can someone summarize the story of silver haired guy1. Why is he so obsessed with his leading lady but hate the…
3. His real name is Qi Min and it's not his real family. His father was the Crown Prince who died in the massacre 16y ago because the Sui prince didn't send reinforcements. His mother orchestrated a fire in which the eldest Sui boy died, she burned her own son's face and switched the identities of the boys. She also died in the fire. 1. Due to the fire, he had ugly scars and was forced to wear a mask, and Qian Qian was the only person who looked at him without fear. When Qi Min was 14, his nanny drugged him and a maid so they could create an heir as he was deemed unstable and unfit to rule and the royal bloodline needed to be continued. He later finds out that the maid is Qian Qian. He hates the boy because it's a reminder that it was not his choice to have a child and because with a descendent, he is no longer needed so he could be killed at any time to prevent him from reclaiming the throne. 2. She is from the present time, it's a common trope in chinese dramas.
I love him more in the kunning palace. His character was magnificent, strong, dark, obsessive.. In POJ, he is…
Red flag, authoritative, obsessive and jealous vs green flag, kind, patient and respectful of boundaries. Xie Wei has a lot more common with Qi Min than with Xie Zheng.
I’m going to be eternally angry at the censors for robbing us of two amazing scenes with the leads. I was really…
The 1st one looked weird when they were in motion... and not in a good way. It's the type of thing that looks good on paper, but it's a bad idea in practice.
Regarding the ages of the leads in the drama... this is what happens when you age people up and do not update the chronology of the plot. We know the FL is 18 at the start of the drama, that the massacre happened 16 y ago and that the ML was 5 when his mom commited suicide ( I hope I am not misremembering it, a rewatch will clear this part up). That would mean that FL's parents fled with her as an infant, which doesn't make sense when you factor in the conversation on NYE between FL's dad and Gen He when they decide the name of the baby just and also the alternate universe where ML is 5ish and FL was not born yet. In the novel, FL is 16, ML is 20.
Same thing happened in LLTG, the same screenwriter changed the circumstance under which the FL's mom went to war - in the book FL was 3, the war lasted approx 10 years, when the parents get home she's 14. However, in the drama FL's mom left after giving birth and they came back when FL was 15. From that point on, the characters would either say the war had been ongoing for 10 (like in the book) or 15 years (new timeline for drama), to the confusion of those at home who are trying to keep up with the chronology of the story.
Finally, i finished the drama. At first i gave it a 10/10, but i think i will review it an 8 now. For me, the…
Qian Qian and Qi Min were not compatible - she was a modern woman who cherished her freedom and he was the Crown Prince. Had they gotten married, she would have been one of the many concubines in the royal harem, stuck in the palace for the rest of her life.
Almost all of the emperors I’ve seen in Chinese dramas are either useless, unintelligent and very very stupid.…
The emperors in Love Like The Galaxy, The Double, Story Of Kunning Palace and Youthful Glory were intelligent too (and some of them were really nice people)
https://www.facebook.com/reel/697696090060534/?app=fbl
Better than nothing, i guess.
1. Due to the fire, he had ugly scars and was forced to wear a mask, and Qian Qian was the only person who looked at him without fear. When Qi Min was 14, his nanny drugged him and a maid so they could create an heir as he was deemed unstable and unfit to rule and the royal bloodline needed to be continued. He later finds out that the maid is Qian Qian. He hates the boy because it's a reminder that it was not his choice to have a child and because with a descendent, he is no longer needed so he could be killed at any time to prevent him from reclaiming the throne.
2. She is from the present time, it's a common trope in chinese dramas.
When Yunhe publishes the viewership data for yesterday in 30 min, I will be back with updates.
But they are the exceptions since they wanted to die in the first place.
But the music background was different.
https://mydramalist.com/shows/top_chinese_dramas
Immortality (https://mydramalist.com/54501-hao-yi-xing) has 108k and has not been released (and probably never will)
We know the FL is 18 at the start of the drama, that the massacre happened 16 y ago and that the ML was 5 when his mom commited suicide ( I hope I am not misremembering it, a rewatch will clear this part up).
That would mean that FL's parents fled with her as an infant, which doesn't make sense when you factor in the conversation on NYE between FL's dad and Gen He when they decide the name of the baby just and also the alternate universe where ML is 5ish and FL was not born yet. In the novel, FL is 16, ML is 20.
Same thing happened in LLTG, the same screenwriter changed the circumstance under which the FL's mom went to war - in the book FL was 3, the war lasted approx 10 years, when the parents get home she's 14. However, in the drama FL's mom left after giving birth and they came back when FL was 15. From that point on, the characters would either say the war had been ongoing for 10 (like in the book) or 15 years (new timeline for drama), to the confusion of those at home who are trying to keep up with the chronology of the story.