For Chinese TV viewers, a host of new and engrossing drama
series may help take their minds off the current heat wave.
Among the new programmes, TV drama series favoured by Chinese
viewers is the screenplay entitled Spicy Mother-in-Law
(Ma La Po Xi), now showing at primetime on CCTV-1.
In a humorous manner, it depicts the trivial, daily frictions
between mother and daughter-in-law in an extended family in
northern China.
By dramatizing tension between the two sides and depicting
everyday life in a humorous way, director Li Shaohong says, "The
series addresses common domestic problems that everyone is familiar
with."
"I like this drama for its humorous and personal touch," said
Yan Feng, a middle-aged company clerk and TV viewer.
However, for younger Chinese TV drama buffs, Smile
Again (Zai Ci Wei Xiao), a soap opera imported from
South Korea, is a favourite.
Starring pop idols such as Kim Hee-sun and Lee Dong-gun, it is a
moving love story between a softball player and a perfume
seller.
Through movies, TV dramas, comic books, clothes and music, South
Korean pop culture has become very popular among Chinese young
people.
Kim Hee-sun, one of the most well-known South Korean pop stars
in China, will definitely add to the appeal of this series, critics
say.
Meanwhile, viewers will be treated to a good number of new
series. Following the success of Dae Jang Geum, South
Korean director Byoung-hoon Lee is offering viewers a new
historical drama, Seodongyo, King Moo of Baekje.
Adapted from an old Korean folk song, this 54-episode series
recounts King Moo's accession to the throne. With his long
background in shooting historical dramas, Lee has reportedly
expressed his confidence in the new production.
Given its great popularity in South Korea, many Chinese critics
believe that it is certain to be a hit with Chinese audiences.
Apart from South Korean TV series, Hong Kong dramas are also
very popular.
For example, soap operas from Hong Kong's TVB have long been
favourites among mainland audiences, especially younger
viewers.
The Dance of Passion (Huo Wu Kuang Sha) is
poised to capture viewers' attention with its drama and enmity
between two households on the plateau of northern China. Though
criticized by some people for its "banal scene of endless loess
landscape," it is still credited with a truthful representation of
the lifestyle and customs of Northwest China's Shaanxi
Province.
With a star-studded cast that is the same as that of War and
Beauty (Jin Zhi Yu Nie), this glamorous costume play
will soon be released, according to sources close to TVB.
On the Chinese mainland, the adaptation of popular novels has
produced various TV drama titles, such as Knightliness of a
Group of Swordmen (She Diao Ying Xiong Zhuan) and
New Eagle Lover (xin Shen Diao Xia Lu), both
drawing a huge number of loyal fans.
New Shanghai Bund (Xin Shanghai Tan), due to
be aired in the coming weeks, may offer viewers some new delight,
critics say.
The TV drama series tells the story of life in Shanghai in the
turbulent 1930s.
It stars Huang Xiaoming and Sun Li, emerging stars among Chinese
TV drama fans and moviegoers. The first "Shanghai Bund" TV drama
series, which starred Chow Yun-fat and Lu Liangwei, proved to be a
great hit among mainland viewers.
"What makes it distinctive from the previous version is its more
detailed depiction of characters in the critical historical
moment," popular TV drama series director Gao Xixi was quoted as
saying by local media.
(China Daily July 25, 2006)