Qing Chen è una potente incantatrice con notevoli capacità di guarigione. Fa parte di un gruppo elitario di maghi il cui ruolo principale è quello di vegliare sulla famiglia imperiale che governa la terra. Tuttavia, il destino la porta ad innamorarsi di uno dei principi imperiali, Yuan Ling. Il codice dei maghi proibisce severamente di sposarsi o di avere rapporti intimi con la famiglia imperiale - in particolare con l'Imperatore - poiché ritengono che la violazione di questo codice avrà un effetto disastroso sul regno. Ma il legame d'amore tra i due è troppo forte per essere negato. E quando Yuan Ling sale al trono, decide di prendere Qing Chen come moglie. Ma il giorno della cerimonia, il fratello del nuovo imperatore scatena un violento tentativo di prendere il potere. Qing Chen usa una pietra magica per viaggiare indietro nel tempo in un universo parallelo, intento a vanificare i suoi piani amorosi con Yuan Ling e ad evitare future catastrofi. Può riuscire a respingerlo la seconda volta? O l'amore si rivelerà troppo forte perché anche questa potente maga possa trattenerlo? (Fonte: Viki) Modifica la Traduzione
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- Titolo Originale: 醉玲珑
- Conosciuto Anche Come: Zui Ling Long , Drunken Exquisiteness
- Regista: Lin Yu Fen, Leung Sing Kuen, Yu Cui Hua, Guo Hu, Ren Hai Tao, Jiang Ji Zheng
- Sceneggiatore: Rao Jun, Han Pei Zhen
- Generi: Romantico, Wuxia, Fantasy
Cast & Ringraziamenti
- Cecilia LiuFeng Qing Chen [Great Sorceress of the Mages]Ruolo Principale
- William ChanYuan Ling [4th Prince]Ruolo Principale
- Joe XuYuan Zhan [7th Prince]Ruolo Principale
- Cecilia HanTao Yao [Leader of the Mages]Ruolo Principale
- Liu Yi JunEmperor Yuan AnRuolo Principale
- Jovi XuYuan Li [12th Prince]Ruolo Principale
Recensioni
There's also the cute side characters/couple that are so adorable.
I love how both the main lead would do anything for anyone they cared/loved n how much they loved each other it was just so sweet many dramas always have something where there's some kind of trust issue or where ones a little too jealous to the point of overboard but this was just amazing.
Now onto my lovely prince zhan many may not like his character bc of what he did but then i felt like he's such a sweet boy he was willing to do anything for Qing Chen but sadly he's just a second lead :(
The only thing that I didn't like was like slow subbing which is not the dramas fault at all but then I had to wait forever bc dramefever the only one that got the licenses for it took a whole moth to freaking start subbing the first few episodes n that the director had to add duo xia who wanted so desperately to be with ling at one point but it was good that he never swayed for her or anything lol cause I would've flipped out if he broke Qing Chen's heart in anyway when she did all of that just for him.
Overall I'm just in love with this dramas so yes I definitely recommend this drama if you want to watch something that brings out all your emotions but not annoyingly bad or just sad like some other shows that I've watched. Btw the music tho it's amazing I've noticed that Chinese dramas always have amazing music to accompany their shows lol none of it are like ever bad.
Convoluted explanation:
Qing Chen utilizes a set of nine stones to reset the universe after the love of her life nearly comes to a fatal end. However, doing so is not without consequence. Firstly, no one will remember her, nor can she reveal her identity. Secondly, she'll only have a predetermined amount of time before the flower of life wilts, which loses a petal whenever the major players in that timeline die and/or as time passes. And thirdly, if she doesn't recollect the scattered stones before her time is up, her existence will be wiped from the history of the universe and everything she has done up until that point will be nullified.
Simple explanation:
The basic premise of this show is that a girl (Qing Chen) goes a year into the past to change the fate of the love of her life. It obviously can't be that easy because the writers have another 45-ish episodes to write, so there are rules: she only has roughly 6 months to recollect the scattered stones that acted as her time machine and return to the future. If she fails, she disappears from the universe (including people's memories) and, as mentioned above, everything she has done up until that point will be nullified.
(If you haven't watched it yet, stop reading now if you want to avoid spoilers)
So what does she do? She devotes all of her efforts to saving Ling, her true love, and basically blows off searching for the stones because... Selflessness?? I guess?? Honestly, when it comes to dramas like these, the overall consensus is that any "genius" character is just a brilliant fool... Mostly for plot convenience. When the writers need them to pull some miraculously impossible solution out of their ass, they do, and when the writers need them to play dumb and overlook something blatantly obvious, they do. And that about perfectly sums up Qing Chen. She's a brilliant fool and victim of cheap plot manipulation.
She SHOULD be concerned about finding the stones. She SHOULD value her life. Why? Because if she doesn't find the stones, or if she dies, everything she went through to save Ling will go to waste— he'll still die at the hands of his power-hungry brother from before she went back in time, she just won't exist to witness it. It basically invalidates everything she is putting herself through; it's like devoting tons of time and effort into a video game with the intention to just delete the save file halfway. IT DOESN'T MAKE SENSE.
There are so many plot holes, so many I've lost count. They pulled a J.K. Rowling "Prisoner of Azkaban" so many times. What do I mean by that? Well, the whole premise of "Prisoner of Azkaban" is that Harry and Hermione fuck with time to fix a bunch of shit, but that mechanic is never visited again in the subsequent books because... Well, because it was hellish to write about so J.K. Rowling just casually opted out. Plus, it would've destroyed her tragic plans for the the story (since everything could be fixed by time travel), making it boring, repetitive, and predictable. TL;DR? "Lost Love in Times," like "Prisoner of Azkaban," is another example of— say it with me now— PLOT CONVENIENCE.
Then again, they must've done something right since I did watch it until the end, which is rare for me these days. I gotta give it to China— they've got political turmoil and domestic upheaval down to a science. If you can keep track of all the characters and side stories, you won't be disappointed by the amount of detail that goes into the corrupt and ceaseless competition for power. WITH THAT BEING SAID...
What a cheap excuse of an ending. It's the epitome of "oh shit, we wrote ourselves into a corner and the characters don't have their happy ending. Whelp... SCREW IT. FAN SERVICE TIMEEEE."
Don't get me wrong, I love me a happily ever after, but I'd rather a tragic ending that makes sense than a forced and poorly executed happy ending. Period.
*deep breath*