Just my musings on the recent character posters and videos. The latest drama poster of the dragon in the mountain hinted at something big the production team is holding. This could mean anything – the drama, or a huge spoiler. The recent drop of official character announcement promos provides intriguing details.

Tang Lici

The hero stands amidst gingko trees while playing his flute, seeking cause and effect (adventure or karma). The gingko tree symbolizes peace, hope, and vitality. The fox’s dance is alluring, arrogant, and admirable, but it hides a monstrous secret. From the original source, Tang Lici is strong but he is not necessarily healthy. His hair is silver ombre; black hair signifying his mortality while the white represents his past identity.

In the promo video, he plays the flute and zither, a reflection of his genuine feelings (usually sadness) as well as his lethal weapons of choice. From the original source, he can also play the pipa. He survives and gets ahead through strategy (chess). He is extremely cunning, like a fox, yet is lonely in his cold desolate heart. He is everyone’s savior and shoulders the burden of love and hate in the martial arts world. From the outside, he has everything that anyone could want, yet he has nothing at all. He experiences the seven attachments before the turbulence in the world calls for him.

In another poster, he rides the dragon dressed in black dragon scale hanfu with silver hair while playing a blue flute. Unlike past posters, the dragon has scales and spikes with less fur. Also, there are no white fur feathers flying in the wind. The hero’s crown is also blue with spikes. The blue may indicate turbulent water while black and spikes portrays a transformed state from his past self. Maybe a reflection of his heart or karma? How can it be like this? Looking forward to the story!

A Shui / Ah Shei

She holds an umbrella protecting her from the rain. She is dressed in all white signifying purity and goodness. From the actress’ post, she is alone and heartbroken. The wind is cold and bleak, her life filled with sadness devoid of any warmth and understanding. Even still, her sadness is charming, like a beautiful painting. She stands amidst bamboo sprouts, symbolizing her resilient nature and perhaps connection to the bamboo forest.

In another poster, she stands amidst jasmine flowers. The flower represents love, romance, sensuality, and grace. It is delicate and associated with purity and divinity. However, the flowers are tainted with blood, suggesting that love involves pain and sacrifice or that her purity has been sullied. In promo video, she is seen offering her blood to the fallen hero. She is compassionate and takes care of others.

Although her character aligns with the original source as well as her relationship to Tang Lici, it seems some details of her mysterious life have changed and her character is more central to the overarching storyline. From other materials, her significance to the male hero is one of fate or karma. A chance or destined meeting? The winds and clouds are uncertain, and the fate/ karma that awaits them is unknown. This is very interesting and I’m already excited for the plot.

Edit: the little white flowers could also be from a magnolia tree, signifying nobility and purity.

It’s interesting how so many character on the posters have a connection to a specific plant/flower.

I see maple, cherry blossom, jasmine, wisteria and, of course, peonies. 

There are more, red plum blossoms and orchids. I was surprised with the wisteria instead of the willow tree, but it appears to be more fitting for the character.

Zhong Chunji

She appears in light shades of lavender while peering up in aspiration at the hanging leaves of the maple tree. The maple tree symbolizes protection from negative energy. Her hair is adorned with purple butterflies and parted in a way that appears to depict the feminine. In the video, she wields the sword arrogantly, her youthful face exuding confidence and sassiness. The colors of the maple leaves are a vibrant orange red, giving off an energy that reflects Zhong Chunji’s dynamic character, one part chivalrous and one part something else.

In another poster, she is dressed in luxury and her sword is unsheathed with traces of blood. Unlike her weapon from the original source, a dagger that can cut through anything, the sword here appears pink and cute. But she is not cute. She stands on a sea of red while blue butterflies flutter about her and the red ones appear like splatters of blood in the background as she looks onward. What has she seen? From other materials, her significance to the male hero is one of redemption or salvation. This is quite interesting, curious about her story.

Liu Yan

He is awash in purple while he strums the strings of the dragon-headed pipa under the shade of the wisteria tree, his gaze hard and steely. He is a skilled musician and master in the sound killing technique, the strings vibrating gut wrenching tunes seducing those to succumb to his will. Like the symbol for the wisteria tree, his hidden facade exudes friendship and charisma which can lure unsuspecting others into his trap.

In another poster, he is seen hovering above, behind him a tidal wave that ends in an ominous tail. His larger than life hand gives off an oppressive feeling. However, it appears he has another side. A transparent jellyfish flows in the corner, suggesting weakness, passivity in entanglements, or acceptance. In other materials, the wisteria flower blooms around him, implying humility and reflection. His significance to the male hero is that of misguided hate. Looking forward to how his story unfolds.

Xi Fang Tao

Hiding in pink, XFT flirts with the peach blossom branch, “whip it out” and around, twirling prettily under a rain of peach blossom leaves. Peach blossoms topple the hair, peeking out along the pink hanfu, blooming on masked skin. Peach blossoms in the tree, peach blossoms in the hand, peach blossoms to smell, peach blossoms flying in the air, peach blossoms everywhere!

The peach blossom tree signifies prosperity or an admirer, possibly drawing one in to behold its beauty. From the original novel, the most magnificently beautiful woman . . . is a man disguised as a woman. Because beauty is to be coveted, beauty is to be stolen, and beauty is to deceive.

In a different poster XFT is sideways with flowing pink fur, giving the impression of perversion, hiding the peach blossom's secret. The pink robe appears peculiar at the waist, as if undone in the front. XFT’s greatest weapon is pointy and sharp, like the hairpin, and the way to prosperity is through calculation and ruthlessness. The peach blossom character’s significance to the male hero is conspiracy. To what end is the scheming cruelty? To what abominable lengths will the peach blossom go?