232 reviews
I was looking for some Mandarin-language TV show to improve my Chinese, and I stumbled across the Untamed. The actors seemed okay, the scenography was cool and I started watching. However, after just a few episodes, I was so into the story. The relationships between the characters are beautiful, and the story keeps on getting more and more sad but I couldn't stop watching.
I really liked the Lan Zhan and Wei Ying relationship. The way Wei WuXian says "Lan Zhan" in the beginning is so enthusiastic and kind of annoying, however - at the end of the series it becomes so gentle and caring.
Ironically, the reason I started watching this TV show was just to improve my Chinese. But now I want to improve my Chinese BECAUSE of this series.
From the perspective of a novel fan, "The Untamed" truly surpassed my expectations as the live adaptations of Mo Dao Zhushi (Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation). The synopsis: A fantasy story set in ancient China about two young idealistic paladins who found themselves entangled in a bloody rebellion against an evil clan. One became a powerful demonologist and died tragically, until a strange event reunited these two friends years later. They joined force to solve the mystery behind a series of deaths, but unexpectedly uncovered a sinister conspiracy and many startling revelations about each other.
"The Untamed" brought this fantasy world to life with visually stunning scenery and set design, outstanding soundtrack, great plot and character development, as well as a team of talented new actors (major bonus points for giving us a parade of eye candies). I was a bit turned off by the substandard CGI...but I get that it's not a big budget production and funding must had been tight after the studio caught on fire.
So what made "The Untamed" the biggest runaway hit of 2019 in the world of Chinese television? It has a well written script with a perfect balance between comedy and drama, as well as action and intrigue. I'm also very impressed by how the screen writers managed to fill some of the original novel's plot holes and reorganize the timeline to make the story less confusing. However, it's not flawless and some episodes had issues with pacing. For example, the first two episodes were bogged down by too many subplots and flashbacks at times. The last episode also had several repetitive and out of order sequences that felt like fillers before the final scene (nevertheless it's still a pretty good finale).
Here's another element that made this a truly binge-worthy series. The casting directors of "The Untamed" did a superb job finding two talented lead actors who also had outstanding chemistry together on screen. Xiao Zhan is the perfect embodiment of the playful, dark, and passionate Wei Wuxian. He captivated audiences from the very first scene and was the main reason that kept me going pass the first two confusing episodes. Then there's the interesting casting choice for our second lead character...It's hard to picture a vibrant 21-year-old pop artist/TV host portraying the stoic and graceful Lan Wanji, but Wang Yibo's ability to convey a plethora of emotions with few words and very subtle expressions cemented his status as an up and coming actor. It goes without saying that directors Zheng Weiwen and Chen Jialin played a huge part in these actors' remarkable performance.
It's also important to mention that "The Untamed " has one of the most well-rounded supporting roles with their own stories and character arcs. Their relationships with the protagonists were pivotal in the story's central themes: the fine line between good versus evil and the enduring love that exists between siblings, friends, and adopted families. There were talented supporting actors who were outstanding from the start while the rest took some time to get into their characters. Nevertheless, it's a pleasure to watch these young actors bring out the best in each other as the series goes on. Although there were some comically bad villains, but the screen writers managed to redeem themselves by creating complex antagonists with motivations and perspectives tht we can all relate in real life.
Overall I recommend giving "The Untamed" a whirl even if you are not familiar with Chinese costume drama. You'll be rewarded with a thoroughly unique and entertaining viewing experience once you get over the heavy makeup and over-the-top choreography typical of traditional martial art series. So grab a couple of your fun loving friends (group reactions and comments will be a blast, I guarantee), sit back and enjoy the 50-episode fantasy adventure that is "The Untamed".
"The Untamed" brought this fantasy world to life with visually stunning scenery and set design, outstanding soundtrack, great plot and character development, as well as a team of talented new actors (major bonus points for giving us a parade of eye candies). I was a bit turned off by the substandard CGI...but I get that it's not a big budget production and funding must had been tight after the studio caught on fire.
So what made "The Untamed" the biggest runaway hit of 2019 in the world of Chinese television? It has a well written script with a perfect balance between comedy and drama, as well as action and intrigue. I'm also very impressed by how the screen writers managed to fill some of the original novel's plot holes and reorganize the timeline to make the story less confusing. However, it's not flawless and some episodes had issues with pacing. For example, the first two episodes were bogged down by too many subplots and flashbacks at times. The last episode also had several repetitive and out of order sequences that felt like fillers before the final scene (nevertheless it's still a pretty good finale).
Here's another element that made this a truly binge-worthy series. The casting directors of "The Untamed" did a superb job finding two talented lead actors who also had outstanding chemistry together on screen. Xiao Zhan is the perfect embodiment of the playful, dark, and passionate Wei Wuxian. He captivated audiences from the very first scene and was the main reason that kept me going pass the first two confusing episodes. Then there's the interesting casting choice for our second lead character...It's hard to picture a vibrant 21-year-old pop artist/TV host portraying the stoic and graceful Lan Wanji, but Wang Yibo's ability to convey a plethora of emotions with few words and very subtle expressions cemented his status as an up and coming actor. It goes without saying that directors Zheng Weiwen and Chen Jialin played a huge part in these actors' remarkable performance.
It's also important to mention that "The Untamed " has one of the most well-rounded supporting roles with their own stories and character arcs. Their relationships with the protagonists were pivotal in the story's central themes: the fine line between good versus evil and the enduring love that exists between siblings, friends, and adopted families. There were talented supporting actors who were outstanding from the start while the rest took some time to get into their characters. Nevertheless, it's a pleasure to watch these young actors bring out the best in each other as the series goes on. Although there were some comically bad villains, but the screen writers managed to redeem themselves by creating complex antagonists with motivations and perspectives tht we can all relate in real life.
Overall I recommend giving "The Untamed" a whirl even if you are not familiar with Chinese costume drama. You'll be rewarded with a thoroughly unique and entertaining viewing experience once you get over the heavy makeup and over-the-top choreography typical of traditional martial art series. So grab a couple of your fun loving friends (group reactions and comments will be a blast, I guarantee), sit back and enjoy the 50-episode fantasy adventure that is "The Untamed".
- patriciacarpenter
- Nov 17, 2019
- Permalink
At first, I almost gave up after the first few episodes, but I'm so glad I gave this series a chance. Fifty episodes later, I'm still obsessing over not only the two lead characters but also the actors who embodied them. I haven't read the novel nor seen the anime version, so there were no expectations going in. I won't go into the story as so many others have already done so. I'll just provide my opinion only.
The various plot lines held no big secrets--predictable and routine for a xianxia story with often long drawn scenes which didn't make sense nor push the plot through. The CGI was under par but did the job. What held it together and won me over was the ever so strong chemistry between the two leads, supported by a very talented supporting cast. The BL arc didn't hit me until I did my research. I initially interpreted it simply as brotherhood love, strong friendship and bonding between soulmates (not in the romantic sense) that has been written in so many wuxia novels that came before this one. Then after reading reviews and other info, I had to go back and rewatch episodes to pick up on what really was happening. The longing gazes, the tortured internal conflicts, the array of emotions unspoken but seen through the slightest smile or nod or simple act...these little crumbs spoke volumes if you understand what's going on. Rematching and looking for these clues were Eureka! moments for me. I actually really appreciated the fact that, due to censorship or not, the production portrayed this aspect of BL so subtlety and poetically, unlike the in-your-face presentations that would leave nothing to the imagination. Bravo! The actor who portrayed the "ultimate villain and mastermind" behind the plot deserved his own shout-out...his acting was at once convincing yet heartrending! The emotions in which his portrayal evoked literally gave me a vertigo spin.
Here's wishing much success to the two leads in their professional and private lives!! I can't get enough of seeing them together. Don't let the haters win.
The various plot lines held no big secrets--predictable and routine for a xianxia story with often long drawn scenes which didn't make sense nor push the plot through. The CGI was under par but did the job. What held it together and won me over was the ever so strong chemistry between the two leads, supported by a very talented supporting cast. The BL arc didn't hit me until I did my research. I initially interpreted it simply as brotherhood love, strong friendship and bonding between soulmates (not in the romantic sense) that has been written in so many wuxia novels that came before this one. Then after reading reviews and other info, I had to go back and rewatch episodes to pick up on what really was happening. The longing gazes, the tortured internal conflicts, the array of emotions unspoken but seen through the slightest smile or nod or simple act...these little crumbs spoke volumes if you understand what's going on. Rematching and looking for these clues were Eureka! moments for me. I actually really appreciated the fact that, due to censorship or not, the production portrayed this aspect of BL so subtlety and poetically, unlike the in-your-face presentations that would leave nothing to the imagination. Bravo! The actor who portrayed the "ultimate villain and mastermind" behind the plot deserved his own shout-out...his acting was at once convincing yet heartrending! The emotions in which his portrayal evoked literally gave me a vertigo spin.
Here's wishing much success to the two leads in their professional and private lives!! I can't get enough of seeing them together. Don't let the haters win.
- facesofine
- Jan 12, 2020
- Permalink
I can't remember seeing tv series that afected me so much. I don't know if that is because of the different style (Chinese movies have a unique approach to the viewers) or because of the drama plot itself but it was so good.
The first few episodes I've struggled with because there was so much information I had hard time remembering and a lot of names which I couldn't remember but after a few episodes it was easier for me to watch. I think the most interesting thing about the drama were the characters and their development through the episodes. There was a hidden message behind every scene which I found absolutely fascinating. The two main leads executed their roles perfectly. I was captivated by Wang Yibo's performance as Lan Zhan. To have a few lines and to have to count on the facial expressions it's the most difficult role to play. Good job!
Abou the plot - it was interesting, it touched very powerful and meaningful themes such as family relationships, brotherhood and even love. Some the scenes in the series were one of the most romantic things I have ever watched, even though there were only hints. I found that approach very powerful.
The costumes were great, the atmosphere was like a fairytale, the OST was perfect. And yes, after 30th episode when everything started to come to place I cried a lot and I'm not a movie crier at all. Every little detail moved me and after the last episode I can't stop thinking about that drama.
- gjudorovastella
- Oct 29, 2019
- Permalink
This drama started off slow for me but the story really came together. Just be patient as the story is unfolding. The two leading characters did an amazing job portraying their emotions. The Main character Wei Wuxian has the most beautiful smile. He is such a talented actor. I love their chemistry. There are so many twist and turn in the drama. The beautiful music really pulls at your heart strings. I cannot say enough good things about it. Clearly the world feels the same as this drama has been trending for quite some time now and have launched the two leads into super stardom. The loyalty between the two main characters is beautiful. One of the best drama I have ever watched and I have watched a lot of drama. I am completely obsessed and have been following their careers since watching it. Even after watching it so many times, I am still picking up new tidbits. Kudos to the cast and crew of The Untamed. What a masterpiece.
I have just finished watching this epic on Netflix and, in short, I have to say it is well worth sticking with it, as ultimately it is hugely rewarding on so many levels. Looking at a show like this with a western sensibility, we have to talk of some elephants wandering around the room.
Firstly the era in which this drama takes place means the depiction of strong class and social positioning, showing a degree of respect and politeness rarely seen in the west, except perhaps in the 18th century. The mannerisms and dress take some getting used to. The viewer must also get used to the fact that everyone has at least two names: given name, courtesy name, and sometimes a formal name. All the major characters belong to one of five clans.
Secondly the pacing of this series is likely to be difficult for a generation with a short attention span and a video-game paced expectation. This series has many periods of long glances, involved speeches and lengthy exposition. Sometimes it's difficult to know why some characters get so upset over things that are apparently so trivial. These social orders are strict indeed.
Then we spot that there are fifty one-hour episodes, a daunting thought, but more of that later. I would advise checking out more knowledgable reviewers to gain more insight into the clans and the people in them.
I cannot speak to the original novel. I have searched but cannot locate an English translation. Much is made of the relationship between the two male leads and, by all accounts, this is much more explicit in the novel. Nonetheless it became clear to me early on that there was attraction between the two that was more than just brotherly love.
The story begins with events leading to the death of Wei Wuxian (aka Wei Ying and the Yiling Patriarch). After this we are taken on a lengthy flashback detailing the development of the friendship between Wei Wuxian, the demonic cultivator, and noble and intriguing Lan Zhan (also Lan Wangji and Lord Hanguang). We learn how Wei Wuxian is framed for misdeeds and killings he did not really do. Some years after his death Wei Wuxian is revived by illegal means, is reunited with Lan Zhan and they embark on an investigation as to who is behind all the feuding and the discredit of Wei Wuxian, although this has been hinted to the viewer already.
Many of the confusions of earlier episodes begin to get resolved; you will easily find spoilers elsewhere if you want them. Suffice to say the final half-dozen episodes reveal a great deal and the end is satisfying.
The spectacular scenery, stunning costume design and and decidedly attractive cast make this whole journey unique and exciting. I have found the animated version online and have started watching that too.
The two leading actors, Xiao Zhan as Wei Wuxian and Wang Yibo as Lan Zhan, are mega-stars, across east Asia these days and they appear together on all kinds of tv shows (see YouTube). The intensity of their performances, coupled with the nuanced nods to more than just a bromance is enjoyable and skilfully done in a climate of censorship.
I can thoroughly recommend this, although it is unlikely that many westerners will commit to a fifty episode series and that is a shame. There is much to discover about a very different society and we could all learn much from it.
- steve-butten
- Jan 1, 2020
- Permalink
It's a 9 out of 10 but only because it breaks my heart due to content regulations it can be exactly like the original source. I still think they did and amazing job adapting the script to make it GP friendly. I started the series, and once I started it was really hard to stop. The acting by both main actors, really reflects the original characters, Wang Yi bo totally nailed Lang Wangji, and Xiao Zan left me speechless, he delivered.
I have no idea why this came up as a recommended title for me on Netflix, but I am so glad it did. I've never shown an interest in non-English titles, let alone those in Chinese, and I almost gave it a pass. I'm now blessing my lack of impulse control. I was charmed almost immediately, even if the first two episodes left me pretty much completely lost. I was still mesmerized. Sticking with it, I was able to piece together the story, and I enjoyed it tremendously.
The lavish scenery, the music, the sets and costumes create a fascinating world, but the actors are enchanting beyond belief, and they sell this story like they were born for it. They all play their characters with an earnestness that makes the heart squeeze. Seeing the two leads bond throughout the series is a joy to watch, even throughout the emotionally wrenching periods of turmoil that drive the plot and the mysteries. There is something wholly profound, almost deliriously romantic in a way, about their relationship and how it deepens and evolves.
Whenever the mischievous Wei WuXian smiles, it feels like sunshine bursting from the screen. When we finally see the ridiculously stoic Lan WanJi smile, it's breathtaking for all its quiet honesty. It leaves you sorely wanting more.
It's not exactly perfect, though, this series. The effects are frankly sometimes silly. But it doesn't matter, with a story this captivating. The often fast dialogue can be tough to catch via the subtitles, but you do follow the gist. One serious negative is how the story treats the women on the whole. For any other series, it would be a deal-breaker for me. But I was otherwise so completely taken by the series that I can look past that. What I love about the series outweighs the negatives so much that I have no hesitation to give it a ten. It's earned that ten from me.
This series was actually more of an experience, and I intend to go through it again. I'm not ready to let go.
The lavish scenery, the music, the sets and costumes create a fascinating world, but the actors are enchanting beyond belief, and they sell this story like they were born for it. They all play their characters with an earnestness that makes the heart squeeze. Seeing the two leads bond throughout the series is a joy to watch, even throughout the emotionally wrenching periods of turmoil that drive the plot and the mysteries. There is something wholly profound, almost deliriously romantic in a way, about their relationship and how it deepens and evolves.
Whenever the mischievous Wei WuXian smiles, it feels like sunshine bursting from the screen. When we finally see the ridiculously stoic Lan WanJi smile, it's breathtaking for all its quiet honesty. It leaves you sorely wanting more.
It's not exactly perfect, though, this series. The effects are frankly sometimes silly. But it doesn't matter, with a story this captivating. The often fast dialogue can be tough to catch via the subtitles, but you do follow the gist. One serious negative is how the story treats the women on the whole. For any other series, it would be a deal-breaker for me. But I was otherwise so completely taken by the series that I can look past that. What I love about the series outweighs the negatives so much that I have no hesitation to give it a ten. It's earned that ten from me.
This series was actually more of an experience, and I intend to go through it again. I'm not ready to let go.
Trust me when I say this series is the most perfect blend of fantasy, subtle romance and family drama. Everything about this series has me wanting to rewatch it more than a few times. From the actors Xiao Zhan and Wang YiBo to the cinematography, the costumes, the sets and amazing soundtracks. This series brings me so much joy to watch!
Would highly recommend this series to anyone that wants to appreciate a good Chinese drama.
Would highly recommend this series to anyone that wants to appreciate a good Chinese drama.
- crystalskysx
- Jan 28, 2020
- Permalink
This is a funny Chinese TV drama leading with very promising Chinese young actors, especially Xiao Zhan and Wang Yibo.Xiao Zhan is a unprofessional actor, but he presented a very excellent performance. His role is quite hilarious and charming. I enjoyed the fantastic story and the drama.
You won't miss it if you love ancient Chinese TV series.
- packageofsunshine
- Oct 22, 2019
- Permalink
I can say I haven't read the novel etc, but of all the dramas I've watched I can this was one of the best ones and of all of the dramas I've watching the acting was flawless. Although I was asking for more, the drama didn't end badly. Take your time and watch a few episodes or the whole season who knows you might love it!!
- jesuslove-21250
- Nov 25, 2019
- Permalink
I'll admit that I've never read the original story, or seen the animated series, so I was going into this completely blind (basically; all I knew about the series before I watched it was all the guys have long, luxurious hair and fight each other graceful with swords whilst flying through the air... Oh, that and the fact the main two characters are in love...), but I have to say it really exceeded my expectations in many aspects!
I don't think I'm the only one who'll say that the first few episodes are a bit confusing to get into (especially when you're not familiar with the source material) which makes them drag just a little bit. But I'd say if you're feeling this way at the start, definitely try to stick with it! The story continues to get more interesting and intense, as well as things get explained as it goes on! And the characters all go through some really great development through the 50 episodes, which makes them more relatable!
As far as complaints go; my main issue is with some of the ways scenes are filmed and framed, particularly in very emotional scenes... It wasn't necessarily bad or too jarring, but it did pull you away from the immersion a little bit! The cgi isn't the best, but that's to be expected considering this didn't have a massive budget... It wasn't too bad to pull you out of the story, though, so I'd say it wasn't too big of an issue!
The biggest thing I'll commend the series on is something I imagine everyone has already said: that being the handling of the relationship between characters, particularly the main two! It's no secret that this is based on an lgbt ('bl') novel, and that China have strict censorship laws that don't allow depictions of that on screen. However, the producers and scriptwriters really were able to develop a believable and touching dynamic between the two main characters throughout the span of the series in subtle and well done ways! And more than that, the other friendships and relationships of the series were made believable and touching too!
Overall; it's an emotionally invested and well made drama, with some pretty decent acting on the most part and a bunch of really engaging and interesting characters!
I don't think I'm the only one who'll say that the first few episodes are a bit confusing to get into (especially when you're not familiar with the source material) which makes them drag just a little bit. But I'd say if you're feeling this way at the start, definitely try to stick with it! The story continues to get more interesting and intense, as well as things get explained as it goes on! And the characters all go through some really great development through the 50 episodes, which makes them more relatable!
As far as complaints go; my main issue is with some of the ways scenes are filmed and framed, particularly in very emotional scenes... It wasn't necessarily bad or too jarring, but it did pull you away from the immersion a little bit! The cgi isn't the best, but that's to be expected considering this didn't have a massive budget... It wasn't too bad to pull you out of the story, though, so I'd say it wasn't too big of an issue!
The biggest thing I'll commend the series on is something I imagine everyone has already said: that being the handling of the relationship between characters, particularly the main two! It's no secret that this is based on an lgbt ('bl') novel, and that China have strict censorship laws that don't allow depictions of that on screen. However, the producers and scriptwriters really were able to develop a believable and touching dynamic between the two main characters throughout the span of the series in subtle and well done ways! And more than that, the other friendships and relationships of the series were made believable and touching too!
Overall; it's an emotionally invested and well made drama, with some pretty decent acting on the most part and a bunch of really engaging and interesting characters!
- dangerbeforeyou
- Oct 29, 2019
- Permalink
Where do I begin with. Its a beautiful story about Lan Zhan & Wei YIng.
Though I personally liked the book version better even the ending was very well handled in the book because the drama ending felt a bit lonely. Also the story telling was well maintained the flashbacks & current story when in drama it felt a bit overwhelming to force viewers to watch the entire flashback at once. Honestly flashback sorry didn't make sense in drama.
The actors were brilliant and portrayed the roles very well. Actor playing Wei Wuxian was cute & charismatic just like its character in the book & actor played Lan Wangji was brilliant with his acting skills (& cant' stress enough but he was super beautiful just how he was mentioned in the book "A fine piece of jade"). All the other actors as well were really amazing & specially actors who played Jin Guang Yao and Xie Yang. They were brilliant.
Though drama changed the story a bit and left a few open ends for which, one need to read the book. Well choreographed action sequences, but had some flaws like every time anybody who played the flute I couldn't see them putting any effort, just pouting except Zhan Xiao(he did it well), felt a bit fake.
The drama definitely worth a watch & I am sure viewers won't be disappointed & I really praise all the actors again, they did a wonderful job with their acting skills. Hope to see more of their good work in future.
And the OST WangXian song was simply superb. Its beyond beautiful. The singers got really beautiful voice.
Though I personally liked the book version better even the ending was very well handled in the book because the drama ending felt a bit lonely. Also the story telling was well maintained the flashbacks & current story when in drama it felt a bit overwhelming to force viewers to watch the entire flashback at once. Honestly flashback sorry didn't make sense in drama.
The actors were brilliant and portrayed the roles very well. Actor playing Wei Wuxian was cute & charismatic just like its character in the book & actor played Lan Wangji was brilliant with his acting skills (& cant' stress enough but he was super beautiful just how he was mentioned in the book "A fine piece of jade"). All the other actors as well were really amazing & specially actors who played Jin Guang Yao and Xie Yang. They were brilliant.
Though drama changed the story a bit and left a few open ends for which, one need to read the book. Well choreographed action sequences, but had some flaws like every time anybody who played the flute I couldn't see them putting any effort, just pouting except Zhan Xiao(he did it well), felt a bit fake.
The drama definitely worth a watch & I am sure viewers won't be disappointed & I really praise all the actors again, they did a wonderful job with their acting skills. Hope to see more of their good work in future.
And the OST WangXian song was simply superb. Its beyond beautiful. The singers got really beautiful voice.
- bhardwaj-purnima2011
- Mar 12, 2022
- Permalink
I told my girlfriend that this is probably the worst thing that we have watched for queer content.
The acting is so-so. I thought that the actor who played Lan Zhan did a better job in the later episodes when conveying his loving looks. The actor who played Wei WuXian had to voiceover most of his work, which was distracting.
The special effects and the fight scenes were atrocious. The extras were awful. Watching the extras in the fight scenes would have been entertaining if it weren't so... sad.
The story itself is fine. It's quite predictable and easy to follow... to the point where the last three episodes are almost completely unnecessary. They could have condensed it to one episode, for sure.
We watched it on Youtube to support the creators, but oh my god were those subtitles god awful. I could barely follow the story because the subtitles were made by some robot. I had to ask my girlfriend SEVERAL times about what the hell was going on. But that's not the fault of the show, just the fault of the subtitles.
The fact that the show cycled through the same three songs and their instrumentals did not help things. One of the songs in particular (the one about his sister) is a DIRECT SPOILER. So thanks for that, show.
The acting is so-so. I thought that the actor who played Lan Zhan did a better job in the later episodes when conveying his loving looks. The actor who played Wei WuXian had to voiceover most of his work, which was distracting.
The special effects and the fight scenes were atrocious. The extras were awful. Watching the extras in the fight scenes would have been entertaining if it weren't so... sad.
The story itself is fine. It's quite predictable and easy to follow... to the point where the last three episodes are almost completely unnecessary. They could have condensed it to one episode, for sure.
We watched it on Youtube to support the creators, but oh my god were those subtitles god awful. I could barely follow the story because the subtitles were made by some robot. I had to ask my girlfriend SEVERAL times about what the hell was going on. But that's not the fault of the show, just the fault of the subtitles.
The fact that the show cycled through the same three songs and their instrumentals did not help things. One of the songs in particular (the one about his sister) is a DIRECT SPOILER. So thanks for that, show.
- emolosesgirl
- Sep 26, 2019
- Permalink
This story is a masterpiece. The love and loyalty between the 2 main characters Lan zhan and Wei Ying really has an impact on you as a viewer. From the first episode on you are immediately invested in their story. The plot and side plots are strong, but the casting of Xiao Zhan and Wang Yibo in these 2 lead roles is such a stroke of genius, that it takes the series to a whole other level, an unbelievable performance, from both of them. The soundtrack by Lin Hai is also beautiful, especially the tracks with guqin music. I have listened to it many times. This series is so unique, that I hope it has a breakthrough also in the west. I don't randomly gives 10's. But this show deserves it.
- nessieclarks
- Jan 9, 2020
- Permalink
Amazing story! The entire cast was fantastic. Xiao Zhan and Wang Yibo were brilliant in their performance together. I definitely will be fangirling them both in their future dramas. Cheers for this outstanding wuxia-fantasy costume drama! Loved it!
I have never ever seen such beautiful drama! This is the first Chinese drama I've ever watched and already finished it watching 5th time. Never have I ever thought I would be so much addicted to it and the main leads specially Wang Yibo as Lan Wangji, I just can't get over them. Watching this drama made my days so enjoyable now I really miss this. Hopefully able to watch the main leafs together again and yeah forever WANGXIAN!
- tasmiam-06671
- Oct 30, 2019
- Permalink
Warning: this is going to be a long, messy, raving review.
I don't watch chinese dramas - all the ones I've started lost me halfway either because of plot holes, overacting, poor dubbing or megacheesy romance between ditzy girl / tough guy.
One day, willing to improve my poor chinese language understanding, I gave a shot to this weird fantasy series featuring long hair wigged idols with cheesy flying habilities. It was at the top of the 2019 asian tv series chart. I knew nothing of the plot, but no romance so at least there was that (was I wrong).
First couple of episodes were messy, I couldn't understand much of what was happening, the CGI was terrible, but it was intriguing and actors were sufficiently compelling for me to continue. From episode 20, my "okthatmaybereallygood" sense was tingling. From episode 30, I went into 3 days of intense and emotional bingewatching. I never expected to fall that hard. Story, script, cast and music epicness made me forget the ugly CGI and the 5$ budget these guys had.
Story or the art of confusion! Guys, let's start with the story (the tough part): this show is set in a supernatural chinese world where you find different clans ruled by the powerful Wen sect, which dominates over the smaller Lan, Jiang, Nie and Jin sects. The clans members, through "cultivation" practice, have different sets of powers. Now, you follow Wei Wuxian, a cheerful troublemaker, who just woke up in an unknown place years after dying in the worst CGIed volcano mountain you could hope for. He finds he is at Mo manor and that everyone thinks he is Mo Xianyu, the crazy nephew of the Mo lords, who always wears a mask (convenient isn't it?). After some events involving a ghost, the death of the Mo lords and their son, the appearance of a poker face character WWX seems to know named Lan Zhan (or Lan WangJi. Or HanGuang Jun. Characters have several names in this show, which is no help AT ALL), Wei WuXian sets off with his mask and a donkey named little apple (yes), trying to lay low as he doesn't want to be discovered. He fails. After a battle with another worseCGIever wonder, his true identity seems to be discovered by the poker face guy and his brother - permanenteyerollface - JiangCheng, who seems to hate WWX for some reason. He gets hit by the brothers's weapon, faints, and here begins 31 EPISODES OF FLASHBACK. Third ep, you meet young WWX, JC and Yanli (older sister of both), happily going to Cloud Recess, home of the Lan clan, to get instructed for a year. From there he meets Lan Zhan, a whole cast of other characters with loads of names to remember, goes off on various adventures. We are introduced to WWX personnality as a brilliant, inconventional and carefree young cultivator, the strong bond he shares with his step brother and sister, the growing friendship (let's call it that for now) with Lan Zhan and the Wen clan as the show's first menace. This may sound confusing, it is. You need to bear with the first dozen episodes to get accustomed to the wide cast and the world lore. The flashback story expands continuously, getting more and more complex each episode until it reaches the climax we saw on the first episode. After this, you follow WWX 16 years later, on a quest with Lan Zhan to find clues as to what happened 16 years earlier (the story kind of becomes a detective story from there, and that's great). As I cannot give any spoilers away (going blind in this story was a fantastic experience, so many plot points I never saw coming!), I can only say this is an exciting and well thought out plot, with a strong script and very very few plot holes. Some parts may be initially boring, but some will make you cry. Or think. Or laugh. Watch. This. Show.
Themes! Big themes! The importance of found family, how to decide what is right and what is wrong, the danger of believing rumour, the fragility of one's reputation, understanging one's pespective before passing judgment, how social conformity can be destructive and so on... these are explored through the story in a compelling and never patronizing way. Kudos, writers and original material, kudos.
Characters! So many! The characters, main and background, are never black or white. They are very much grey (apart from a couple of Wens, let's be honest). They have reasons for their actions, and are consistent from start to finish. The MC all have established and different personalities (although this is a sadly very male cast, the women are few but they are GREAT): Wei WuXian is a perfect MC, with whom you will warm up quickly. He has a carefree and fun personality combined with great skills and a will to do what he believe is right, even if this puts him at odds with others (and boy, it does). Which makes Lan WangJi, second young master of the Gusu Lan clan, second MC of this show, pokerface extraordinaire, his perfect foil. LWJ, raised in a clan with just 3000 principles, is the young prodigy of his clan, uptight, expressionless and man of few words. His loyalty to his principles gets increasingly at odds with his relationship with WWX, a personnality so opposite to everything he has been taught (he gets annoyed. A lot). JiangCheng is WWX younger brother, heir of the Jiang clan, master of the eyeroll. Prone to anger but loving his family in his own way, he has the hard task to meet his clan expectations. Jiang YanLi is the older sister of WWX and JC: while she may seem quite plain initially and fill the typical "motherly/caring" role, her sweetness and love for her brothers, mixed with hidden strengh will win you over. WenQing is the other main woman of the cast: she and her little brother WenNing are from the the notreallynice Wen clan, she is sent to Cloud Recess to find the Yin iron hidden there. She is a skilled doctor, tough woman with the life goal to protect her weak little bro from harm. WenNing is the weak little bro (or not), the second cinnamon roll of the series, a good kid with a high spirit sensitivity who has a REALLY tough time in this show. There are a billion other great characters. Big praise to the show directors mad ability to juggle with so many.
No love story! Nope! On to the "at least a chinese drama with no romance" part: so, I was wrong. This is one of the most compelling love story I've ever seen, and it comes from a series with two male leads in a chinese tv show within BL censorship context. See, as I learnt later, this show is based on a BL novel with the two MC as a couple but the TV adaptation had to change it into soulmates kind of story to pass censorship. So the leads never say or do anything that may explicitly give away they are in love, but their relationship is so endearing, the two actors have such a great chemistry, the production put so much effort that you get it and fall DEEP for it. They are indeed soulmates, and you see what you want to see in their relationship (although the long soft soft stares are difficult to put in the BestBro category). Give me that kind of duo (any type) in a romantic show and I am IN!
The cast! The level! Now on to the raving. One of the strongest point of this show. Casting director, may I say WELL DONE. Initially it looked like a big case of pretty-face-idol syndrome. They indeed are pretty. They are also (most of them) quite impressive. Leads XiaoZhan and WangYiBo give their all and are a huge part of this success. XiaoZhan gives such a vibrant portrayal, making you laugh and cry with him. He is the heart of this show, and the superstardom status he got with this show is earned. He. Is. Fabulous. WangYiBo, I discovered later, has like 2 years experience in acting. Man, is this guy a natural. He has a tough job, being the straightfaced one with at most 3 lines in one episode. He emotes through ridiculously minuscule facial and body changes whatever LWJ is thinking, and he does it in a fascinating way. You clearly see he gets better and better through the show (also he was 20 when they shot this. 20. 2×10.). Wang Zhuocheng as JiangCheng was for me a weaker link of the first part of the show, as his performance felt a bit forced. On the second part he toned it down and was muchXuan Lu as YanLi is perfect. Not an easy job to be the super sweet adorable sister without becoming a caricature, and she did an amazing nuanced job. Meng ZiYi as WenQing gives a great performance, alternating between strengh, worry and resolve fluidly. YuBin as WenNing is also really strong, with a heartfelt performance. Shoutout to Zheng Fanxing as Lan Yuan and Zhu Zanjin as Meng Yao who were perfect in their role. And let's not forget the part I usually hate in Cdrama: the dubbing. Usually you find some issues with sync, voice performance or voice fit. Here, nope. Bravo voice actors.
Music! MUSIC! The soundtrack is so good. It had to be since the leads are quite prone to use musical instruments to fight (don't ask) and they delivered. The Wuji/Wangxian, the family one, the opening one. When some of them start, you almost fear them as they are very efficient tearjecker. The ending song sang by both leads, much love.
Production! Where should we put the 5$ budget? Ok so did I say they had an absolutly ridiculous budget for this? Because that shows. That, along with the confusing story beginning, might make you stop watching. I almost did. At one point there is an animatronic giant dog that looks like it came straight from the 80s. The CGI is very windows98 labyrinth savescreen level. It's that bad. Thankfully some shots and background are beautiful, which helps to ease the pain. Scenes with close up on the caracters are the best as, let's be honest, they must have used most of their budget on makeup and the SO PRETTY costumes.
So to end this very long rant, if you're able to look past the terrible effects, a couple of cringy acting and the constant state of confusion you feel in the first 15 or so episodes of the show, you may be in for one of the best TV experience of your life.
Story or the art of confusion! Guys, let's start with the story (the tough part): this show is set in a supernatural chinese world where you find different clans ruled by the powerful Wen sect, which dominates over the smaller Lan, Jiang, Nie and Jin sects. The clans members, through "cultivation" practice, have different sets of powers. Now, you follow Wei Wuxian, a cheerful troublemaker, who just woke up in an unknown place years after dying in the worst CGIed volcano mountain you could hope for. He finds he is at Mo manor and that everyone thinks he is Mo Xianyu, the crazy nephew of the Mo lords, who always wears a mask (convenient isn't it?). After some events involving a ghost, the death of the Mo lords and their son, the appearance of a poker face character WWX seems to know named Lan Zhan (or Lan WangJi. Or HanGuang Jun. Characters have several names in this show, which is no help AT ALL), Wei WuXian sets off with his mask and a donkey named little apple (yes), trying to lay low as he doesn't want to be discovered. He fails. After a battle with another worseCGIever wonder, his true identity seems to be discovered by the poker face guy and his brother - permanenteyerollface - JiangCheng, who seems to hate WWX for some reason. He gets hit by the brothers's weapon, faints, and here begins 31 EPISODES OF FLASHBACK. Third ep, you meet young WWX, JC and Yanli (older sister of both), happily going to Cloud Recess, home of the Lan clan, to get instructed for a year. From there he meets Lan Zhan, a whole cast of other characters with loads of names to remember, goes off on various adventures. We are introduced to WWX personnality as a brilliant, inconventional and carefree young cultivator, the strong bond he shares with his step brother and sister, the growing friendship (let's call it that for now) with Lan Zhan and the Wen clan as the show's first menace. This may sound confusing, it is. You need to bear with the first dozen episodes to get accustomed to the wide cast and the world lore. The flashback story expands continuously, getting more and more complex each episode until it reaches the climax we saw on the first episode. After this, you follow WWX 16 years later, on a quest with Lan Zhan to find clues as to what happened 16 years earlier (the story kind of becomes a detective story from there, and that's great). As I cannot give any spoilers away (going blind in this story was a fantastic experience, so many plot points I never saw coming!), I can only say this is an exciting and well thought out plot, with a strong script and very very few plot holes. Some parts may be initially boring, but some will make you cry. Or think. Or laugh. Watch. This. Show.
Themes! Big themes! The importance of found family, how to decide what is right and what is wrong, the danger of believing rumour, the fragility of one's reputation, understanging one's pespective before passing judgment, how social conformity can be destructive and so on... these are explored through the story in a compelling and never patronizing way. Kudos, writers and original material, kudos.
Characters! So many! The characters, main and background, are never black or white. They are very much grey (apart from a couple of Wens, let's be honest). They have reasons for their actions, and are consistent from start to finish. The MC all have established and different personalities (although this is a sadly very male cast, the women are few but they are GREAT): Wei WuXian is a perfect MC, with whom you will warm up quickly. He has a carefree and fun personality combined with great skills and a will to do what he believe is right, even if this puts him at odds with others (and boy, it does). Which makes Lan WangJi, second young master of the Gusu Lan clan, second MC of this show, pokerface extraordinaire, his perfect foil. LWJ, raised in a clan with just 3000 principles, is the young prodigy of his clan, uptight, expressionless and man of few words. His loyalty to his principles gets increasingly at odds with his relationship with WWX, a personnality so opposite to everything he has been taught (he gets annoyed. A lot). JiangCheng is WWX younger brother, heir of the Jiang clan, master of the eyeroll. Prone to anger but loving his family in his own way, he has the hard task to meet his clan expectations. Jiang YanLi is the older sister of WWX and JC: while she may seem quite plain initially and fill the typical "motherly/caring" role, her sweetness and love for her brothers, mixed with hidden strengh will win you over. WenQing is the other main woman of the cast: she and her little brother WenNing are from the the notreallynice Wen clan, she is sent to Cloud Recess to find the Yin iron hidden there. She is a skilled doctor, tough woman with the life goal to protect her weak little bro from harm. WenNing is the weak little bro (or not), the second cinnamon roll of the series, a good kid with a high spirit sensitivity who has a REALLY tough time in this show. There are a billion other great characters. Big praise to the show directors mad ability to juggle with so many.
No love story! Nope! On to the "at least a chinese drama with no romance" part: so, I was wrong. This is one of the most compelling love story I've ever seen, and it comes from a series with two male leads in a chinese tv show within BL censorship context. See, as I learnt later, this show is based on a BL novel with the two MC as a couple but the TV adaptation had to change it into soulmates kind of story to pass censorship. So the leads never say or do anything that may explicitly give away they are in love, but their relationship is so endearing, the two actors have such a great chemistry, the production put so much effort that you get it and fall DEEP for it. They are indeed soulmates, and you see what you want to see in their relationship (although the long soft soft stares are difficult to put in the BestBro category). Give me that kind of duo (any type) in a romantic show and I am IN!
The cast! The level! Now on to the raving. One of the strongest point of this show. Casting director, may I say WELL DONE. Initially it looked like a big case of pretty-face-idol syndrome. They indeed are pretty. They are also (most of them) quite impressive. Leads XiaoZhan and WangYiBo give their all and are a huge part of this success. XiaoZhan gives such a vibrant portrayal, making you laugh and cry with him. He is the heart of this show, and the superstardom status he got with this show is earned. He. Is. Fabulous. WangYiBo, I discovered later, has like 2 years experience in acting. Man, is this guy a natural. He has a tough job, being the straightfaced one with at most 3 lines in one episode. He emotes through ridiculously minuscule facial and body changes whatever LWJ is thinking, and he does it in a fascinating way. You clearly see he gets better and better through the show (also he was 20 when they shot this. 20. 2×10.). Wang Zhuocheng as JiangCheng was for me a weaker link of the first part of the show, as his performance felt a bit forced. On the second part he toned it down and was muchXuan Lu as YanLi is perfect. Not an easy job to be the super sweet adorable sister without becoming a caricature, and she did an amazing nuanced job. Meng ZiYi as WenQing gives a great performance, alternating between strengh, worry and resolve fluidly. YuBin as WenNing is also really strong, with a heartfelt performance. Shoutout to Zheng Fanxing as Lan Yuan and Zhu Zanjin as Meng Yao who were perfect in their role. And let's not forget the part I usually hate in Cdrama: the dubbing. Usually you find some issues with sync, voice performance or voice fit. Here, nope. Bravo voice actors.
Music! MUSIC! The soundtrack is so good. It had to be since the leads are quite prone to use musical instruments to fight (don't ask) and they delivered. The Wuji/Wangxian, the family one, the opening one. When some of them start, you almost fear them as they are very efficient tearjecker. The ending song sang by both leads, much love.
Production! Where should we put the 5$ budget? Ok so did I say they had an absolutly ridiculous budget for this? Because that shows. That, along with the confusing story beginning, might make you stop watching. I almost did. At one point there is an animatronic giant dog that looks like it came straight from the 80s. The CGI is very windows98 labyrinth savescreen level. It's that bad. Thankfully some shots and background are beautiful, which helps to ease the pain. Scenes with close up on the caracters are the best as, let's be honest, they must have used most of their budget on makeup and the SO PRETTY costumes.
So to end this very long rant, if you're able to look past the terrible effects, a couple of cringy acting and the constant state of confusion you feel in the first 15 or so episodes of the show, you may be in for one of the best TV experience of your life.
- alixbroglio
- Jan 12, 2020
- Permalink
It's totally a worth watching drama. 💖
The story is engaging and you keep wanting to know what's next. It had so many beautiful messages. All the actors are really good, and portray the characters perfectly.
what to say about the leads, their chemistry was so beautiful, best bromance ever.💕 The actors had killed it with their performances 👏👏
It was the most cherished bonding I have ever watched💖 The way their friendship gradually developed from being just 2 opposite poles to relying on each other, taking care of each other, protecting each other, even giving up their reputation & ready to cut ties with the entire world just to stay by each others' side took my heart away 💘
Thanks you team Chén Qíng Lìng for choosing such a beautiful story and also depicting it so mesmerizingly. Thanks to all crew members whom were behind the scenes, u guys worked really hard to get us such a delightful series .
I have already watched it many times and still like to rewatch it... Highly Recommend 💖
Love From India
- rasikak-51188
- Nov 1, 2019
- Permalink
Not quite sure how I found out about this Chinese fantasy drama but thankfully, I did. I'm a bit late to the game and not all that familiar with the background but from what I understand now, it was a book or web based story that was turned into an anime series. It's now been recreated live for the screen.
At first, it's a lot to take in. I'm not familiar with Chinese shows so wasn't quite sure what to expect. There's a lot of information in the first few episodes and they're more on the silly/fun side. I was worried the whole show was going to be like that but it's not at all. It really builds who the characters are and the relationship foundations. I think it was around the mid teen eps where it started to become more serious and at some point along the way, I became so hooked. This is a binge worthy show which sucked because there are 50 episodes. I did not want to stop watching at all!
The special effects can be quite funny at times however the acrobatics are cool, fun, interesting and overall, you forget how low budget some of it seems. The costuming is absolutely gorgeous. It's almost like they put the biggest part of the budget towards costuming rather than CGI. So worth it.
The dynamic between the main character, Wei Wuxian and his significant counterpart, Lan Wangji, is beautifully developed and told as well as his familial bonds. The story creates these breathtakingly heartbreaking, emotional scenes that balance well with the lighter humourous scenes in between. I was impressed by the main actors range and with the limited facial expressions of Lan Zhan, that actor really did a great job in expressing so much by doing so little. Excellent!
There's a lot to the story and a lot of characters which I had a hard time keeping up with. I'm now watching it again to catch what I missed and the show is just as good, if not better, the second time around. This is an intriguing, entertaining, addictive show that you will stay with you even after it's over. I highly recommend giving it a go.
At first, it's a lot to take in. I'm not familiar with Chinese shows so wasn't quite sure what to expect. There's a lot of information in the first few episodes and they're more on the silly/fun side. I was worried the whole show was going to be like that but it's not at all. It really builds who the characters are and the relationship foundations. I think it was around the mid teen eps where it started to become more serious and at some point along the way, I became so hooked. This is a binge worthy show which sucked because there are 50 episodes. I did not want to stop watching at all!
The special effects can be quite funny at times however the acrobatics are cool, fun, interesting and overall, you forget how low budget some of it seems. The costuming is absolutely gorgeous. It's almost like they put the biggest part of the budget towards costuming rather than CGI. So worth it.
The dynamic between the main character, Wei Wuxian and his significant counterpart, Lan Wangji, is beautifully developed and told as well as his familial bonds. The story creates these breathtakingly heartbreaking, emotional scenes that balance well with the lighter humourous scenes in between. I was impressed by the main actors range and with the limited facial expressions of Lan Zhan, that actor really did a great job in expressing so much by doing so little. Excellent!
There's a lot to the story and a lot of characters which I had a hard time keeping up with. I'm now watching it again to catch what I missed and the show is just as good, if not better, the second time around. This is an intriguing, entertaining, addictive show that you will stay with you even after it's over. I highly recommend giving it a go.
- fuhtogruhfer
- Mar 1, 2020
- Permalink
This drama is amazing, unbelievable, incredible... If I had to choose only 1 Drama to watch in my life, it would be the Untamed...
- AlexB-France
- Nov 25, 2019
- Permalink
This is a small production series, of course the CGI on the most less important parts were done badly. I never thought that I would watch this and get addicted. Screw the people who read the novel, watched the anime and watched 2 episodes of this drama and give a bad rating. I watched the drama and went back to the novel and anime and investigate what went wrong. The drama actually made a lot sense... the problem are the first few episode which made many people a bit lost or just jump into conclusion. By the 6th episode and on, this will be changed around...you will see great acting, great story line, great plotting... and get addict to it... so much sorrow, sadness, joy, happy and fun I had watching this series. Most people came back to watch the first few episode and enjoy the fun after finishing the series! This is how enchanted and wicked this series is.
- mmsuncarol-93997
- Sep 25, 2019
- Permalink
Literally the most amazing drama. I cried, laughed and fell completely in love with the entire cast. The chemistry between the two leads is undeniable and they're such amazing actors that they completely brought the characters to life. 50 episodes, 44m each is definitely NOT enough, I was left wanting even more considering I binged this show and finished it within 3 days. 10/10 recommend and I lowkey want amnesia so I can rewatch everything.
Let me start off by saying that this had potential. im not the type to just settle for the bare minimum and say oh this is good simply bc they worked on it even if its bad. and im going to give my honest opinion. i am A BIG fan of mo dao zu shi and i knew this series existed but never watched it bc i thought the clips were cringy. and i still do altho ive warmed up to them. im going to rate everything except plot bc obviously its 10/10 aand imma give u the total breakdown k.
1 - acting the acting is.. fine. if u read the novel u know the actor of wuxian had no other choice but to act in such an annoying way. its just how the character is. all the main leads delivered a pretty decent performance. obviously humans arent natural born zombies and ghosts so when they act like that its going to be awkward, but that doesnt mean they couldnt have done better
2 - camera work the camera work omg yall its so weird. sometimes its rlly good when theyre showing the landscape and area but they zoom on the faces and sometimes theres rlly weird angles and theyre too close to the actors that it gave me secondhand embarassment.
3 - props the props are so bad. they look like pieces of plastic. listen if u dont have the budget altho u know that this series is going to need a lot of expensive looking props then dont take it up! do better!!
4 - cgi theres a lot of cgi bc this is based in a world where magic exists. sometimes it was good and then oh god it was just so bad. shouldve got a better team. the scenes where theyre flying gave me second hand embarrassment .
5 - hair and makeup worst part of this show is going to have to be this category. its not HARD to apply extensions and wigs and have them look good, but they failed to do that. it distracted me so much. idk why theyre heads look so thick making them look ugly probably bc of ur musty wig. these actors are so good looking yet ur stylists managed to make them ugly. Xiao Zhan was the only one who still looked good despite the horrible hair..and makeup? is it rlly that hard to find good artists? the cuts, wounds, scars and blood yk they just look so fake and poorly done. do better miss girl..
6 - setting omg whoever decided on the shooting locations deserves a raise bc theres some beautiful locations that blew my mind and look exactly how i imagined them too. the cloud rec and gusu in general was beautiful honestly. good for the person that picked these locations
7 - costumes this. this is the one. i have nothing to say other than i hope whoever designed and was in charge of costumes is sleeping well rn because they look so fkn good. saved the show and made me forget abt the other flaws.
in conclusion ummm watch this show with caution. the characters are relatable and u will become emotionally attached. byeee
1 - acting the acting is.. fine. if u read the novel u know the actor of wuxian had no other choice but to act in such an annoying way. its just how the character is. all the main leads delivered a pretty decent performance. obviously humans arent natural born zombies and ghosts so when they act like that its going to be awkward, but that doesnt mean they couldnt have done better
2 - camera work the camera work omg yall its so weird. sometimes its rlly good when theyre showing the landscape and area but they zoom on the faces and sometimes theres rlly weird angles and theyre too close to the actors that it gave me secondhand embarassment.
3 - props the props are so bad. they look like pieces of plastic. listen if u dont have the budget altho u know that this series is going to need a lot of expensive looking props then dont take it up! do better!!
4 - cgi theres a lot of cgi bc this is based in a world where magic exists. sometimes it was good and then oh god it was just so bad. shouldve got a better team. the scenes where theyre flying gave me second hand embarrassment .
5 - hair and makeup worst part of this show is going to have to be this category. its not HARD to apply extensions and wigs and have them look good, but they failed to do that. it distracted me so much. idk why theyre heads look so thick making them look ugly probably bc of ur musty wig. these actors are so good looking yet ur stylists managed to make them ugly. Xiao Zhan was the only one who still looked good despite the horrible hair..and makeup? is it rlly that hard to find good artists? the cuts, wounds, scars and blood yk they just look so fake and poorly done. do better miss girl..
6 - setting omg whoever decided on the shooting locations deserves a raise bc theres some beautiful locations that blew my mind and look exactly how i imagined them too. the cloud rec and gusu in general was beautiful honestly. good for the person that picked these locations
7 - costumes this. this is the one. i have nothing to say other than i hope whoever designed and was in charge of costumes is sleeping well rn because they look so fkn good. saved the show and made me forget abt the other flaws.
in conclusion ummm watch this show with caution. the characters are relatable and u will become emotionally attached. byeee
- hastingsbritney
- Dec 21, 2020
- Permalink
I guess I'm the only one who thought that the acting was terrible apart from the two main actors. After watching the live action of Word of honor it was quiet easy to see the differences in quality (acting & costumes/props, and the grandmaster of Demonic cultivation - live action renamed as The Untamed - I felt could've done much much better. I didn't appreciate the changes from the original story either, altering nearly most of the main plots. Eg: WWU's ability to freeze someone on the spot (1st episode). I get that they can't add all the information in the book. The donghua/anime is much recommended and if anyone wanting to know the actual story, read the novel Mo Dua Zu Shi. There are some good English translations on the web.
- niruudukala
- Apr 9, 2021
- Permalink