demotion. The role is too small for Chun Pui and a bit too prominent (hey! Louise is your wife, that must mean a promotion!) for ke-le-fes.

BEST SCENE

Quite a few. I like how in the end she realises that her children's turning to the dark side isn't really due to her gambling habits but her gambling habits showed to her their real personality, how she reconciled with the fact that their relationships will never be the same ever again, the subtle smile she had when she saw Ruco's Summer  beating her son whom she loved very much but became very very disappointed with. Her confrontation with her pretentious children with some really hard hitting dialogue ever spoken, probably by Louise herself. I think those are her best scenes, as she confronted her children's hypocrisy and yet you see from her eyes, her heart is breaking and she is constantly asking herself what did she do wrong, that she ended up with 2 rotten children.

REBECCA CHAN
Another fine performance. I always thought for a veteran Rebecca Chan is often not very much appreciated. She has fine acting skills. And she is still beautiful. I don't have much to say except this is a very subdued performance and it suits her character well.

BEST SCENE
Lying side by side with Chui, who regretfully and tearfully said "Han.. I am so sorry...I always thought I can fix the rift between you and Summer but in the end I was the reason for the rift... I never expected by my loving him unconditionally as he was growing up that he will see me as his mother and reject you. I am so sorry Han, I am so very sorry" and we see Chui lying by her side, her back facing Han and she was silently crying. It was a heart wrenching scene. Han never blamed Chui for taking her place, she was grateful and in a way she blamed herself for her failure to be a good mother in Summer's eyes but it doesn't make that scene any less heart wrenching.

ANOTHER MOST HEARTBREAKING SCENE
Many times Summer said some terrible stuff to her, from "please leave" to outright "get lost" but the most heartbreaking was when he said "Auntie Chui can do no wrong in my eyes! She is perfect in my eyes! Whatever she does, however she does wrong, I will always forgive you! But I will never ever forgive you!" and pushes Han out of the door. Sometimes I hate Summer for resenting his mom who was making a lot of effort and poor Han did give up for a while, thinking she didn't want to force her presence onto Summer who clearly hated him. But I believe Chui did say "When there's hate, there's love".

MAK CHEUNG CHING
He really looks like a camera man. A very convincing performance and at times a comic relief. Whilst his story with his wife and parents (as in the guy stuck between 2 forces) may seem disconnected to Summer's story, you can say it is not disconnected but rather a separate story of his own. I enjoyed his story, how he avoided going home to avoid arguments. After a while his arguments is lost in his unrelentlessness in bending his wife to his will so to speak. I mean he loves his wife, no doubt about it but he never once in his own way respected his wife's own free will. Yes the woman is silly in thinking letting her manager grope her means she can get her promotion but her husband never quite asked her why she was desperate to stay in her job. He never considered she took pride in her job or why she argued with his old aged mother or why she wanted to move out, etc. In the end all things right itself and we see Evergreen as the unlikely romantic guy sorta wooing his wife in a rather cute scene by the beach. I thought he did very well.

BEST SCENE

The scene where he raged against his nosy neighbours for tearing his family apart, sad and yet funny. Also like the cute small small stuff like his wife's picture on his handphone, with her looking glamorous. And lookout for his impersonation of Andy Lau at the end!

MEINI CHEUNG
Seen her but not idea who she is. But she has a substantial role and I feel she was adequate and served her role well.

BEST SCENE
I suppose that scene where her manager was caught filming her legs or something and everyone rallied around her and her mother in law said she can be a witness and the manager dismissed her mother in law as lying and for probably the first time ever, she shouted out loud "IF MY MOTHER IN LAW SAYS YOU DID IT, I BELIEVE HER!".

PRISCILLA WONG
This is her first acting role I believe? Was she horrible? No, far from it. She was a natural. I am not saying she is great, I am saying she did not ruin this series, at all. In fact she was sincere, genuine and heartfelt in her performance of a PA who isn't afraid to speak her mind without being annoying. The most annoying thing about her May is not her acting or her delivery of lines but rather the fact that her wardrobe consists of short pants, short jeans, and anything short and I wonder, does TVB in real life has that sort of dress code for PAs in their offices? However there were times I felt like she was virtually near tears because she sounded like she was scared, terrified, her voice trembling. I suppose she was scared in her first performance and it showed, through her voice. But for a first timer, she was rather charming and served her role well and has good chemistry with her co-stars. So I am not complaining. And as opposed to Jason Chan, she looks believable when carrying her bags and knapsacks.

BEST SCENE
Probably her worst scene was her argument with her father. She doesn't do argument scenes well. Best scene probably the scene where she stood by the door, relaxed, thinking her father lying unconscious on the floor was just pretending to be unconscious.

HERO YUEN
Who the heck is this young actor? First question in my mind. Pretty raw but is convincing as a douchebag who turned to be a nice guy in the end. He has a lot of roles in the first few episodes and when he was gone from the screen I kinda missed him. An effective performance and let's be frank, he was rather good even if rather raw.

BEST SCENE
Entire rural village scenes.

STANLEY CHEUNG
Another effective performance and even if rather raw as well. I don't have much to comment but he does have a substantial role and he doesn't annoy me. In fact I thought he did rather well.

BEST SCENE
Every scene he is in with his nosy grandfather, makes for comical moments.

YU TZE MING
To me the most hated old man in this series, who provokes others and yet doesn't admit it. But that's what makes him lovable I suppose; he penchant for "stoking fire" in other people's problems.

BEST SCENE
Without a doubt, that scene where he spoke to Mak's Shun about his rather loud argument with his wife and Shun said "You were the cause of our rift!" and he said meekly "But this time I didn't say anything at all, you were the one who started it" and Shun said "What did I say?!" and basically he repeated the exact dialogue which was funny and when Hong joined in and offered to advice Shun and Shun angrily dismissed Hong and said "What do you know? You're just a kid, how dare you advise me!" and he walked away and old grandpa looked confused as he said "But I am 70... surely I am qualified to advise you..". Ahhhh lost in translation. It was a very funny scene!

JENNY LAU
It took me a while to realise she is that poor actress who was manhandled and pushed so roughly to the door that she crumbled into the floor and cried her heart out. That scandal that exposed that rude director who once scolded obscenities at a very young Charmaine Sheh. Joke is, that was her best acting moment, it felt real, the fear felt real and in retrospect she probably felt real scared. Other times, I can't stand her bitchy "Ah Beeeeeeeeeeeeeeee". I can do without her but this series needs a villain.

RACHEL KAN
She has been getting a lot of prominent supporting roles lately. I don't like the way she grits her teeth as she talks. But performance wise, a very good one as she lets her inner bitch out and gave it her all as the cruel bitchy greedy daughter whose comeuppance in the end was more of an afterthought.

BEST SCENE
When she turned her inner bitch on with her mom, Chui. Cruel words, real dialogue, evil woman!

OWEN CHEUNG
No idea who he is but again same comments as per Rachel Kan above, except acting is raw BUT effective. And perhaps the most unconvincing turnaround in the end.

BEST SCENE
Which probably is one of the most cruel to Chui when he suddenly stopped her as she was about to leave his pink-ki-fied apartment and I thought, could it be he had a sudden blast of conscience? when he said sheepishly "Mom, can you give me back my house keys?" and zing! Oh poor Chui... poor poor Chui! I bet at that moment she thinks "I should have had a plate of Char Siew rather than this piece of crap!".

VINCENT WONG
Very surprised to see this actor with "huge flared up nostrils" back at TVB. How many years I haven't seen him? Anyway zero development for a character, one of the weakest in here. Acting wise, one dimensional because his character IS one dimensional.

KAKI LEUNG
She is cute here, she excels as the girl next to the leading lady and always the cheerful one. However I was rather annoyed with her constant grins in here. She quite simply laughed too much.

CHOW CHUNG
Probably one of the very few performances of Chow Chung that I actually like and that I find amusing and funny at times. He was effective in here and I like the little details like how he will hold his onscreen wife's hands when walking, like a loving old couple should.

TERESA HA
She has aged a lot. No comment since she is always effective in her performances. You may dislike her in the beginning in this series since a lot of the misunderstanding between her son and his wife stemmed from her own misunderstanding of her daughter in law.

BEST SCENE
For both her and Chow Chung, has to be the one where Shun reluctantly told them he had to move out to be with his wife and daughter and the father quietly pulled up a notice and on it is the number of tha mover lorry service and he told his son he does not disagree with his actions.

OTHER PERFORMANCES
I do not know their names but they were all competent and effective. Some of the best and most natural acting had to be the rural village scenes where the kids and the older actors were at ease, had great chemistry and were very likable. I wish I knew all of their names because they all deserved a mention for a job well done. I specially love the Lau family and the cute boys and girl. Seriously natural in their performances.

And a special mention to the detective at the police station where all the family drama happened. It was very funny how stern the cop was and then soft-hearted enough to devise a reunion between Summer and Chui who was hiding herself and later on gets front row seat in many emotional encounters. I thought those scenes did more to the police image than all those stupid detective series that ruined the police image.

VERDICT
The ending may be predictable, the middle may be repetitive, the story may have been recycled from other stories but there is no denying, this is quite a ride. I absolutely enjoyed this series and whilst I can do without certain elements, tweaking here and there, overall this is as I have said earlier, one of the best series of 2013 and I do not make the claim lightly. Fans of Ruco Chan and Mak Cheung Ching must watch this for their fantastic performances, especially Ruco Chan's. Those who loved the veterans should watch this series as well as they are all given prominent roles. The dialogues are crisp and clear, some realistic, some dreamy and romantic. It is more character driven than story driven, but doesn't mean it should be dismissed as boring, one note, one story, etc. It has its charm and for all the craps TVB's been churning out, it is always the one with least publicity and without headlines screaming everywhere are the ones that is worth paying attention to. Reality Check is such a series and it deserves more attention it is getting. Don't miss this one but do be patient with it and you will be rewarded with some very emotional moments and great dialogue that shows to us all, TVB can make a series with heart in it (if they want to).

INTERESTING FACTS
Thanks to llwy12 of Jaynestars for the tip which is fascinating although each had a few speaking lines, I thought they were convincing and now I know why!

a few of the cameos, especially in the last episode, are actual crew members — for example, the guys who played Ruco and Evergreen’s new assistants during the return to the village were real PAs and cameramen…TVB Magazine actually did a piece on this last week
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12 December 2012

THE CONFIDANT / 大太監 [TVB][2012] : The Baffling Non-Existent Palace Struggle in “The Confidant”[O]

Written by Funn Lim


The following are not episode recaps but are ramblings and torrents of disbelief for The Confidant <大太監>. All merely personal opinion.


SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS



Released in : 2012
Cast-Character : Wikipedia

Watched until episode 29…

You know, there are so many things I love about The Confidant. The acting, some characters like An Dehai, Pang Sam Soon and of course Li Lianying who is slowly becoming more of a man than a coward. There are some characters I love to hate, like Seung Hei, Cixi and of course the one destined for most hate, Cian. And also Tim Sau. In fact by the end of episode I believe 29, I am convinced Cian and Tim Sau caused the downfall of the empire and only Lianying and Cixi can save the empire! Very dangerous precedent this series is forming, as Yoda will say.

I also like some scenes in episode 29, such as Tongzhi explaining why he had given up on himself and dedicated his entire time to having fun, in one moving scene Sam Soon got down on his knees and tearfully said to the emperor, “Your majesty promised us loyal servants that you will always help us, you will always be on our side no matter what. But your majesty has broken your promise. Your loyal servant is now bullied and cornered by his enemies in all 4 corners and your majesty did not come to rescue me. Why your majesty has forsaken your promise?”

Tongzhi woke up for one split second from his angry moment and explained why… “Mother said I am useless. Those ministers talk behind my back and call me useless. I am nothing but a puppet emperor. So what if I do well? No one cares! Since everyone has marked me as a useless emperor, and so I shall be!!! I will be the most useless of them all!!” It was a very sad moment and I blame Cixi. I don’t get her; when he worked hard and sneaked out of the palace to actually see the problems of the people, she scolded him and said he was too stupid to make use of his ministers and therefore unfit to be emperor. I thought that was especially harsh and I was thinking, “What does she want him to do?!”

But on a good note, let me declare, I have forgiven Seung Hei! Why? Well the princess died when he was forced to go and administer medicine to Cian by that dastardly Tim Sau and so Seung Hei blamed Cian and scolded her. The moment he scolded her, I forgave him. He had the guts to say what he said,”You evil black hearted woman! Why are you still alive and all the good people dead? The princess didn’t deserve to die. But you, you deserve death and yet here you are, alive”. In modern speech, Seung Hei could have save his breath and just scream “DIE BITCH DIE!!!!!!” And when he was imprisoned as he explained why he refused to help Cian, the way he said it, I swear Seung Hei will go mad one day. He said with a tinge of a smile that grew into a full blown wide grin as he said, “Why won’t I? Right now, she would be feeling the full effects of her illness. She will be in tremendous pain, she will be suffering, and in 7 days, she will die. She deserves to die in the most painful way for what she did to the princess and Dehai” and I swear he was smiling. Kudos to Raymond Wong for that piece of fantastic acting, that satisfied look of a man who is happy to know his enemy is suffering. But of course it turns out Cian was well, not even sick and Seung Hei was baffled and he was carried away crying “WHY ARE YOU STILL ALIVE? WHY AREN’T YOU DEAD?! There is no justice in this world, there is no fairness, you evil black hearted woman, you are still alive when you should be in hell for what you did!!”

At that moment, I said “Seung Hei, bless you!” Yes I forgive him! I know he was selfish in An Dehai’s case but he was a fool for love. He was also not that nice when he knew the princess didn’t love him anymore but what he did after, the way he cared for her, the way he didn’t care if he lived or die as long as if he could save her, he will kill himself as sorry to An Dehai, the way he scolded Cian, made me forgive him. Lianying and Sam Soon have also forgiven him.

All these are the good stuff.

The Baffling Non-Existent Palace Struggle Story

And that is exactly what I don’t get. The entire story now until the end is the threat posed by Cian to the emperor and to Cixi and the empire and how Lianying came back to “clean the house of rubbish” as he puts it that way. So Tim Sau declared Lianying to be public enemy no. 1 and in return Lianying asks Cixi to give him a 4th ranked official as his title which is really very high and a pearl on top of his hat. Basically he is now “Big Eunuch”. Terribly exciting except…

where is the struggle?

First of, Cian is powerless. I don’t get Cixi don’t just chop off Tim Sau’s head? She said she gave up on her son who accused her of adultery with Dehai. Cian wants to make life hell for Cixi. So she made sure Tongzhi is a useless emperor having fun all day. BUT so? So the power struggle is…what? Because Cixi is still ruling the country. Cixi basically can just chop off Tim Sau’s head, kick out Chan Fuk and put Cian under house arrest. Why not since Cixi is RULING the country and Cian is doing what?

Secondly, the emperor is powerless. So what if Cian made him useless, how can that threaten Cixi? It only solidifies her position as Cixi now is the de-facto ruler. Make her feel heartsick? Like that will cause her hell?

Thirdly, Cian using the eunuchs for her grand plan of tormenting Cixi. But what eunuchs she used? Ling Tim Sau who is a joker to tell you the truth. Cian could have given Tim Sau a 4th rank position but she has no power to do so. Instead Cixi gave Lianying that ranking! So what’s the point of Tim Sau turning evil? What does he get in the end?

Finally, what is Cian’s grand plans anyway? Because the way I see it Prince Gong is still working well with Cixi! Prince Gong is a righteous man, he says what he thinks and what he sees. He is not evil. He is not even on Cian’s team. Cixi is still fine. So what is her grand plan? To be a nuisance? What a small minded “grand” plan that is!

The problem with The Confidant right now is it isn’t logical. Forget about historical accuracy. When An Dehai died, my historically accurate side went away with his death. I miss him so. For me the idea of Lianying killing the bad guys had me salivating. Their deaths will be deserving. I am not talking about that logic. I am talking about story integrity.

Here we have a story about power struggle but it was at the end a petty family squabble where one can right the damage but refuses (Cixi), one is going insane (Cian) and one who is torn in the middle (Tongzhi) with one by the side not aware what is happening (Prince Gong). It is not a reasonable power struggle. I mean so what if the emperor is useless? Cixi is there, she can run the country. What possible thing can Cian do to ruin Cixi’s life? Right now, probably killing her favourite eunuch, An Dehai, causing a misunderstanding between Tongzhi and Cixi but then nothing comes out of that misunderstanding.

Since history is screwed, why not follow half of real history? Why not show Cixi on Tongzhi’s good side and Tongzhi favouring Cian and push aside Cixi? Why not make Cian influence Prince Gong to hate Cixi? Why not Cian run the country, put Cixi under house arrest? Why not make it bigger and not make it so petty?

I seriously do not get the so called power struggle because the way I see it Cixi is still in power comfortably. So all these stuff done by Tim Sau is pointless.

My prediction of the last episode will be Prince Gong forced to take out the letter punishing Cixi. I suppose maybe I will get to see Prince Gong being misled about Cixi and at the end dramatically save Cixi. Or maybe not. Maybe Lianying will kill the enemies but the way I see it, the enemies probably fall down and hit their own heads and die. Both Cixi and Lianying’s hands will be free of blood since like I said, series is going all out to show them in a good light. Perhaps when Tongzhi dies, Cian switches back to good woman role.

Because my biggest problem with this series is making Cian the villain. It doesn’t make sense for her grand plan, whatever that is. I would have hoped Cixi was stubborn and unreasonable. Why not make Prince Gong the bad guy? I mean leave Cian alone!

But Maggie Shiu is masterful as Cian. When she was very sick, I could hear her voice trembling. When she is evil, there is a certain satisfaction in her voice. Absolutely fantastic performance.

Natalie Tong is the poor empress but again so little time, so little to do. I just feel there are some good characters wasted and they’re not the eunuchs. But since this series is about eunuchs, I must say the focus is right. But the one person that is very related to the eunuchs is Cixi and I still find her bland. In fact I find her Cixi deep down in that heart of hers is one evil minded woman. Because I just don’t get her. Cian I know. She will be mad soon. But Cixi and the way she scolded her son at the beginning doesn’t make sense.

But at least it is interesting with Lianying back in the palace and a changed man. He was always the coward and An Dehai the gungho guy. Even in death An Dehai retained his gungho-ness. Lianying whilst is happy outside with his sifu, Sin Yung and their adopted son, inside he is struggling with his anger. He is angry because he new An Dehai was wrongly accused and died pitifully. I was thinking please don’t show him returning to the palace to save Cixi. And thankfully, in one of the best moments in this episode, right up there with Seung Hei scolding and cursing Cian, is Lianying saying he wants to go back to the palace to avenge An Dehai’s death. Same goes for Seung Hei who vows to fight Cian to avenge for the princess and An Dehai’s death. Everybody got his (and his) priorities right. That is perhaps the most logical moment. Of course Lianying was also right when he said “Eunuchs scheming against one another for power is expected and I won’t argue with that. But using the emperor’s well being as a pawn is something I will not accept.”

Good point! Even if I don’t get how one Lianying can save the palace. Because there are no other eunuchs?

Anyway episode 29 featured a short conversation between Lianying, Sinyung and one young scholar named Kang youwei (Hong Yau Wai) and he proposes that an emperor that can’t even rule over his own household can’t possibly be trusted to rule over the empire. Meaning if you can’t even straighten your household, what more can you do for the empire? People must not be selfish to one’s own needs and must do what is right. That and his deep desire to avenge Dehai’s death drove Lianying back into the palace, with Sinyung’s blessing.

So is this Kang Youwei real?

Google says.. YES!! Got pictures also!!

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kang_Youwei

Who is he?

Political reformer hated by Cixi.

There, history screwed again but oh who cares!! Lianying, KILL! KILL! KILL!!!

Oh how TVB has brainwashed me!

>> You will also find this article with comments at Jaynestars.com 


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10 December 2012

THE CONFIDANT / 大太監 [TVB][2012] : The End of An Dehai [O]

Written by Funn Lim


The following are not episode recaps but are ramblings and torrents of disbelief for The Confidant <大太監>. All merely personal opinion.


SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS



Released in : 2012
Cast-Character : Wikipedia

There is this awesome scene from Kang Xi Di Guo/Kang Xi Wang Chao (starring Chen Daoming as Kangxi) where his eunuch, Li Dequan made some mistake and Kangxi wasn’t very pleased, but not some murderous emperor, anyway he asks Li Dequan a question;

“Do you know how you will die in future?”

And Li Dequan was baffled since he was young and not very sharp and he was like “Errrr Your Majesty… I.. errrr…” and the Emperor whilst looking for his book answered sharply;

“Ni hui ben si” aka “You will die from stupidity”

It was a funny scene! And as I watched the sorry life of Seung Hei, An Dehai and gang, I suddenly remembered that scene and my feeling is everyone who will die and did die in The Confidant died from their own stupidity.

Thank you to Kangxi for highlighting the obvious!

And so here I am, continuing with this post with a bit on the single most emotional moment so far in The Confidant (and it is nearing its end) and that is the death of An Dehai and how in the end everyone in The Confidant dies because in some ways from their own stupidity or others’ stupidity. In An Dehai’s case, it was not by his own stupidity. I predicted a whole lot of things but two things I never thought of:-

1. An Dehai remained true to himself and died in my eyes a true man, balls and all.

2. The cause of his death in  a large part is thanks to people he cared about and who brought about his sorry end. And one of them his good friend Yiu Seung Hei and the other his benefactor whom he loved/hated and admired and respected who hurt him most when she insulted his perfect Siu Chai and yet comforted him when he cried for Siu Chai’s death, and that is his master, Cixi.

After I saw episode 25, I felt so disgusted with Seung Hei. For the princess and thinking if eloping with her, he betrayed An Dehai. And guess what? He lived to tell the tale. I mean what does Seung Hei have to do to actually die? He eloped with the princess, he aborted the princess’ unborn child without consent and now, the best of all, he told a white lie; he accused An Dehai and Cixi of a sexual adulterous immoral affair and yet, here he is, alive, well, crying and blaming himself. One of the best scene of Episode 26 was Sam Shun who even reprimanded his uncle Chan Fuk for his evil deed and Lianying who lost his best friend and brother An Dehai could not believe their eyes and ears when Seung Hei tried to justify himself. A scene worth recapping because I clapped at Lianying’s logic.

Seung Hei who after telling them that he bought back Dehai’s manhood and buried him with it was given dagger stares by both Lianying and Sam Shun frustratingly and with a tinge of anger says; “Lianying, what would you have done if it was your Sin Yung who was kidnapped? What would you have done?!” and Sam Shun angrily says with his trademark opener as in “Aiyah!! That doesn’t mean you can betray your friend!!” and Lianying angrily says “I would never have betrayed my brother and telling such a preposterous lie!! Poor Dehai! He already had his manhood cut off when he was little, now he had his head chopped off and his naked body humiliated by being hung at the wall for all to see!! I’d rather Sin Yung die!” and Seung Hei almost smirked as he said “You’re saying this because you’re not in my shoes!” and Lianying says “Yes I mean what I said! I will rather Sin Yung die than to frame my friend! And I will kill myself as well, so that I will not be a threat! I will never do what you did!” and I was clapping as Seung Hei looked shocked at Lianying’s reply and he knows Lianying will do what he said. Seung Hei defeated says dejectedly “I know what I did was wrong. After I have saved the princess, I will kill myself to redeem for what I did to Dehai”.

Seung Hei, does it matter then? Dehai is already dead. DEAD! D-E-A-D! DEAD! DEAD! DEAD! And it is YOUR fault, you spineless, ball-less, hairless piece of crappy trash garbage bacteria virus disease unfit to be called a human being!

And guess what? When the Princess confessed to Seung Hei she no longer loves him, she actually loves her dead husband (which is why she wanted to keep the pregnancy and Seung Hei thinking much too highly of his manly charms thought she loved him still-oh and yes, also because Cian lied to Seung Hei about that love part as well), he was so angry, he shook and shook her body until she fainted and when Tim Sau said “She’s dead?” and Seung Hei was so angry with hateful he said with venom “If you so want to be with your dead husband, I will let you be! Join him in hell!” and he left. Wow, what a piece of work this Seung Hei is. And I suspect, even till the end he won’t die. So far, Lianying and Sam Shun is treating him like a pariah. GOOD!!!

But the true cause of An Dehai’s death is also in part thanks to Cixi. He was to be sentenced for corruption charges, the affair part was ridiculous eventhough Tongzhi believed it for reasons I am not sure why except he saw An Dehai hugging Cixi’s legs and crying as Cixi gently patted his head. That looked more motherly and lover you know what I mean? Anyway Cixi needs to save her reputation and so she asked An Dehai to do something which he agreed. That something was screaming at Cixi saying “You know want to abandon me? After you used me during your lonely nights and now you cast me aside? I am a real man! I served your needs and now you kick me out! You despicable wanton woman!!!” and even before he was beheaded he was screaming the same thing. Then his naked headless body was hung on the city wall for all to see, that he is an eunuch so where can there be any sexual affair? Why An Dehai did what he did was because he felt he owed Cixi; he knew he was dying anyway. Might as well save Cixi who was wronged in this instance. Cixi knew it was Cian’s doing by the way and Cian knows she knows and she doesn’t care.

I have been dreading An Dehai’s death scene and it was quite underwhelming. I feel the writer could have stretched it a bit and show us An Dehai’s body on the city wall as well. Also perhaps a private scene of Cixi crying for An Dehai’s sacrifice. She did loved him like a son. All these were missing so there was no emotional punch. I am also disappointed Lianying did not vow to avenge An Dehai’s death but rather sought permission to leave the palace and join Sin Yung which Cixi permitted. I feel Lianying is so passive. But I suspect, as he leaves the palace with determination in his eyes, he is out to find a way to avenge for An Dehai’s death. Lianying can’t just leave and then come back to save Cixi. It wouldn’t make dramatic sense. Or maybe Lianying is THAT passive. If that is so, very very disappointing. Sam Shun meanwhile remains in the palace and remains as the only other character (other than Dehai) to remain dignified despite being from the enemy’s camp.

A side note on a few episodes ago about the fate of Siu Chai. I was wondering what will happen to Siu Chai when Dehai dies. Well, writer solved the problem by suddenly turning Siu Chai into a slut and then have Tim Sau to kill her and her lover off. The sudden bravery (in a way he was brave even if evil brave) of Tim Sau in killing people and his sudden association with Chan Fuk was… sudden. No rhyme nor reason, no explanation, just suddenly Siu Chai = slut, Tim Sau turns murderous. At least Seung Hei got some explanation. I was disappointed at this sudden turn of events for drama sake. I was really hoping to see that emotional side of Siu Chai crying as she sees An Dehai being executed, vowing to stay true for him and him alone. I was convinced theirs was a good love story. Unfortunately this series wants to drive home a point that even if eunuchs want love, they can’t get love since they can’t satisfy their woman and so there can’t be love with sex and there can’t be sex without that missing tool. Total and absolute BS! I hate what the writer did to Siu Chai. It was unbelievable, it was too sudden.

So far this series is more passive than aggressive. More people should be dying and yet no one is. An Dehai’s death is the first true “yuen on” (wrongfully convicted). And he remains the only character from start to end that is somewhat well developed with some emotional changes and personality changes but apart from that, he remains largely a positive sort of character.

The rest remains same old same old.

Performance wise, Michelle Yim has moved up a few leaders but thanks to the non existing writing for her character in this episode, she seems more inhuman than human. I find her rather too subdued, considering she was accused of having sex with her favourite eunuch and she did beg Cian to let Dehai go and Dehai ended up dead in such a horrifying way. She should be more angry. In private maybe throw a cup or something. But she is still same temperament.

Wayne Lai had more emotional scenes in here, and he handled them well. The scene where he questioned Michelle why she let Dehai died was a good scenes, you can see his hunched back and yet he is daring to question her but he understood why. He just wanted to know whose idea it was for what happened to Dehai, was it hers or Dehai. She answered “Does it matter?”. Maybe to Lianying it does.

Raymond Wong actually did very well in that explosive scene of vindictiveness with the Princess. He was ugly! Very good performance as well in that grave side confrontation scene. But oh how I hate Seung Hei! He has got to die a terrible death. And since he plans to die in the end, why not he takes a knife and stab Chan Fuk and Tim Sau and then die?

Power Chan basically is the bystander throughout and although he starts every sentence with AIYAH!, it doesn’t feel irritating or old. He also has the honour of being the one character that is from enemy’s camp who is honest with everyone and remain good. Quite an interesting situation he is in!

Raymond Cho is the star of this episode. Although his death scene could have been so much more, he died with integrity and honour. I love his last scene, as he screamed about Cixi being slut and liar and all, the moment before his head was chopped off, he looked down a bit, became sorta quiet and faced his imminent death with dignity. He truly made An Dehai a very masculine character even if An Dehai is an eunuch and in history is really darn corrupted. But he made me sympathise with him, even in Siu Chai’s matter. I understood his desperation and his willingness to forgive Siu Chai. He changed my opinion about eunuch being sissy and all. Sam Shun is a tad sissy. Even Lianying is a bit soft with perfectly manicured eyebrows. Seung Hei is a scumbag, he doesn’t not count. And here we have An Dehai, looking manlier than them all. Even in death, he faced his death with fortitude. TVB has brainwashed me into thinking An Dehai in real life must be that good! Of course I know all these are fake stuff. But truly, Raymond Cho deserves a gong for his fine performance. If a less competent actor is cast as An Dehai, the effect may be different. Ruco Chan was invited to act in this series and my feeling is he was offered the role of An Dehai. He would have made An Dehai more suspicious as to where his loyalty lies but no doubt he would have given a manly interpretation to An Dehai. What is great about Raymond Cho’s interpretation is his An Dehai is upright and righteous in his own way. Yes he is corrupted but he is not maliciously mean like Chan Fuk. He is a go getter and ambitious but he would never betray his friends like what Tim Sau did. He is also susceptible to love but he won’t for love throw away reason like what Seung Hei did. In a way he is Sam Shun except more serious, less silly and much manlier. He is brave, he stands up for himself, even in death it was in a way by his own rules. A fantastic performance even if the writing for An Dehai falters a little in the middle. The Confidant without An Dehai will be very different because everyone is either so desperately stupid or so cowardly passive.  An Dehai represents that proactive gutsy guy and Raymond Cho is the embodiment of THAT An Dehai The Confidant shows us.


Oh An Dehai, I shall miss you so!!!

By the way raise your right hand if you are one of those who have called The Confidant as The Confident. I swear my Engrish is dam powderful somedimes.


>> You will also find this article with comments at Jaynestars.com 


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05 December 2012

THE CONFIDANT / 大太監 [TVB][2012] : The Roundabout Plot of the Confidant [O]

Written by Funn Lim


The following are not episode recaps but are ramblings and torrents of disbelief for The Confidant <大太監>. All merely personal opinion.


SPOILERS ... SPOILERS ... SPOILERS



Released in : 2012
Cast-Character : Wikipedia

Watched until episode 22….
Let’s forget about episode 20. Or even episode 21. Go straight to episode 22 and then let’s forget about everything that has developed since episode 20 because episode 22 is back to square 1. I am frustrated at how the writer is bending his or her or their backs to make Cixi the good guy. When Cian seems nice, now in episode 22 we are told.. dang dang dang dang …. those are gong rolls by the way…Cian is back to “up to no good” stance. She has never really felt sorry for what she did and she says with gritted teeth “My biggest mistake is to beg for forgiveness from that Cixi. I am an Empress Dowager for god’s sake!! Why am I subjecting myself to that insulting humiliation of being second to that Cixi?!” and then she vows to destroy Cixi by destroying everyone around her, starting with An De Hai. So I was wrong. It may seem An De Hai never turned back, he in fact has a good relationship with his few best friends, best being Linying of course and An De Hai seems to know his days is up as he says to Lianying “If anything should happen to me, all my money is yours, I only ask you take care of Siu Chai for me, as I would take care of Sin Yung for you if anything bad should happen to you.” It means An De Hai is surely dying in the next few episodes thanks to Cian.

And this I do not get. Why on earth is Cian back to no good when viewers must be pitying her by now and wondering why that Cixi is so stubborn and vindictive and mean? Well simple! Like I said series is bending its back to show Cixi the misunderstood one and so by showing Cian is back to no good meaning she has never really changed or regretted her actions, it shows Cixi was right to doubt her and then to boycott her and then to treat her badly! Simple! To TVB all conflict is 1 + 1 equals the number TVB wants you to believe. I hate that sudden development. By trying to justify Cixi, and by making Cian the unrelentless small minded petty stupid jealous woman she is, shows how simplistic this series is. I want Cian to have good and bad side, but that is not to be. I want Cixi to be wrong but she is always right. There is nothing complicated about Cixi and Cian. And that is why this series’ storytelling is god awful if not for the performances.

Take for instance another line of story. The eunuch natural right to a loving relationship. I GET IT! OF COURSE I GET IT! Eunuch even if without his manhood deserves love, craves love, finds love, has love and is natural to love and want to be loved. I! GET! IT! So why is this theme being repeated again and again and again to the point that Cixi even approves of Lianying and Sin Yung OPENLY “dui sik” meaning intended for one another but not marrying as that would be a scandal. Cian begs Cixi to let An De Hai marry his Siu Chai. Seung Hei looking at princess He Shuo who is back by the way, longingly and sure enough will probably go back to love mode. Cian begging Seung Hei to forgive her for her sins of tearing the love birds apart. I suspect she was acting only in light of the ending. And in one unforgivably stupid dialogue and scene which is well acted but still stupid, An De Hai, and everyone laments the fact that “Why the emperor can do anything he wants, marry the woman he loves and we eunuchs can’t even love openly? It is unfair!”

Stupid, because he is the emperor. He is your master. And didn’t they for 2 episodes try to persuade Cixi to let the emperor marry his Bao Yin? Does that show the emperor can marry anyone he loves? No, he still has to beg, pout, be angry, etc before he can marry Bao Yin. And we all know how Prince Gong threatened Cixi with that letter (remember that letter?) before Cixi agrees to the marriage. No, emperor can’t do anything in here without mommy says yes and mommy won’t say yes before Prince Gong go nuclear with his threats. But best was when Cixi threatened Prince Gong back, Prince Gong said, “You can threaten me all you want, if I fall, I will be sure to drag you with me to hell”.

What a man! But what a stupid scene for the eunuchs. And that was when I threw my hands up in the air and scream “I!!!!!!!!!! GET!!!!!!!!!!! IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

Now can we move on? Nope because back to Cian and back to square 1.

This series was amazing in episode 20, but the rest was “can do, can do” or in Chinese “ma ma fu fu”. It will be ending soon but from the looks of it Cixi will never be the villain. She is the good guy. She won’t go crazy or bad. But will this series end with Tong Zhi’s death? I do not doubt Cian’s love for Tong Zhi even if she is manipulating his love in a strange non manipulating way. Since Cian is dying soon, I suppose she will in TVB world die when Tong Zhi dies which means Tong Zhi’s death will be her wake up call? That she should stop being so damn petty? Maybe not. I am giving TVB too much credit in being subtle and yet meaningful.

But both Cian and Cixi are both stubborn and both petty in frustrating ways which is not giving this series a chance to tell a bigger conflict, a bigger story. Right now despite the wide angles of Heng Dian’s fake Forbidden City which is really the best thing in this series apart from the performances, the story sucks by not realizing its full potential.

And go back 2 episodes ago, where got Palace choose “sau lui” at night or so early in the morning? Easy to explain. TVB probably could only book that time for filming. Heng Dian is darn busy. And in some shots I can hear loud chatters (probably fans by the side? Can’t the director say SHUT UP?!) and in one shot, I can hear loud music blaring, probably another series filming some dance scenes. In a way it is a very noisy and happening place, in a way quite distracting. Destroys the feel of the place being the foreboding Forbidden Palace. I am sure in the Mainland China series you can hear all those sounds but since voices are dubbed, you hear echo. In TVB, credit to them for maintaining their integrity in NOT dubbing or rather by recording on site, I don’t mind the sounds. It was just funny in a distracting way or maybe distracting in a funny way which is a more apt description.

For a series with so many people, other people are not getting enough screen time or character development. The usually loud and annoying Natalie Tong gave a subdued performance but she has so little screen time, which may explain why I like her in here thus far. Nancy Wu did a good job but her role is getting lesser and lesser and less and less important. Even Lianying stopped being important. In fact everyone seems underused. I am not sure where all the time went. All I know is people walk in and out of a scene. Chan Fuk is back and that is annoying. He should be dead by now. A lot of people should be dead by now but recycling villains is seriously boring when these villains can’t do much.

At this point, this series survives on performances. But if you look at the story, it is standard ordinary stuff with some stupid moments thrown in and some amazingly idiotic dialogue with some very difficult to understand words just so to make it sound like it was back in those days when it the end it sounds pretentious. I want to love this series but right now, I am liking it for very specific reasons. And the story isn’t one of them. A suggestion to TVB; why not try following the real history? Because real history in this case makes more drama than this insipid so called drama. Waste of talent for the actors.

I hope when this series is done with the Cian conflict, it will show us a better more bigger conflict to end it with a bang. Or like I said, end it with Tong Zhi’s death to make Cian realise whatever she planned are just plain silly and a waste of time.


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