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The Heir chinese drama review
Completed
The Heir
1 people found this review helpful
by Avi
5 days ago
42 of 42 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

One Big Family (on a Town Scale) Thwarted by a One-Man Villain

Most of the Heir is a beautiful inky tale about the people who can hurt us the most and legacies fighting tooth and nail to have a future. If you're interested in that, welcome to the show.

FL's Family: Li

The Li family feuds may be frustrating at first, but it would be strange to watch a series like this and not expect and want to see characters suffer and grow. Thankfully our female lead gets some punches in and rises through her skills, dedication and love for the art of ink making as well as her love for the family that stands by her.

Despite being one of Zhen's biggest naysayers, her uncle is one of the best side-characters with a great arc throughout the drama. In historical dramaland, disabilities often are either faked, miraculously cured or characters with disabilities are evil without reason. The Heir redeems Zhen's explosive disabled uncle well. Cured of his hatred rather than his disability, he remains himself and shows that his old injuries do not hold him back.

Her eight grandfather is the typical old man, who has seen too much and understands too much to go easy on his granddaughter. Nevertheless, their bond only strengthens throughout the drama. As seventh grandmother's favorite, Zhen interacts a lot with her too. It's interesting to see how one matriarch builds up another. Even though there are a lot of strong grandmothers in historical dramas (like in the recently released A Splendid Match), I wouldn't say other FL's are so explicitly taught.

Zhen's mother has a bittersweet backstory and always has her daughter's back. Zhen's friendship Hua was also very pleasing to watch.

ML's Family: Luo

Wenqian, the ML, is a very human character instead of standing above the FL. They both have setbacks throughout the story. The male lead appears more toward the middle and last half of the drama. His story starts as the classic revenge story, except things don't go as planned. Overall, the characters in The Heir are not as good at scheming as the usual leads, which was refreshing to see. They also don't need to be because unlike in other dramas, the characters here never aim to play their game in the capital (except for the villains).

While I'm not particular fond of the met-as-children-once trope for the main couple, it worked here. Zhen and Wenqian are so cute and awkward, they are simply endearing.

Wensong, the ML's older brother, is one of the best characters the drama has to offer because he cares about ink to an unnatural extend, and it is one of the few crimes this drama commits that he is the only character of his unhinged type. Though, Li Zhen and her uncle come close, it would have been nice to get more mad geniuses.

The elders of their family are an interesting bunch. I would have enjoyed some more time with the aunt.

Villain's Family: Tian

Let's get to the, imo, weakest part of the drama. Two of the Tian family members are almost comically evil and if this were another drama, they wouldn't stand out so much. Alas, in a world filled with characters who have business sense and their own levels of integrity, if of their time, they are a bit too on-the-nose. The main bad guy, Tian Benchang, was exhausting to watch almost immediately. Most times he is on screen, I hope he disappears again. At least he gets what is coming for him.

The Heir is best when it is about the ink, its process, its competition and its consequences. Sadly, the villain overshadows those challenges by being vicious on the personal level only. Despite his non-stop-scheming taking up time, he also suddenly always has the best ink there is in Huizhou. He was simply badly balanced, so the part in which he appears most - the penultimate arc - drags the drama down.

The only light in the dark for the Tian family is Ronghua, who gets dealt a bad hand by being tied to a family which could not appreciate her less. Apart from Zhen's uncle, Ronghua has the best arc in this drama. In fact, I would have liked to see more of her struggles as a nobel lady.

From Family to City to Country

That the nationalism might become strong in this one was to be expected, sadly I don't think the drama balances the story expanding from the family business to the city industry to national craftsmanship as well as it could. Through Wensong's involvement in the army, there are mentions of the national situation from the start, but they are made too unimportant when his punishment after failing to secure military funding is inconsequential. Tian Benchang also overstays his welcome as the big bad, so that ink as the national treasure is squeezed into the last four to three episodes.
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