Pendant la période des royaumes combattants, la plus belle femme du pays piège les cœurs de deux hommes très puissants. Gong Sun Li est la petite-fille et disciple du puissant chef militaire Gong Sun Yu. Le premier disciple Jing Ke et Sun Li se sont aimés depuis l'enfance. Lorsque les troupes de Qin attaquent, Jing Ke est empoisonné en essayant de protéger Sun Li. Afin de sauver Jing Ke, Sun Li accepte d'épouser Ying Zheng, l'empereur de la dynastie Qin, mais apprend qu'elle est déjà enceinte du bébé de Ying Zheng. Ying Zheng a toujours aimé Sun Li et accepte l'enfant. Tandis que Sun Li apprend à connaître le côté plus doux et gentil du souverain impitoyable, elle commence à en tomber amoureuse. Vers qui se tournera sa loyauté lorsque Jing Ke viendra au palais pour assassiner Ying Zheng ? (La source: Viki) ~~ Adapted from the 1st book in the novel series "The Legend of Qin: Li Ji Story" (秦时明月之丽姬传) by Wen Shi Ren (温世仁). Modifier la traduction
- Français
- 中文(简体)
- Русский
- Deutsch
- Titre original: 秦时丽人明月心
- Aussi connu sous le nom de: The King's Woman , Li Ji Chuan , Qin Shi Ming Yue Zhi Li Ji Chuan , 丽姬传 , 秦时明月之丽姬传
- Réalisateur: Liu Xin, Hsiu Lan Hu, Hu Yi Juan
- Genres: Romance, Wuxia, Drame, Politique
Où regarder La femme du roi
Distribution et équipes
- Dilraba Dilmurat Rôle principal
- Vin Zhang Rôle principal
- Liao Xue QiuHuayang Queen Mother / Lady HuayangRôle Secondaire
- Zhang NatalieGe LanRôle Secondaire
Critiques
Story (7/10):
In more ways than not, the premise is unconventional - not only by Chinese dramas standards, but in the realm of romance. If one is even slightly familiar with early Chinese history, then the idea of a forced relationship with a man whose ruthless tyranny is more infamous than his merits in unifying what is now China, has all the ingredients for an interesting romance. A romance tying into real historical characters and their famed personalities, leaves one curious to see how this equally unstable yet devoted ruler thaws his way into the heart of the object of his infatuation, after taking her away from the life she wanted and those she loves.
Throw in a second lead (Jing Ke) whose name is synonymous in history with balls rivaling the Great Wall for his assassination attempts on the emperor, and imaginations be running wild from all sorts of directions this story can go, and the immense potential it has. Sounds very ambitious, doesn't it?
And yet it fell flat. Over-saturated with unoriginal, predictable tropes that take away substantial momentum from the bigger picture, and in the end achieved nothing for plot and characterization. Despite active ingredients for what could have been good storytelling and real conflicts, poor characterization is probably what ruined the drama. Characters that garner neither sympathy nor respect, whose actions make no sense of the insensible, and mostly controlled by situations rather than in control of. Drama begins with a plot only to end with none (minus the part where they stuck to history). Seriously, will someone please think of the plot?!
And then there's flashbacks. The only thing more overused is good ol' flashbacks with the cheesy music, to cement itself as extremely lazy, poor writing at its finest. One flashback in particular has me thankful for helping me realize self restraint levels I never knew existed.
Because everytime it comes up the urge to shave myself bald before pulling my hair out from seeing it for the 100000th time is real. To paraphrase another user, the excessive flashbacks is "an insult to audiences as if the lot suffers from amnesia" couldn't be more accurate.
And ultimately, all is left are frustrating characters, unfulfilled potential and whole lot of disappointment.
Acting (6.5/10):
Not much to be said here. The cast does little to connect the audience, poor characterization aside on writers' part. Dilraba is wholly unimpressive as the leading lady , and proved herself as lacking depth to carry heavier roles like her character here. As for Zhang Bin Bin, he delivers as a mean guy with tender moments, but lacks the magnanimous charisma of a unstable frightening ruler that is Qing Shi Huang. Seriously just read up the guy on Wiki for those unfamiliar with Chinese history. Chemistry between the two however, might be the only saving grace for the drama, if ever is one.
Supporting characters played by actors for Han Shen and Li Zhong are more convincing than mains.
Music (7/10): The OST is good. And by OST I mean two songs for the entire 48 episodes. One in particular is the jack of all trades, used for happier moments to tragic ones, rain or shine, Li Er with Jing Ke, Ying Zheng, etc you name it. One can even guess when it cues and where. The producers of this drama tend to have a single favorite for everything, from music to flashbacks. Besides that, the OST reflects well the tragic theme of the drama, and is memorable. Though may be a function of being hounded into one's memory.
Rewatch: (5/10) only reason I can imagine anyone wanting to bother with this is for the leading pair during more romantic moments. One is better off finding those YouTube MVs for all those "swoonworthy" moments instead.
Am I being too harsh? Perhaps. However, as a frequent watcher of Chinese historicals, I can't help but feel unimpressed. Maybe a better writer, production team and leading cast would have brought out a better outcome. Went into this excited but came out with shattered expectations. Unfortunate because the cinematography, filming (minus choppy editing)and costumes are gorgeous, and despite the complaints, I wanted to like this so badly for parts I did enjoy. However redeeming aspects are largely overshadowed by what is not