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  • Últ. vez en línea: abr 25, 2021
  • Género: Mujer
  • Ubicación: USA
  • Contribution Points: 0 LV0
  • Cumpleaños: November 30
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  • Fecha de ingreso: septiembre 27, 2013
Silence taiwanese drama review
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Silence
A 6 usuarios les ha parecido útil esta reseña
by pattyrn4
mar 12, 2014
20 of 19 episodios vistos
Visto 0
Global 3.0
Historia 2.0
Actuación/Reparto 5.0
Música 5.0
Volver a ver 1.0
This review may contain spoilers
Vic Zhou is a handsome, talented actor, but he could not save this drama. It was utterly boring with the characters frozen as flashbacks played for minutes at a time. The first episode starts with 2 children meeting in a hospital where the girl has been taken after a bus accident. Although no one can figure out why, it left her a mute. She can see and hear, but can't speak. That is the premise for the drama. Let's think about this for a minute. Millions of people are in accidents and are there mutes walking around using sign language? The children agree to meet 13 years later. During the 13 years of absence they continue to love each other after only meeting for a few days, another absurdity. The writer then uses continual contrived events to bring the two together 13 years later. For example, Wei Yi's car breaks down and Shem Shem just happens to be driving the same road at the same moment. Or Shem Shem is on a bus and Wei Yi gets on the very same one at the same time. Around Episode 6 (this is not a spoiler, it is in the summary above) Wei Yi discovers he is dying. For the next 13 episodes the drama is set in mourning. The mood, tempo, and music slow down even more. There are no big surprises, everything is predictable. I always cry at melodramas, but not this one. It was a relief at the end. If you want more of Vic Zhou, watch Mars or Meteor Garden.
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