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A Splendid Match chinese drama review
Completed
A Splendid Match
3 people found this review helpful
by TTR - The Truth Review
15 days ago
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 3
Overall 1.0
Story 3.0
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

This is in the conversation for one of the WORST dramas ever made

It is rare to see a show change its main character as quickly and drastically as this one. In the beginning, the female lead was introduced as a refreshing change of pace. She was a shrewd, calculating and genuinely a strong woman. By episode 9, however, that writing seems to have been discarded. She has devolved into an immature brat who spends her time being lovestruck, not even over the actual ML, but over his adopted nephew, a character who acts like a total closed book. Watching a once-promising, intelligent woman turn into a regressive character over a secondary figure can be quite frustrating. The rest of the show does very little to save itself from this writing. While the actual ML is depicted as properly ruthless and competent when dealing with his enemies, the domestic scenes surrounding the FL are difficult to sit through. It is a shame, because the toxic family dynamic itself is likely historically accurate for an abandoned legitimate daughter. The villa is entirely run by the scheming concubine and her wicked daughter, while the female lead's biological mother, who is supposed to be the matriarch, is portrayed as a weak and useless parent who refuses to step up. Ultimately, A Splendid Match is a massive disappointment that can lead to irritation. What started as a promising historical drama with a smart heroine has transitioned into a frustrating, immature mess that may not be worth finishing.

Episodes 10–21 gets marginally better than the absolute bin fire of the first nine episodes, but it is still plagued by major problems. While the plot moves away from the FLs initial infatuation, it replaces it with lazy writing, a complete lack of logic and infuriating character dynamics. The 2ML is a difficult character who completely tanks any potential for second-lead syndrome. Despite a decent appearance, the Marquis’s son is a short-sighted individual who cannot see the bigger picture. The ML is desperately trying to save this man's family from ruin, yet the Marquis always accuses him of being petty and holding grudges, completely blind to the fact that he is the one acting in an immature and petty. Least we forget the fact that early on he actually whipped the FL because he was having one of his petulant tantrums because she was giving him some home truths. Very frustrating.
The romance completely stalls out because the female lead has devolved into a bit of an irritating character. The script cuts ridiculous corners, suddenly turning her into an expert archer out of nowhere just to suit the plot. When the ML behaves like a proper adult by confessing his love and proposing, she flat-out rejects him due to baggage over her dead mother, dragging their dynamic into a childish standstill. To top it all off, the show suffers from severe narrative amnesia regarding its core villains. The half-sister and father, whose cruel crimes defined the start of the series, are suddenly treated like background characters and completely sidelined. Instead of giving any satisfaction by punishing them for their past crimes, the script forces us to focus entirely on the father’s extended family and their wicked schemes, turning the show into a frustrating political slog.

Nb. During the first half of this show there are a couple of moments particularly after episode 10 they’re actually quite nice especially between the ML and FL but they are so few and far between that I lose sight of them and almost forget them because of the frustrating elements.

The narrative completely collapses from episode 22 to 28, transitioning from a potential promising historical thriller into a masterclass in script lobotomy and state-approved propaganda. The fierce, calculating heroine we were promised completely regresses into a passive, skittish martyr who spends her time fixing household problems for her abusers and collapsing into her evil grandmother's arms to satisfy censorship-mandated family harmony codes. Meanwhile, the ruthless ML is thoroughly neutered into a passive bystander, and the 2ML throws a psychotic, sword-wielding, blood-spitting tantrum over a heartbreak he never even earned, considering he never properly courted her and literally whipped the FL earlier in the series. The political stakes completely evaporate as the actual mastermind of the corrupt grain swap is lazily let out of prison, the young Emperor suddenly mutates into a telepathic mastermind and the adopted nephew goes on a literal hunger strike over the wedding. To top off this absolute bonfire of garbage writing, the wedding day rewards the unrepentant scumbag father and toxic cousin, grandmother et al with massive imperial prestige and social immunity simply because the FL is marrying up. The show has officially sacrificed every ounce of character logic and cathartic revenge to serve as a pretty, high-budget piece of ideological stability lecturing that is a total insult to the viewer's intelligence.

From episode 29 to 34, it has transformed into a show that is a logic-defying catastrophe where character consistency is sacrificed for lazy padding and state-approved propaganda. The absurdity begins when the Emperor suddenly strips the Marquis title from the household the second the patriarch dies, backing his top confidant (2ML) into a corner over a nonsense power play. Instead of dealing with this high-stakes political crisis, the script bizarrely stalls to let the MLs ex-fiancée launch into a petty lecture scolding the female lead regards the 2mls unrequited obsession, forcing the heroine to endure this unfair humiliation in submissive silence to satisfy censorship-mandated family harmony codes. The story completely abandons basic human psychology and legal consequences as it barrels through its worst writing loops. The weak Fourth Master gathers the brazen audacity to kidnap the fl with the explicit, vile intent to sell her to a brothel so the "whole world would trample on her", yet the supposedly ruthless ml lets him off the hook with a soft exile and a mere kick to the leg. This legal farce peaks when an ironclad treason petition against the corrupt grain minister is derailed by a single verbal claim, causing the bribe-taking uncle to be dragged off in chains while the actual treasonous mastermind is allowed to casually hang out in his luxury mansion instead of rotting in a cell. The script then drags out a repetitive, rage-baiting subplot of the corrupt official's evil wife trying to frame the female lead's restaurant, completely wasting the viewer's time because the writers have run out of original ideas. The ultimate death of character intelligence happens right after the male lead is injured in an ambush. When he acts like a mature adult and asks a perfectly rational question about her past with his nephew, the female lead completely refuses to answer him. Instead of using her brain to resolve the trust barrier, she simply uses a physical kiss as a conversational mute button while the production blasts sweet music to gaslight the audience into ignoring the total breakdown of logic. The show has officially checked out, trading its somewhat early promise for an exhausted, mechanical product that relies on lazy romantic shortcuts and unpunished villains just to crawl to its 40 episode finish line.

Episode 35 to 40. The structural collapse reaches absolute peak psychosis across the battlefield arcs. The top-tier Metropolitan scholar Chen Xuanqing is completely lobotomized, transforming into a knife-wielding madman who takes the heroine hostage out of pure, unearned spite because his uncle got married. The writers then subject him to an absurd, five-minute suicide speedrun where he is lashed forty times, bashes his own head, and reveals he already drank poison, all while the production blasts unearned, manipulative music to force a synthetic tragedy. This is immediately followed by a gruelling display of misery porn during the invasion battle. The script stubbornly refuses to give the audience a single second of heroic triumph; instead, the entire supporting cast of friends and the male lead's personal guard are pointlessly pulverised in the mud. The second male lead takes a cliché spear to the back to cheat his way out of stalking accountability, triggering a grotesque, ten-minute sequence where the female lead screams uncontrollably and tenderly strokes his corpse, completely ignoring her own husband who is literally bleeding out and fainting into the dirt right in front of her.
The final episode is a masterclass in production panic and structural failure. Out of a 41-minute finale, the first seventeen minutes are entirely wasted on the dead rival's funeral and the female lead weeping over a secret letter hidden behind a painting, completely freezing the political plot. When the male lead finally reappears at the 20-minute mark, the script commits a bizarre act of identity theft by forcing him to cosplay in the dead stalker's armor to lead the remaining army. The grand political climax is entirely outsourced to a kitchen-knife standoff inside the mentor's office. In the final two minutes, the writers suddenly remember that the male lead was supposed to be "ruthless" in episode 1, mutating him from a sophisticated statesman into a blade-throwing action-movie assassin who hurls a piece of steel straight through the hostage-taking wife's chest. Within thirty seconds, the entire mention magically mutates into a CGI inferno, allowing the mass-murdering traitors to get a romantic, peaceful "Romeo and Juliet" deathbed embrace while the male lead scoops up his wife in a bridal carry and strolls out of the flames. By completely erasing the supporting cast, ignoring the total breakdown of marital trust, and replacing human dialogue with cheap visual shortcuts, the show finishes as a mechanical, exhausted joke that actively insults the viewer's intelligence. This show is without a doubt in the running for the gold medal for worst of all time in the history of television.
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