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- Título original: 炽夏
- Também conhecido como: Chi Xia , Fall , The West Wind Blows Toward the Evening , Xi Feng Xiang Wan , Zhui Luo , 坠落 , 墜落 , 熾夏 , 西风向晚
- Diretor: Hsu Chao Jen
- Roteirista: Gao Jia Qi, Tong Shuang Shuang
- Gêneros: Romance, Juventude
Onde assistir Zhui Luo
Elenco e Créditos
- Bao Shang EnZhou WanPapel Principal
- Daniel ZhouLu Xi XiaoPapel Principal
- Zhao Ying BoJiang Yan [Xi Xiao's half-brother]Papel Secundário
- Xu Yuan Li NaGu Meng [Zhou Wan's classmate]Papel Secundário
- Ke ChunLuo He [Hooligan]Papel Secundário
- Fu Wei LunJiang Fan [Xi Xiao's friend]Papel Secundário
Resenhas
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Never-Ending Summer, Never-Ending MisunderstandingI finally finished Never-Ending Summer, and after reading so many comments, I honestly feel like a lot of people completely misunderstood the story.
Everyone keeps asking, "Why did Zhou Wan leave?" "Why didn't she chase after Lu Xixiao?" "The plot doesn't make sense."
But I don't think the problem is the writing.
I think people expect every romance to have simple answers and happy endings. This drama was never trying to be that. It was about trauma, guilt, impossible choices, and how love alone can't magically fix everything.
Let's start with Zhou Wan.
People judge her for the choices she made, but very few people stop to think about why she made them.
When she was only ten years old, her father died after his business failed. Then her own mother abandoned her and even took the insurance money that should have gone to Zhou Wan and her grandmother. Her grandmother became the only family she had left, and a few years later, she became seriously ill.
Imagine being fifteen or sixteen years old and realising the only person who has ever truly loved you might die because you can't afford surgery.
No teenager should have to carry that responsibility.
Zhou Wan was one of the smartest students in school. She always ranked near the top of her class, but she never really got to be a child. Her childhood ended the day her father died, and her mother walked away.
So yes, she became desperate.
When she discovered the connection between her mother and Lu Xixiao's father, she didn't immediately think, "Great, I'll use this."
She resisted it.
She kept telling herself she didn't want to become a bad person. She felt guilty before she even approached Lu Xixiao. She knew what she was considering wasn't right, but she also believed it was the only chance she had to save her grandmother.
Was it morally right?
No.
Was it understandable?
Absolutely.
Now let's talk about Lu Xixiao because people act like Zhou Wan ruined his life, when the drama itself tells us that isn't true.
His trauma didn't begin with Zhou Wan.
It began the day he watched his mother die by suicide right in front of him.
No child should ever witness something like that.
On top of that, the adults around him failed him completely. His father cheated on his mother, and instead of protecting her, the family cared more about maintaining appearances than her happiness. Their household never really felt like a family. It felt like a business empire where emotions always came second.
Of course, that would leave scars.
Then Zhou Wan entered his life.
For the first time since losing his mother, he slowly started smiling again. He trusted someone. He allowed himself to love someone. She became a place where he finally felt safe.
She didn't create his healing overnight, but she became a huge part of it.
Then came the stabbing incident.
People forget how much guilt Zhou Wan was already carrying before that happened. She blamed herself for approaching Lu Xixiao under false pretences, even if her reasons came from desperation rather than malice.
The stabbing only made that guilt worse.
Then his grandfather threatened her and made it very clear that she should leave Lu Xixiao alone.
At that point, Zhou Wan genuinely believed everyone's life would be better without her.
She looked at Lu Xixiao and saw someone who had money, status, opportunities, and a powerful family. She couldn't see that emotionally, he was just as broken as she was.
So she left.
Not because she stopped loving him.
Because she loved him enough to believe he'd be happier without her.
Was she wrong?
Yes.
But she didn't know she was wrong.
That's what makes the story tragic.
Then people ask why she didn't chase him after the 10-year reunion?
Honestly...why would she?
She was the one who walked away because she believed she was protecting him. If she suddenly came back acting as if nothing had happened, it would completely contradict everything her character believed.
One of my favourite moments in the drama is when Lu Xixiao finally tells Zhou Wan the truth.
He tells her that she was never the reason for his nightmares, his insomnia, or his emotional struggles.
Those began the day his mother died.
If anything, she was the one person who made those nightmares quieter. She wasn't the cause of his pain.
She was his healing.
When she disappeared, those old wounds simply reopened.
That's a huge difference, and I think a lot of viewers overlook it.
I also don't understand why some people insist on comparing this drama to other romances where the female lead spends years chasing the male lead. These are completely different characters in completely different situations. Zhou Wan leaving because of guilt and then refusing to come back because she still believed it was better for him is perfectly consistent with who she is.
Not every love story needs grand gestures.
Sometimes the biggest act of love is letting someone go because you truly believe they'll have a better life without you, even if you're completely wrong.
That's why the ending worked for me.
Love didn't magically erase ten years of pain.
It gave them the chance to finally understand each other.
Lu Xixiao understood why Zhou Wan left.
Zhou Wan finally understood that she had never been his burden.
She had always been his comfort.
Neither of them was perfect.
Both of them made mistakes.
Both of them hurt each other.
But that's exactly why they felt real.
This drama never asked me to agree with every decision the characters made.
It asked me to understand them.
And to me, that's what made Never-Ending Summer so unforgettable.
⭐ Rating: 10/10.
Sometimes the best stories aren't the ones where everyone makes the right choices.
They're the ones where every choice, even the wrong ones, makes perfect sense once you understand the people making them.
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Never‑Ending Summer (2026) — Review
From the moment I finished the final episode of Never-Ending Summer, I knew this drama would linger with me long after the credits rolled. Adapted from Tian Cu Yu’s web novel Zhui Luo, this 29 episode series directed by Hsu Chao Jen delivers a heartfelt exploration of love, regret, resilience, and redemption that feels both intimately personal and universally resonant. I went in expecting a standard youth romance with a time-skip twist, but what I encountered was a profoundly character driven story that earns its emotional weight through nuanced performances and thoughtful writing. It is, without hesitation, a 10/10 for me.Zhou Wan, portrayed with remarkable depth by Bao Shang’en. Zhou Wan is not your typical flawless heroine; she is resilient yet burdened, intelligent yet flawed by desperation. As a top student facing her grandmother’s life threatening illness and the abandonment by her mother, she makes a calculated decision to approach Lu Xi Xiao. What begins as a strategic move born of necessity evolves into something far more complex.
Bao Shang’en captures the quiet strength and internal conflict of this young woman beautifully. Her expressions convey layers of guilt, longing, and determination that words alone cannot. You feel her isolation, her fierce protectiveness over her grandmother, and the weight of every moral compromise she navigates. In the later timeline, her growth into a capable professional who still carries the scars of youth is portrayed with subtlety and grace watching her confront her past self while refusing to be defined by it is deeply moving.
Opposite her, Daniel Zhou embodies Lu Xi Xiao with a magnetic intensity that perfectly suits the rebellious, wounded heir. Lu Xi Xiao is the quintessential bad boy with a golden heart, but the performance elevates him beyond trope. He is arrogant, fiercely independent, and initially guarded, yet Daniel infuses him with vulnerability that makes his affection for Zhou Wan feel earned and authentic.
Daniel’s portrayal shines in the subtle shifts: the way Lu Xi Xiao’s sharp gaze softens during quiet summer evenings, revealing a young man starved for genuine connection beneath his defiant exterior. We witness his internal battle as he recognizes Zhou Wan’s calculated approach yet chooses to trust her anyway, drawn by her quiet strength.
His protective instincts surface in small, meaningful gestures helping her navigate family pressures or encouraging her dreams while his own artistic passions and strained family ties add rich layers. In the ten year reunion, Daniel masterfully conveys lingering hurt through restrained anger and reluctant tenderness, making Lu Xi Xiao’s gradual thawing feel profoundly real. This depth transforms him into a fully realized character whose growth mirrors the story’s themes of forgiveness and enduring love.
Ten years later, the reunion is charged with unresolved pain. His initial coldness and deliberate difficulties toward her stem not from hatred but from a love he never fully extinguished. The way he gradually lowers his defenses while they collaborate on uncovering truths about a past factory accident adds layers of tension and tenderness. Daniel’s micro expressions and physical presence make Lu Xi Xiao’s emotional journey compelling his quiet realizations and protective instincts shine through even in moments of conflict.
The chemistry between Bao Shang’en and Daniel Zhou is electric and believable. Their early interactions crackle with uncertainty and budding attraction, while the post time skip dynamic is laced with bittersweet familiarity. Height difference, lingering glances, and shared history make every scene between them feel lived in. Whether they are navigating youthful summers filled with small acts of mutual support or confronting workplace challenges and lingering misunderstandings, their connection drives the narrative. The drama excels at showing how love can persist through separation, how misunderstandings rooted in protective lies can fracture even the strongest bonds, and how truth seeking can pave the way back.
What sets Never-Ending Summer apart is its refusal to shy away from emotional complexity. The youthful phase beautifully captures the idealism and fragility of first love. We see Zhou Wan and Lu Xi Xiao supporting each other through family pressures, personal setbacks, and the harsh intrusion of adult realities. Their bond strengthens through shared hardships, but the world intervenes with painful misunderstandings that feel organic rather than contrived. Without revealing too much, certain revelations around family secrets and sacrifices hit hard, forcing both characters to grapple with guilt and forgiveness. These moments elevate the story from simple romance to a meditation on growth and second chances.
In the present timeline, the workplace setting introduces fresh stakes. Their collaboration on the factory accident investigation allows for meaningful character development. Lu Xi Xiao’s evolution from vengeful to understanding, and Zhou Wan’s quiet courage in facing both professional and personal demons, are portrayed with care. The supporting cast adds texture friends like Gu Meng and Jiang Fan provide levity and perspective, while family members represent the complicated ties that shape our leads. Not every side character is deeply fleshed out, but they serve the central relationship effectively.
Visually, the drama is a treat. Warm, sun drenched cinematography in the summer sequences evokes nostalgia and fleeting happiness, contrasting effectively with the cooler, more restrained tones of the later years. The OST complements the mood perfectly, with tracks that underscore tender moments and angsty turning points without overpowering the performances.
Some may critique occasional plot conveniences or pacing in the expanded adaptation from the novel, but for me, these never detracted from the emotional core. The focus remains steadfastly on Zhou Wan and Lu Xi Xiao’s inner worlds their fears, growth, and unwavering pull toward one another. This character focus makes the drama feel intimate and true. It reminded me why stories of youthful passion meeting adult realities can be so powerful: they mirror our own experiences of love lost and, sometimes, rediscovered.
Never-Ending Summer left me with a profound appreciation for its leads’ journeys. Zhou Wan’s quiet determination and Lu Xi Xiao’s fierce loyalty create a romance that feels authentic in its imperfections. The drama doesn’t promise perfection; it shows healing, forgiveness, and the courage to choose love again despite past wounds. For anyone seeking a story rich in emotional depth, stellar acting, and a romance that lingers, this is essential viewing. It perfectly captures why some summers and some loves never truly end.
I HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
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