A wealthy lawyer who has lost all memories of his past travels to a rural village where a woman he once loved now lives with her son.A wealthy lawyer who has lost all memories of his past travels to a rural village where a woman he once loved now lives with her son.A wealthy lawyer who has lost all memories of his past travels to a rural village where a woman he once loved now lives with her son.
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Liang Mu Cheng was born into privilege until it all disappeared in a moment when she was a tween. Instead of working to become a concert pianist she then had to work to survive. She also ends up w/ a peeper-creeper for a step-dude. She's doing her daily hustle when a convertible driving rich @$$hole crashes into her life.
Rich dude is Ren Guang Xi, a lackluster law student and lustful, but cynical, womanizer. They end up trading insults at the police station & Mu Cheng believes she'll never have to see that arrogant jerk again. Fate has them colliding often, though, as Mu Cheng's family operates one of the campus eateries. RGX, always looking for the next conquest, finds out from his friends that the 'lunch girl' is hot but she turns down every guy that asks for a date. RGX bets that he can conquer her w/in 24 hrs w/o even knowing who she is or what she looks like. When he sees who she is, & that she hates him already, he is undeterred. This is a non-spoiler review, so the following is the scantest of summaries - After the opening eps in which these 2 fall in love, they are separated in a heartbreaking manner. It is all skillfully portrayed. They meet back up again when the quick-tempered RGX must do community service.
If you are used to Chinese features and this one feels differently from the start, that's because it's Taiwanese. They are almost nothing alike except for the Mandarin. While Chinese historical & fantasy pieces are superb, Chinese modern-day features are dreamlike, often clumsy and substandard in the categories of acting, dialogue, wardrobe, character development - and virtually every other aspect - but they have a prozac-like quality that keeps me tuned-in. AC, rated 8.5 on MDL, feels real by comparison. It's either 21 90-minute eps or 34 45-minute ones.
As for the players, Ady An is adorable & soulful as our FL. Her looks garner all the wrong attention. Vanness Wu plays n'er-do-well RGX. His voice is extra nice. Respecting nothing, he uses people as playthings & tosses them aside. He's never taken a bus anywhere - His mama is rich & connected, his lawyer is top-notch, & his medical records provide an excuse for his abhorrent behavior. He's spoiled, he's angry, & he's taking it out on the world. He's also "an expert in pretending to be strong. He puts up a wall when he runs into difficulties." Lin Mei Xiu practically steals the show as Hua Tian Xi Shi, Tuo Ye's mother. The viewer just wants to hug her. Chris Wu is also good as Hua Tuo Ye. He's had a crush on our FL for yrs. So he pines away. And he waits. And he pines. And waits & pines, waits & pines, waits & pines. I'm convinced that if one likes the right person, meaning someone who will be a good match, it's ALWAYS mutual. People who get caught up in obsessive 1-sided crushes are just focusing on themselves, what they want, & a projection of what they perceive the object of their affection to be, not the real person. If you believe you love someone but s/he isn't interested, then don't wait around for a moment. Just keep working on yourself. Maybe they are the one for you, but YOU aren't ready yet. (Whatever else is going on in our lives, we should never stop improving. The better we each are, the better all our lives will be). Never settle: 1 reason why relationships are in such chaos these days is b/c people hook-up out of convenience, not for true love. The acting is good-VG. Even though RGX is alittle much at times, I love him at every moment. The director has the characters devolve into giving monotone speeches w/ unnatural pauses in the 2nd half of the show, which is irritating, but we can't blame the actors for that; they showed what they can do in the 1st half. Benny Wen plays the child Liang Xiao Le and he is luminous at every moment he's onscreen.
The romance is excellent & this pair delivers. Unfortunately, the romance starts to lag in the later episodes. They manage some sizzle & steam, but they missed even more opportunities to get cookin. It could have been much better. There's plenty of good cheer & laughter. RGX arrives in town for his community service and, per village customs, they immediately get him drunk. He's passed out & Tuo Ye is charged w/ putting his rival to bed. There's a new blanket for RGX, still in its store packaging. Tuo Ye rips it open & drops it on Guang Xi's body without bothering to spread it out or tuck it in. The whole scene is so dude-like it's amusing. It's little touches like that that make a production special.
The show has several worthy themes. How the entitled trample those w/ less power, particularly male on female abuse is the main theme. We see at least 3 abused women who must be rescued from various socioeconomic situations. 'Don't go it alone' is a theme: "There are many ways to love. Perhaps I didn't choose the best way." Going it alone and lack of communication cause many problems. Everyone thinks they know how to fix things but they often think too highly of themselves and the impact they have to make improvements while at the same time they underestimate their ability to screw things up. Another theme is nearly ubiquitous, as there's not many Asian features that don't deal w/ toxic pride, often in the form of rigid and controlling parents. Parenting should be about forming the child into the best version of h/h-self to ultimately secure the child's happiness - which ultimately benefits society. Unfortunately, parenting often becomes about the parent and the parent's pride, which is why we see rageful parents suing schools instead of correcting their errant offspring. "Fairy godmother, this place is so cool! Did you ever bring {your son} here?" "{He} was a busy child. He had language mental arithmetic and essay writing lessons..." In our pursuit of excellence we've neglected the most important thing: We don't live. If you don't have downtime w/ your family you are neglecting the most important thing. That is when you bond w/ them.
"Some only feel happy and safe when they deceive themselves." Refusing to live the lie is a theme. Instead of worrying about the repercussions of doing what's right and letting the truth come out, our FL worries about the impact on her and her family. We witness her stepmother prefer to believe a lie, rather than face the truth. "This is no time for you to think about your stepmother, who has deceived even herself. If you really love her you should let her know {the truth}," RGX tells Mu Cheng. One of the benefits of hitting bottom is becoming familiar w/ the truth. People that become familiar w/ the truth start to see the lies everywhere. People love comfortable lies. We all like to think of ourselves as better than we are, and if we stay busy, we never have to pause and reflect. We are the hare, lies are the turtle, and the lies will always overtake us, in the end, b/c they never stop until they do. Persevering through hardship is a theme as demonstrated by the following quotes: "What is special about the Lotus? It grows in the mud, yet it remains pristine." "Do you know? One time, when Bach was performing in a palace, his cello was sabotaged. All the strings were broken except the second string. Just as he was about to make a fool of himself, he composed an entire tune using only his 2nd string. That tune is now known as Concerto in G major. It teaches us that no matter how difficult life gets, you can always produce a masterpiece." "Get up on your own after falling and don't blame everyone else while you're on the ground." This is all evidence of quality writing.
Since I loved AC from the start, it hurts to say that as the eps play by it declines. Things get slightly soap-opera w/ big melodrama around ep21 and the show never fully recovers from that trend. There's also plenty of head-scratchers & things that don't make sense along w/ things that could have been better; but there's no major eye-rollers - AC never becomes insultingly stupid. As for the sour notes: The drawn out pace that starts around ep21 continues to the end, mostly. Along w/ that are long speeches, unnaturally long pauses mid-sentence, & logical pitfalls. The criminal case & the trial are oversimplified & all-out nonsensical. The viewer must put effort into disregarding a string of substandard dialogue & plot points in the latter eps. Mu Cheng becomes shut down & monotone - that may not be unrealistic given that she is an abuse survivor. Going from trauma to being the victim of longstanding predatory abuse, her behavior, while exasperating at times, is probably spot-on. Our ML vacillates erratically, & it's basically fantasy that RGX would become such an imposing & successful attorney in 3 short years. That whole go-it-alone after the bad guys thing is ridiculous. Hollywood does it too much - it's apparently a problem on an international scale, scarring otherwise good entertainment. Then our FL goes-it-alone in ep31 and my head started throbbing: It made no sense and it was painful to watch. The wardrobe vacillates between excellent & drab. Most notably, RGX 's low-cut tops are silly, not sexy.
The first 2/3 of the show is a delight, though. It starts so strong that I watched it straight through & never turned to anything else. If the last 1/3 was as good as the first 2/3rds, the rating would be close to 9. Unfortunately, it sinks into a morass of poor quality melodrama, never to crack the surface again. I would still choose to watch it again for the 1st time as the positives eclipse the negatives. If you are interested in other shows from Taiwan, watch Age of Rebellion. It is excellent.
QUOTE📢
You're only turning yourself into a piece of trash.
If you don't work hard, no one can help you.
〰🖍 IMHO
📣6.3 📝7 🎭7 💓7 🦋7 🌞6 🎨6 ⚡4 🎵/🔊7.3 😅3 😭4 😱4 😯4 😖3 🤔4.5 💤4.3 🔚8
Age 13+ $h!+ b@$+@rd Sexual situations including prostitution - relatively mild @ 4 or 5/10.
Re-📺? The 1st 2/3 only so probably not.
🐫
Rich dude is Ren Guang Xi, a lackluster law student and lustful, but cynical, womanizer. They end up trading insults at the police station & Mu Cheng believes she'll never have to see that arrogant jerk again. Fate has them colliding often, though, as Mu Cheng's family operates one of the campus eateries. RGX, always looking for the next conquest, finds out from his friends that the 'lunch girl' is hot but she turns down every guy that asks for a date. RGX bets that he can conquer her w/in 24 hrs w/o even knowing who she is or what she looks like. When he sees who she is, & that she hates him already, he is undeterred. This is a non-spoiler review, so the following is the scantest of summaries - After the opening eps in which these 2 fall in love, they are separated in a heartbreaking manner. It is all skillfully portrayed. They meet back up again when the quick-tempered RGX must do community service.
If you are used to Chinese features and this one feels differently from the start, that's because it's Taiwanese. They are almost nothing alike except for the Mandarin. While Chinese historical & fantasy pieces are superb, Chinese modern-day features are dreamlike, often clumsy and substandard in the categories of acting, dialogue, wardrobe, character development - and virtually every other aspect - but they have a prozac-like quality that keeps me tuned-in. AC, rated 8.5 on MDL, feels real by comparison. It's either 21 90-minute eps or 34 45-minute ones.
As for the players, Ady An is adorable & soulful as our FL. Her looks garner all the wrong attention. Vanness Wu plays n'er-do-well RGX. His voice is extra nice. Respecting nothing, he uses people as playthings & tosses them aside. He's never taken a bus anywhere - His mama is rich & connected, his lawyer is top-notch, & his medical records provide an excuse for his abhorrent behavior. He's spoiled, he's angry, & he's taking it out on the world. He's also "an expert in pretending to be strong. He puts up a wall when he runs into difficulties." Lin Mei Xiu practically steals the show as Hua Tian Xi Shi, Tuo Ye's mother. The viewer just wants to hug her. Chris Wu is also good as Hua Tuo Ye. He's had a crush on our FL for yrs. So he pines away. And he waits. And he pines. And waits & pines, waits & pines, waits & pines. I'm convinced that if one likes the right person, meaning someone who will be a good match, it's ALWAYS mutual. People who get caught up in obsessive 1-sided crushes are just focusing on themselves, what they want, & a projection of what they perceive the object of their affection to be, not the real person. If you believe you love someone but s/he isn't interested, then don't wait around for a moment. Just keep working on yourself. Maybe they are the one for you, but YOU aren't ready yet. (Whatever else is going on in our lives, we should never stop improving. The better we each are, the better all our lives will be). Never settle: 1 reason why relationships are in such chaos these days is b/c people hook-up out of convenience, not for true love. The acting is good-VG. Even though RGX is alittle much at times, I love him at every moment. The director has the characters devolve into giving monotone speeches w/ unnatural pauses in the 2nd half of the show, which is irritating, but we can't blame the actors for that; they showed what they can do in the 1st half. Benny Wen plays the child Liang Xiao Le and he is luminous at every moment he's onscreen.
The romance is excellent & this pair delivers. Unfortunately, the romance starts to lag in the later episodes. They manage some sizzle & steam, but they missed even more opportunities to get cookin. It could have been much better. There's plenty of good cheer & laughter. RGX arrives in town for his community service and, per village customs, they immediately get him drunk. He's passed out & Tuo Ye is charged w/ putting his rival to bed. There's a new blanket for RGX, still in its store packaging. Tuo Ye rips it open & drops it on Guang Xi's body without bothering to spread it out or tuck it in. The whole scene is so dude-like it's amusing. It's little touches like that that make a production special.
The show has several worthy themes. How the entitled trample those w/ less power, particularly male on female abuse is the main theme. We see at least 3 abused women who must be rescued from various socioeconomic situations. 'Don't go it alone' is a theme: "There are many ways to love. Perhaps I didn't choose the best way." Going it alone and lack of communication cause many problems. Everyone thinks they know how to fix things but they often think too highly of themselves and the impact they have to make improvements while at the same time they underestimate their ability to screw things up. Another theme is nearly ubiquitous, as there's not many Asian features that don't deal w/ toxic pride, often in the form of rigid and controlling parents. Parenting should be about forming the child into the best version of h/h-self to ultimately secure the child's happiness - which ultimately benefits society. Unfortunately, parenting often becomes about the parent and the parent's pride, which is why we see rageful parents suing schools instead of correcting their errant offspring. "Fairy godmother, this place is so cool! Did you ever bring {your son} here?" "{He} was a busy child. He had language mental arithmetic and essay writing lessons..." In our pursuit of excellence we've neglected the most important thing: We don't live. If you don't have downtime w/ your family you are neglecting the most important thing. That is when you bond w/ them.
"Some only feel happy and safe when they deceive themselves." Refusing to live the lie is a theme. Instead of worrying about the repercussions of doing what's right and letting the truth come out, our FL worries about the impact on her and her family. We witness her stepmother prefer to believe a lie, rather than face the truth. "This is no time for you to think about your stepmother, who has deceived even herself. If you really love her you should let her know {the truth}," RGX tells Mu Cheng. One of the benefits of hitting bottom is becoming familiar w/ the truth. People that become familiar w/ the truth start to see the lies everywhere. People love comfortable lies. We all like to think of ourselves as better than we are, and if we stay busy, we never have to pause and reflect. We are the hare, lies are the turtle, and the lies will always overtake us, in the end, b/c they never stop until they do. Persevering through hardship is a theme as demonstrated by the following quotes: "What is special about the Lotus? It grows in the mud, yet it remains pristine." "Do you know? One time, when Bach was performing in a palace, his cello was sabotaged. All the strings were broken except the second string. Just as he was about to make a fool of himself, he composed an entire tune using only his 2nd string. That tune is now known as Concerto in G major. It teaches us that no matter how difficult life gets, you can always produce a masterpiece." "Get up on your own after falling and don't blame everyone else while you're on the ground." This is all evidence of quality writing.
Since I loved AC from the start, it hurts to say that as the eps play by it declines. Things get slightly soap-opera w/ big melodrama around ep21 and the show never fully recovers from that trend. There's also plenty of head-scratchers & things that don't make sense along w/ things that could have been better; but there's no major eye-rollers - AC never becomes insultingly stupid. As for the sour notes: The drawn out pace that starts around ep21 continues to the end, mostly. Along w/ that are long speeches, unnaturally long pauses mid-sentence, & logical pitfalls. The criminal case & the trial are oversimplified & all-out nonsensical. The viewer must put effort into disregarding a string of substandard dialogue & plot points in the latter eps. Mu Cheng becomes shut down & monotone - that may not be unrealistic given that she is an abuse survivor. Going from trauma to being the victim of longstanding predatory abuse, her behavior, while exasperating at times, is probably spot-on. Our ML vacillates erratically, & it's basically fantasy that RGX would become such an imposing & successful attorney in 3 short years. That whole go-it-alone after the bad guys thing is ridiculous. Hollywood does it too much - it's apparently a problem on an international scale, scarring otherwise good entertainment. Then our FL goes-it-alone in ep31 and my head started throbbing: It made no sense and it was painful to watch. The wardrobe vacillates between excellent & drab. Most notably, RGX 's low-cut tops are silly, not sexy.
The first 2/3 of the show is a delight, though. It starts so strong that I watched it straight through & never turned to anything else. If the last 1/3 was as good as the first 2/3rds, the rating would be close to 9. Unfortunately, it sinks into a morass of poor quality melodrama, never to crack the surface again. I would still choose to watch it again for the 1st time as the positives eclipse the negatives. If you are interested in other shows from Taiwan, watch Age of Rebellion. It is excellent.
QUOTE📢
You're only turning yourself into a piece of trash.
If you don't work hard, no one can help you.
〰🖍 IMHO
📣6.3 📝7 🎭7 💓7 🦋7 🌞6 🎨6 ⚡4 🎵/🔊7.3 😅3 😭4 😱4 😯4 😖3 🤔4.5 💤4.3 🔚8
Age 13+ $h!+ b@$+@rd Sexual situations including prostitution - relatively mild @ 4 or 5/10.
Re-📺? The 1st 2/3 only so probably not.
🐫
- 50fiftillidideeBrain
- Nov 1, 2023
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- Next Stop, Happiness
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