Loved the Journey
First, gotta love a title that can be perceived two different ways that both apply to the whole series. For me, most everything organically came together fairly well with a little bit for everybody – some gender-bending (with a fairly believable young Princess being passed off as a Prince – good makeup); a collection of bromantic brothers whose personal quirks made for enjoyable interaction; a sharp, no-nonsense heroine played and flawed to perfection, enough natural light humor to encourage viewer uplift; moments for tears and unavoidable sadness.Spot on martial arts work and effects! And an amazing soundtrack that did what every soundtrack SHOULD do…not just provide background filler for dubbed audio, but actually have lyrics that bring more meaning to the narrative. It shadowed the character’s emotional state when dialogue would have been too preachy or flat. The music also punctuated humor, and intensified urgency, chaos or success whether during a graphic battle, or in a character’s thoughts. To me this well-crafted soundtrack added so much more feeling to the acting.
My personal preference for romance – feelings that organically develop from a spark of connection, aren’t maudlin, melodramatic or slo-mo’d to infinity, and fit the characters’ personalities (example: Liu Yuning and Liu ShiShi conversation over tea at an outdoor table - his leg randomly shakes as he tries to impress her while realizing he’s desire-rich and romance-poor. Well timed and acted!)
The ensemble cast, in my opinion, was a director’s dream. Their quirky but effective interactions made each one special as an individual and endearing as part of a twosome or team. By the end of the series, it was these special characteristics that made it almost agonizingly difficult to keep from missing anyone who was suddenly gone. The comradery seemed well-acted and very compelling through the story.
The story itself was sufficiently engaging, with enough twists to hold my interest. My only “uh,hmm, well” comment was the “Game of Thrones Ending Syndrome” – a seeming rush through to the finale that even included a brief piece of “…and THIS all happened…and now to cut back to our action…” narrative that could have been more effectively presented as actual scenes. The following individual angsty climaxes left me disappointed that such a wonderful bunch of characters got the bums rush to the Finale.
For the most part, A Journey to Love seemed to do what its title suggested: took its characters from virtual rags to riches where each rose from pathetic or mundane origins to a pinnacle of personal greatness that made each one’s life an ultimate success. No regrets.
Yeah, though in some ways it wasn’t perfect, I loved the Journey. I’d go again.
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