Completed
sunsky
74 people found this review helpful
Jan 20, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 8
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

XIAO DUO & BU YINLOU IS THE BEST PART OF THIS DRAMA

Okay first thing first I’m the type to give review on mdl just for dramas I found really entertaining to watch from ep1- to ending. Now that the show had ended, I will give my review for this surprising very engaging drama to me. I watched this drama because of the dark trailer vibe and angst I thought gonna happened 90% of the time due to the eunuch-concubine love story but nope, this drama surprised me with romcom moments and I love it so much. Watch for super non-toxic and hot-cute couple. It’s serious yet not so serious drama I must say. And I love it!

This is my first time watching both main leads on a full drama, before this I did know them from drama clips on YT etc so it’s not that I’m entirely new to both of them but this is their first drama I watched in full until the end. And I love Yukee Chen (Bu Yinlou) and Dylan Wang ( Xiao Duo) so much on this drama. Sure, I can’t say their acting are perfect from beginning to the end but the definitely improved so much throughout the show. Yukee Chen is good with emotional scenes and she can cry naturally & easily imo. Her best scenes that are so memorable to me from this drama were confrontation scenes with the Emperor and emotional scenes with ML Xiao Duo and her father. BYL is very strong, smart, cunning and calculative. She’s not good at martial art like XD but she’s definitely strong willed and not the type to be bullied as well. In fact, the bullies are the ones who need to be scared with her comeback. If people hit her, she will definitely hit them back on the spot. I love this kind of FL in cdramas. I will drop dramas I’m watching if I feel like FL is too stupid, I only like smart people. And BYL is exactly the character I like to watch in dramas. I’m so satisfied to get this kind of FL who’s actually useful to the plot and helping the whole scenes along with ML.
Dylan Wang as Xiao Duo is a good match! He indeed looks suave while doing martial art scenes. He just nailed it with his posture and movements. Dylan is still young but I can see great potential in him. His memorable scenes in this drama are of course his fighting scenes whoa I repeated few times before I moved on to next scene, and his lovey dovey scenes with FL. He also has mature looks, so he can look older than his age with correct expressions. I think he did so well as XD. ML is a very smart, cunning and calculative person as well. XD and BYL actually have so much similarities in character imo, so their synergy are really good and they can simply understand each other’s plan when they’re scheming something. These two are too smart that they can’t even fool each other. Yet despite how cunning and calculative they’re, I like that they’re not toxic to each other. At first they did used each other for support but that’s before they fall in love. I love how these two didn’t have stupid misunderstanding because they just know each other very well. I’m satisfied with the romance despite the cuts (yes there’s many cuts due to censorship) but even without those cuts, the romance is still there. Despite all this ‘forbidden love’ thingy, don’t worry, these two especially XD didn’t even try to hide their relationship? He only tried to deny BYL’s feeling once but after that, he’s on full flirting mode with her till the end. He’s so hotly ‘dark’ looking on the first few episodes but once he started to have feeling for her, oh my this cold-hot-ML trouple turning into hot soft-husband to his wife will always make me melt. He didn’t even care if anyone in the Imperial City knows about them. Their romance is the best thing in this drama imo, I stick to them till the end because they totally worth my time. I think their chemistry is really convincing, no one can convince me otherwise. They’re cute and hot together. XIAO DUO AND BU YINLOU IS THE BEST PART OF THIS DRAMA!

okay plot wise, I’m majorly attracted to this forbidden love between eunuch-concubine because I had watched Serenade of Peaceful Joy and damn the angst between the Princess and her eunuch there was heart wrenching but I love that this drama made some plot twist. They made it lighter romcom, yes there are very serious moments here and there, you will get scared and creeped out by the Emperor because damn he’s SO CREEPY! Too obsessed with FL. Peter Ho did amazing job here because I cursed him so much throughout the show. Like seriously, he’s good!
But everytime there’s serious scenes, this show will manage to lighten the mood with comedy after it, so you don’t get traumatized. It’s light not light, serious not serious to me. I like it that way.

About the cuts, at first I was mad but after knowing how they only passed the censorship after 3rd time, I’m just thankful that they managed to release this. You can check out the discussion section here, the cuts to fill in your imagination will be there. That’s some high quality cuts YOU MUST WATCH (lot of kissing?) or else you will miss out the good stuffs, this is important!

I will assure you that you will be fine with the ending. Some plot holes here & there which is expected to me but as long as my CP is okay I don’t really care about anything else, as simple as that. To me this show is a MUST WATCH for news stans of Dylan Wang and Yukee Chen. Good performances from both of them and shout out to Peter Ho for being effective psycho.

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Completed
MagnoliaCream
32 people found this review helpful
Mar 2, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 9.5
Music 9.5
Rewatch Value 10

Contrary to naysayers, the story is intact. Brave and noble, too.

If you're looking for a fluffy, bubble-gum drama that would not require you to think, or if you just want to see Dylan Wang's kissing scenes and are not in the least bit curious about the title of the drama, take note - only by firing up some brain cells would you fully appreciate this.

Unchained Love tells the love story of Xiao Duo, a mysterious eunuch who is the second most powerful man in the empire next only to the emperor, and Bu Yinlou, a young concubine-born noblewoman who is swindled by her father's legal wife to become one of the aged emperor's concubines. Before Yinlou meets the emperor, he dies, leaving her to become one of his childless widows who are to be sacrificed as tribute ladies to accompany him in the afterlife. Xiao Duo saves Yinlou from this cruel fate, starting a collusion between two intelligent, cunning and passionate characters that develops into friendship and eventually love.

Dylan Wang is perfectly cast as Xiao Duo, the head of an imperial bureau that enforces peace and order in the empire. Six years ago, he entered the Imperial City then used his martial arts skills and charms to gain a powerful position that would enable him to investigate the murder of his younger brother. Yuqi Chen shows exceptional acting skills as Bu Yinlou, the illegitimate daughter of a noble family who pretends to be stupid and lazy to hide her intelligence and wit, refusing to participate in palace power games.

The rest of the cast is as remarkable and three-dimensional, notably Peter Ho as the new emperor who is obsessed with Yinlou, and Zeng Li as the previous emperor's empress who is obsessed with Xiao Duo. The emperor's and ex-empress's oppressive desires to possess the objects of their obsession contrast with the unchained love between Xiao Duo and Yinlou that seeks the beloved's survival, freedom and happiness.

The title of the novel on which the drama is based, Fu Tu Ta, refers to the tower where tribute ladies are sacrificed to join newly-deceased emperors. It is thus a symbol of oppression that brought about such inhumane practices as requiring newly widowed imperial concubines to either become tribute ladies or attend to their dead husbands' remains in the Imperial Mausoleum for the rest of their lives. Another oppressive law forces male palace workers to give up their manhood, that is, become eunuchs. Oppression is also manifested in the new emperor's obsession with Yinlou and the ex-empress's obsession with Xiao Duo.

Much ado has been made about scenes that were cut due to censorship. In my opinion, only about six cut scenes had some significance but none affected the story. The absence of those steamy scenes doesn't matter as the intensity of Xiao Duo and Yinlou's passion still shines through and the remaining romantic scenes are more meaningful than the cut ones. In fact, I think the removal of some scenes served the story better. I would have been immediately turned off Yinlou had the scene of her tastelessly jumping on and kissing Xiao Duo at the start of their acquaintance not been cut.

It's rather amusing how the censored scenes provide a metaphor for Xiao Duo's manhood. Despite the cut scenes, the story is intact.

In a genre that glorifies revenge-killing, I applaud the bravery of this drama in showing how true love can rid the heart of the oppressive power of hatred that fuels the obsession for revenge. In a master stroke of storytelling, justice for his brother is served without Xiao Duo resorting to such a cowardly act as killing an unarmed man cold-bloodedly. Thus, I consider any alleged flaw, such as choppy editing due to a few censored-out scenes, more than offset by the uncharacteristic noble values espoused by this drama - love, peace, patience and forgiveness, among others.

Another thing I love about this drama is how humor that is mostly subtle and witty is injected every now and then. The ridiculous knock-on-the-wall communication, Yinlou outwitting kidnapping attempts and other hilarious situations and witticisms had me in stitches.

And yet another thing I love is the ending that is so loaded with symbolism it could occupy hours of discussions about oppression. About hope rising from its ashes. About love prevailing over its chains. That scene startled me that a Chinese drama could be that poetic, daring to disappoint fans hoping for a more explicit ending. It also gave me respect for low-budget cdramas that could dare to choose art over a crowd-pleasing happily-ever-after scene.

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Completed
Crazy about Asian dramas
18 people found this review helpful
Jan 24, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 7.5

Different story

The way the story solve the solution of the problem was different. Here problem was tyranny king whose obsession destroyed so many lives . His greed made him restless. He totally drown in his power . The solution was to run away from the problem without acknowledge the problem.
Good acting ,all the characters of the drama was amazing . At some point I lost the interest with the drama but the way story was progressed I liked it . I love the chemistry between the leads and their assistance's love story too.
Give a try.
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Completed
gaja123
20 people found this review helpful
Feb 10, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 10
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers

Wang He Di and Chen Yu Qi the best couple in this drama !

I started watching this drama because of the lead actor Dylan Wang, whose films I've been watching recently. And it turned out that this drama is one of the best I've watched in recent times, despite the many cuts they had to make due to censorship!
Nice plot, although the beginning and the first episodes in the palace are too long ... it's good that then they moved the main characters outside the city and they could continue the development of the relationship.
The main couple is incredibly cute! They both had very good chemistry, it was felt as their love developed. Dylan Wang as Xiao Duo, at the beginning as stiff, unavailable, but with humorous moments, gradually under the influence of Bu Yin Lou, he turns into a sweet, in love man who wants to protect his beloved with all his might. He can joke, flirt and those beautiful scenes when he stares at his beloved BYL with his beautiful unusual eyes, something fantastic, I love this couple! I really regret that the censorship cut out so many nice, romantic scenes with them! And there was so much positive emotional charge in these scenes!
Chen Yu Qi also played very well, she was intelligent, clever and cheerful. Her relationship with the lead lead was fantastic. They supported each other. I didn't know this actress before, but I really liked her. I hope they will play together in another drama someday.
The secondary characters also did very well. Fans that the plot also had a lot of funny elements, it did the whole drama well.
I lost the most nerves because of the character of Murong Gao Gong, the one who was initially undervalued, unsuccessful and fixated on memories of a girl who once helped him in his childhood, a prince, and then a cynical, psychopathic emperor fixated on an imaginary unrequited feeling for his childhood savior WAS. Ruthless if anyone opposed him. Peter Ho played it so well I wanted to strangle him. It's a pity that he took revenge on the main characters until the very end.
I didn't like that the solution was rushed and in the last episode. Fortunately, it worked out well for the main leads. But there are no scenes between the two main leads after they split up and the final scene ends with the main leads running out of town, but it's unclear if they ran out or not because the episode ends here. I know there was a scene of the main leads out of town on a hill in a beautiful romantic setting, and I don't know why they cut it. This scene would have ended the whole thing beautifully. So I am sorry about that. I recommend it for shaving.

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Completed
Terrica18
17 people found this review helpful
Feb 12, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Must watch.

This was surprisingly good. I really loved it. I was hesitant based on the synopsis but I’m glad that I watched it. It was very unique. The storyline was one that I’d never seen so I was definitely always wondering what would happen. I think the build up was good. There were few and short lived misunderstandings. Things were cleared up well and the ending was great.

Bold ML and a clever FL. The chemistry was one scene which made it even better.

You’ll get the obsessive person, the scheming person, the vengeful person, the deceiver, the lover, the chemistry, loyalty, brotherhood, good fight scenes and I do mean gooood. ML was a beast. Love, love, loved it.

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Completed
PeachBlossomGoddess Flower Award1
70 people found this review helpful
Feb 5, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 15
Overall 6.5
Story 6.5
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 5.0

Missing parts.

Let me preface this review with a warning - this is a well-loved drama that I simply fail to appreciate. If my criticism of it will offend you or ruin the joy you found in it, best give this a skip.

The soundbites are tantalizing: a taboo romance between a eunuch and a concubine; a ruthless and scheming male lead; a spirited and clever female lead; and palace conspiracies and mysteries aplenty. Not to mention Wang Hedi's Xiao Duo exudes that intense tall, dark, and dangerous kind of sex appeal that screams he is no Lord Varys. So I jumped in despite my reservations over Chen Yuqi's acting. As it turns out, that is one of the drama's lesser problems.

This drama is an inane attempt at dark satire aimed at the obscene privilege of emperors. It opens with the shockingly cruel practice of sending off childless concubines, known as tribute ladies to accompany the emperor in the afterlife. After high powered eunuch Xiao Duo rescues Bu Yinlou from this dastardly fate, an alliance of sorts forms between the two as they navigate treacherous palace politics in a time of power transition. I like how it was just a mutually beneficial relationship initially and how they disliked and were wary of each other; that the romance did not blossom instantly. Where it falters is in showing me why the two most powerful men in the palace connect with and fall so utterly for a woman afflicted by bizarre facial paroxysms.

Xiao Duo's wicked ruthlessness is gleefully conveyed with wit, panache, and flawless comedic timing by Wang Hedi. This is well matched by Peter Ho's slightly over-the-top portrayal of the deceptively simplistic, cartoonish-ly obsessive, and delusional emperor. Both portrayals convey each character's underlying ethos; a past sadness and secret loneliness. Unfortunately, Chen Yuqi’s jarring and tacky comedic interpretation is far more typical of a slapstick comedy than dark satire. Her exaggerated rapid eye movement and outlandish facial expressions had me triple-checking the synopsis to see if the character is supposed to be epileptic, schizophrenic, or simply possessed. While a huge upgrade from her usual vacuous sleepwalking, for the first 14 episodes, there is little beyond brazen tasteless humor in Chen Yuqi's Bu Yinlou. After that, she gets into character and delivers some really good scenes. She has good romantic chemistry with Wang Hedi that elevates her performance and the more serious tone the story takes also helps. But her acting is not consistent and wobbles again at the ending episodes. It highlights her limited range and is quite inexcusable for someone who is an acting school graduate with a long list of drama lead role credits. This is the best I have seen from her in years but that says nothing at all.

This drama's biggest issue is that it is missing a good plot. The storyline is contrived, naive and so ridiculous it is disdainful of audience intelligence. The writer's ignorance and superficial understanding of feudal imperial inner palace workings are embarrassing. It is impossible for someone like Bu Yinlou to waltz in and out of the inner palace like it is a hotel, live at a brothel and gallivant all over the kingdom with Xiao Duo. The production leaked "cut" romantic scenes like a sieve, trying to blame the abysmal failure in storytelling on censorship. The truth is all the kiss scenes in the world cannot salvage the messy plot and inconsistent characterizations. We are told both leads are smart characters but they are actually the architects of their own troubles. The allegedly Machiavelli Xiao Duo wrests the crown prince from the custody of the one person with the highest incentive to keep him alive and healthy and puts him in the hands of the person with the strongest incentive to kill him dead! As a couple, they have repeated opportunities to escape, but choose not to. Xiao Duo's revenge is anti-climatic and hastily swept under the rug once the killer is uncovered. They flaunt their affair with such reckless impunity they so deserved to get busted. I stopped caring if they ended up together and sat on the meh ending episode for weeks. I finally finished watching this so you don't have to. To my dismay, they got an ending they didn't earn or deserve.

The bottom line is Wang Hedi is the only reason to watch this drama. He is sexy even when he glowers and scowls and his costuming and visuals in this drama are swoon-worthy. In fact, save yourself some time and just watch all the fan-made videos of the romantic scenes hard-core fans have stitched together. You can skip all the rest because as foreshadowed by the eunuch theme, this drama has critical missing parts. I can only rate it 6.5/10.0 to finish at the rock bottom of my completed list for 2022.

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Completed
lenggonice
16 people found this review helpful
Jan 21, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers

Fresh story with great acting skill

This is my first chinese drama that I follow on going after I encountered Dongfang Qingcang (LBFAD is my first ever CDrama). While waiting for it to air, I watched Dylan's past dramas, and I can say his acting becomes so much richer and more versatile in every drama, start from Meteor Garden, Evernight 2 and so on. While DFQC is his most iconic role, Xiao Duo is his richest character with so many layers and I can say he gave XD justice. XD is much more than badass and cool domineering character, he is also the softest sweetheart, the most romantic lover, the best friend and the best leader for his men, cunning, smart yet silly sometimes, etc. so many layers of his characters yet Dylan played them all very well. I can't sense any DFQC left in him beside the badass and domineering side.

I really enjoyed this drama, its story is fresh and unique, the acting skills of most main actors are superb and supporting roles are great too (except Tongyun). I love how it was directed, fighting scenes are awesome and the drama set is beautiful. Even the ship set when they went to west shu is beautiful too.

But this drama has its flaws too. The flow of the story is sometimes choppy due to censorship, FL charachter is sometimes unconsistent, a few scene doesnt make sense, but it's drama anyway... the murder of XD brother plot is overused, they should make Prince Nanyuan the real culprit and Bu Yu Lu still be the traitor IMO.

The ending felt unreal since it was just it, they just showed the CP escaped together. They didnt give us any extended scene to show that they really live happily ever after! BUT, I think the drama did not really have to tell us about that moment, it already showed how it ends, not properly, but they showed us. The main protagonists got what they want freedom, free to be with whoever they want to be. The villains got what they deserved. Murong Gaogong was showed falling down to the ground, its his falling. They stopped it there. It wouldve been better if there was a naration of what happened to him, but no. But they showed us how he got his karma. He got badly injured thus he can have any child! He became eunuch himself literally. And he was slowly being crazy and lost his mind, mentally sick. And the kingdom would never accept that kind of King. They didnt show us, but it was implied. So, tho I want more for the ending, but the drama said just it. They already gave us the closure, dont asked more since it will need more effort, more episodes lol.

As for romance, tho it was cut every here and there, but I assure you, just by looking at XD lustfull gaze, you'll get to know that they're quite wild couple, lol. And IMO, even with all of those cut, their chemistry is still on fire!

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Ongoing 36/36
SweetV
18 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 8.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.5
Rewatch Value 8.0

CHAIN YOURSELF TO THIS LOVE

This is the first time I’ve written a review for an incomplete series, but it’s a MUST WATCH. So far, it’s kept me on the edge of my seat. You get a wonderful balance of romance, political turmoil in the court, battles of wit and did I mention the romance? The cinematography is stunning and the costumes are phenomenal.

Dylan and Yukee shined in their roles. As a couple, they’re definitely a force to be reckoned with. Dylan’s portrayal of the cold, cunning and ruthless high chief “eunuch” is outstanding . The way he speaks, the small gestures, the intensity of his eyes, they command your attention and his powerful aura dominates the screen. When he’s in love, he gives everything to his lover and that’s how a real man should be.

Yukee’s portrayal of the late emperor’s consort is breathtaking. She’s a breath of fresh air. She’s smart, quick witted and I love that our girl takes initiative! She’s not afraid to love who she loves despite the obstacles. I adore her.

What you get so far is a fantastic storyline with a beautiful couple who communicates, don’t have dumb misunderstandings and are courageous in their actions. I’m looking forward to seeing their story unfold and I don’t want this to end!

Edit: I finished it… and I got excited too quick. The first part of the series, led us in one particular direction, but the latter part of the series for some reason diverted from the original theme into something else. What we thought we were going to get was a serious drama with a dark tone about revenge, blood and gore. But towards the middle, it turned into a romcom that was unexpected. I’d prefer the original intent of Dylan’s character to be this brooding character filled with hatred and the thirst for revenge. However, he turned into more of this lovable, playful, goofy guy in love, which took a different direction from what I wanted. The ending itself felt very rush. Like a very typical Chinese drama. Overall I give this a solid 8/10.

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Completed
MarsellaNindita
11 people found this review helpful
Feb 1, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

The best chinese drama

Storyline, acting skill and chemistry of Unchained Love are beyond my expectation. I never think that eunuch can be male lead before I watch this drama. Dylan and yuqi really potrayed xiao duo and yinlou perfectly. Their acting skill were improved a lot if I compare with their last drama. Even a lot of intimate scenes were deleted bacause of cencorship regulation and it frustated many viewers, but, the crew released BTS of deleted scenes so we could still enjoy it. They successfully built up the great chemistry which was so natural, sweet and electrifying. I know it's hard for making romcom with historical background. I love how they switched romantic scenes to be hilarious moments and make me admire author and director. Thank you for making this beautiful drama. I really love it..

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Completed
virgievirgie
9 people found this review helpful
Feb 20, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 2
Overall 8.0
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.5

Watch it for Romance/Obsession or Dylan/Peter - But not for Revenge or Palace Politics

Subjective Gut Rating - 7.75

“Unchained Love” has such an interesting and unique general plot that unfortunately the writing and editing did not deliver. The lure of a forbidden love between a eunuch and the emperor’s woman, with revenge in the backdrop, seems to be such an amazing story. I missed the comedy tag, as I thought this would be a serious, heart-wrenching story of love and revenge. The comedy in the first few episodes threw me off a little, and the revenge plot is a disappointment. Having said that, I did have an enjoyable time watching the drama, thus I am rounding this up to an 8.0. If I solely based on the plot disappointment and the sloppy and illogical writing, this would be a 7.0-7.5.

What I Like:

1. Smart Lead Characters - I really enjoy the first third of the drama when the leads are trying to outsmart each other and then form an unlikely and unwilling alliance. I am a fan of smart female leads who can hold their own and be on the same intelligence level as the male leads. I found Bu Yin Lou (FL) has some similar characteristics to Cheng Shao Shang in “Love like the Galaxy”. They are both smart but have to hide their true self due to their upbringing. Similarly, Xiao Duo (ML) is similar to Ling Bu Yi in “Love like the Galaxy” as well. They both appear to be ruthless and cunning and are out to seek revenge, but love their women tremendously, in very different ways. Maybe that’s why I like “Unchained Love” because of these strong characters and similarities. I cannot stand a dumb female lead anymore, or one that is innocent and naive. But the similarities of both dramas end there. “Love like the Galaxy” is a much more well-written drama.

2. Acting - Well, Chen Yu Qi might have overacted a little in the beginning during her comedy parts when portraying Bu Yin Lou’s outgoing personality. But for the most part and especially after the first third of the drama, I do find her convincing. I was never a big critic of hers and found her acting decent. I am actually glad to see this funnier side of her acting, since her other roles I’ve seen are more serious or standoffish. Most of us probably watch this drama because of Dylan Wang. And yes, he plays the ruthless Xiao Duo very well. Though I am not a fan of how his character becomes a love sick puppy, that’s not his fault. He acted well. But the actors that shine in this acting category are the veterans Peter Ho (as Murong Gao Gong/Emperor) and Zeng Li (as Empress Rong An). Many have sung praises for Peter Ho in this drama and he indeed is excellent. It’s an amazing journey to follow his character’s change in this drama. Zeng Li is the only main character that uses her own voice, and I think that is why I like her acting. Coming off her other memorable performance in “Love like the Galaxy” (oh, another reference to LLTG), her acting here is more manic but also nuanced. The rest of the supporting cast did a fine job but no one stands out against the main four.

3. Production value - I don’t think this is a S+ production, but everything looks nice. It has good solid sets in the palace and also in all the houses. The props, fixtures, and furniture look good and sturdy; and nothing looks cheap. The costumes are beautiful and women’s hair accessories are tasteful without feeling overdone. The men also look good and handsome in their costumes. Dylan Wang really looks good in all his attire. Oh, except for the bad makeup for the women - too white and cakey.


What I have Mixed Feelings:

1. Dubbing - I am disappointed that 3 out of 4 main characters are dubbed. I recently saw Chen Yu Qi in “Hi Venus” and “Story of Fox Valiant” and she wasn’t dubbed. I still remember her voice and when she speaks in this drama, I couldn’t place her face with the voice. Peter Ho is probably dubbed because of his Taiwanese accent, but for such an experienced actor, it would feel so much better if I can hear his voice when he’s going all crazy. I think all Dylan Wang’s historical dramas are dubbed, so I wasn’t surprised. At least I heard his real voice in “The Rational Life”. But when you look at the major supporting cast, it seems like most of them are using their own voices. Then, why dubbed the leads???

2. Action scenes - This is not a wuxia drama, so I won’t judge the action scenes too harshly. There are some fun scenes and they definitely make Dylan Wang look good. However, I do feel that they are somewhat overexaggerated and theatrical. The flips and jumps were overdramatic and the wire work wasn’t done well. There are a few scenes especially in the last 5 episodes that it was too unrealistic to have someone standing there, everything in slow motion, and the killing just stopped. Well, I think a certain character should have been dead a long time after being pulled by 5 horses. Instead he’s just suspended in the air for a long time. This is also why I criticize the writing of this drama.

3. Main Romance - I think the chemistry between Chen Yu Qi and Dylan Wang isn’t bad. But because I was expecting more angst, a more tortured romance that I feel something is missing. I was hoping for more longing looks and loving gazes but I ended up getting some pretty open looks and hang outs together. They spend so much time together that it doesn’t seem like a forbidden romance anymore. How can no one out of their small circle see that something fishy is happening? How can the suspicious emperor not suspect something sooner? Of course, for many romance lovers, all these happy and cute scenes are a plus. I was just expecting something different.

What I Don’t Like:

1. Writing/Editing - It is probably due to censorship, or just bad writing/editing that the second half of the drama doesn't make as much sense. It was especially bad for me in the last ⅓ of the drama with the romance plot. In one scene, FL was questioning if ML really likes her and she hasn’t realized her feelings yet. In the next scene, they both spend the night together and they are outright in love with each other? The couple's intimate scenes and dialogs were cut out, and this really affected the flow of the romance. We learned of certain conversations/events via a few flashbacks. FL has been portrayed as smart and cautious throughout the drama, but for the sake of convenience, let’s have her make dumb and careless mistakes so that the emperor can finally find out the big secret. What sloppy writing for this big reveal! Our leads have so many opportunities throughout the drama to elope, but they never did. And when that finally happened, it was just that easy to get out and leave the palace without being detected.

2. Pacing - I think this drama has a strong start in the first ⅓. But in the middle, the drama slows down. I would have thought that the last ⅓ would pick up the pace as that’s when all the revenge, reveal and action take place. But unfortunately, I find these episodes slow. It’s a lot of talking in circles, waiting for something to happen but didn’t really happen.

3. Revenge - On the one hand, I understand Xiao Duo’s realization that ‘an eye for an eye’ might not be the way to go. However, after spending 6 years plotting for a revenge (we’re told but we haven’t seen much), the ending to the revenge plot is very anti-climatic. You fall for a woman, and you throw that rage out the door pretty quickly. I really dislike a male lead who was so determined in the beginning and then became a lovesick puppy in the end. Dylan’s character in “Love between Fairy and Devil” was like that, and here in “Love Unchained’ is the same. That’s why Xiao Duo’s revenge can't hold a candle to Ling Bu Yi’s in LLTG.

Do I recommend this drama? I would if you are in it for Dylan Wang or Peter Ho. “Unchained Love” is a drama about forbidden love and obsession in love. Do not watch this for the revenge plot or palace politics. If you are a romance lover and can throw some logic out the window, I think this could be a very enjoyable watch.


Completed: 2/20/23

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Completed
Drama Addict
9 people found this review helpful
Jan 23, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

Would a forbidden love have a good ending?

The highlights of this drama are the handsome Dylan Wang, the promising Chen YuQi and the acting of Peter Ho.

Dylan Wang acts the cold high-ranking head eunuch Xiao Duo with a secret. He is one of those actors who look very handsome with a stern face. His acting is impressive.

YuQi is at her best in acting the scheming yet boisterous concubine Bu YinLou. I think her acting in this drama beat her performance at the Winner is Love. Her on-screen chemistry with Dylan is excellent.

The one that beats all others is Peter Ho in the portrayal of the emperor Murong GaoGong. His character development in this drama is very interesting - from a timid prince to a hesitant emperor to that of a tyrant. You can literally see the transformation in his acting and facial expression. He is not as handsome as Dylan but his acting is superb.

The story starts very well with an original storyline centred on an eunuch, and not the typical fight for the throne. However, the initial interesting captivation slowly fades into a just a regular development with not much twist in the story. In fact, at some points it becomes a bit boring as it deteriorates into a lovey dovey courtship and love rivalry.

Later in the story, it takes a turn from a romcom into something more sinister. And that turn is not that well developed. It is simply Bu YinLou carelessly left the door of the escape tunnel open. All secrets are out and the emperor seek revenge.

Also, given that Xiao Duo is such a careful and scheming man, it certainly is out of character for him to be so careless in gallivanting with an imperial concubine in view of all the guards and in public, even if it might be in a distant location and among his own people.

Aside from the above, the drama has all the typical setting of the better produced dramas - beautiful costumes, lovely backdrop, excellent cast, quality cinematography.

Overall, it is a good production. Especially, if you are a fan of Dylan or YuQi, it might be well worth watching.

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Completed
a female gazing
9 people found this review helpful
Jan 28, 2023
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers

A Technically Flawed But Ultimately Gratifying Love Story

Unchained Love follows powerful Imperial City special bureau leader Xiao Duo on his quest to avenge his brother's murder by climbing the political ladder and weeding out corrupt officials. On the way to discovering the truth, he meets Bu Yin Lou, a royal concubine who is being courted by the newly-crowned emperor. The two become unlikely allies in dangerous court intrigue, and their bond turns into something more. What follows is a forbidden love story that's simultaneously clichéd and romantically riveting. The show grapples with complex themes around freedom of choice, the corrupting influence of power, and society's view of women as decorative objects rather than as fully realized human beings with their own agency and desires. It's certainly a valiant effort, but not always a successful one.

Revenge/romance/historical dramas usually rely heavily on similar narrative elements, and this show is no exception: you've got the plucky heroine and her dark brooding new beau, the two servants who form a bond trying to protect their masters, the evil queen figure with a penchant for poison, and the paranoid king who slowly descends into madness....I could go on. Nothing here is really new or unique, but it doesn't matter, because those clichés exist for a reason: they work! Plus, the antagonism-to-adoration pipeline never gets old for me. However, I wasn't expecting our ML to fall for the FL quite so fast. The production discarded his menacing Bad Guy™️ persona almost immediately. Make no mistake about Xiao Duo: he is really a big softie in black fabric, and you are reminded of this at nearly every turn. This was not an enemies-to-lovers liaison as I expected it to be, but rather...allies-to-friends-to-lovers? I actually enjoyed this deviation from the norm, though there was plenty of room for improvement.

Dylan Wang was great as usual, and beyond stunning with his villainously slanted eyebrows. I like the guy, sure, but he was utterly gorgeous in this drama. One particular scene comes to mind where he awakens from slumber, and the camera is zoomed in on his face...wow. Listen, it was the best kind of fan-service for the female gaze. Dylan is a little typecast these days, but I'm not complaining. I very much enjoyed the eye candy, and besides, he has an undeniable affinity for playing the bad-boy-with-a-heart-of-gold.

I've seen criticisms of the lead actress, as well as the chemistry of the main couple, but I firmly disagree with these criticisms, and suspect a lot of the negative chatter was young-ish Dylan fans with an unhealthy attachment to his previous projects. Perhaps the chemistry was not Red Hot per se, but it doesn't always have to be. These two had a fantastic dynamic, quiet and soft like a slow heartbeat, that felt very harmonious and natural to me. I don't need sexy fireworks all the time, and what stood out here was the love-factor, not the lust. Xiao Duo's curiosity and confusing desire to protect, colliding with Bu Yin Lou's iron will to survive and her determination for freedom? I found it very moving at times, but to each their own. Will Chen Yu Qi win an Academy Award any time soon? Unlikely. But she did a fine job here, imo. Her Bu Yin Lou was frequently understated and very compelling. The character was clever and adaptable without being a savant; plucky and courageous without being irritating and Girl-Boss-y; brave when it counted and deeply understanding of ML's limitations. Chen Yu Qi embodying the character was so refreshing. I think people are so used to overacting in C-dramas that they perceive normal performances of human protagonists as bland. This is a bad take.

By far the biggest point of contention I had with this show was the pacing. It's difficult to articulate how important pacing is: you barely notice it when done right, but when done wrong, it impacts every facet of the narrative.

The transitions in Unchained Love—between scenes, character arcs, side stories, even camera shots—are anything but smooth, and for this, the whole show suffers. The issue is most pronounced in the shoddy editing, which is criminally atrocious. The most egregious example? The truly bizarre cuts during romantic scenes, which I found out later was due to censorship laws, i.e. the couple is about to kiss and suddenly there is a very abrupt cut to a wide shot of nature/scenery. The camerawork did not feel organic or planned, but rather a change made hastily in post-production. Even the romantic climax was not safe from this 'technique.' There were ways to get around censorship limitations without sacrificing the show's integrity. These cuts seemed so unintentional that I actually wondered at first if there was some sort of scandal with the actors. It was really that pronounced.

The editing was problematic in other ways, too. It was clear to me that the story would have benefitted from more linear storytelling. Instead, the production team tried to use a method wherein a surprising or out of character thing happens and then flashbacks are deployed to explain that the joke is on you, and the thing you've just witnessed is ALL A RUSE! It's a very jarring and ultimately unsatisfying tool used solely for shock value. Its' intention is to Subvert Expectations, and when done well can be exciting, but it was NOT done well here, not a single time. It was unnecessary, and it effectively cheapened the whole drama. It felt cheesy instead of climactic. Audiences like twists, not tricks.

I also feel the trailer profoundly misrepresentative. What seemed to be an angsty, vengeful, myopic romance ended up being a pretty cute and silly romcom where the revenge is mostly an afterthought. Albeit it did have some dark/dramatic elements, but as a rule, these elements weren't treated thematically with the reverence and heaviness they deserved. E.g., the human sacrifice ritual of tens of concubines in the first episode. It certainly got darker in the latter half, but by this point I felt pretty confident in a happy ending and thus these moments didn't have the expected impact. I was not really upset about this, but it did seem a bit like false advertising, and in general the tone of the drama as a whole needed to be better controlled by the director—I had frequent tonal whiplash from scene to scene, making the narrative feel less coherent and sometimes like a patchwork of film scraps. I really, really wish I could have seen this show before the editing room hacked it to pieces.

Minor gripes: Ending was super unsatisfying. OST was okay but very forgettable. Some sets were so absurdly cheap-looking it ruined my suspension of disbelief. Leaning harder into Xiao Duo's black sheep antihero status would have slowed down the burn, upped the intrigue, and made the romantic union more cathartic. The only thing that kept that squishy marshmallow from losing his intimidating presence was the excellently choreographed combat scenes; his anime-style crouched slash-y move was such a rush to watch! In fact, the adventure elements were some of the show's strongest perks (GIVE US!! MORE!! PIRATES!!!!) and I wish we had gotten to experience that genre more often.

AND YET, FOLKS....*sigh* I am here first and foremost for love stories. If you are too, be assured there's buckets of dopamine to be found here, with palace conspiracies taking a back seat to romance the majority of the time. If you want two people to be in one another's arms bad enough, you can forgive any number of technical flaws. I can even forgive it for the brief noble idiocy moment, because to be honest I was in need of some angst amidst all the unexpected fluff.

Is Unchained Love an unapologetically tropey mess? For sure. Could it have been better? Without a doubt.

...Did I honestly love watching it anyway? Absolutely, which is why me, a huge loser, gave it a 8.5/10 regardless of all of its many issues. Sometimes, TV just needs to be entertaining and fun, and I did have a lot of fun. This is one of those rare shows that becomes an enjoyable watch because of the clichés it utilizes, not in spite of them. I will definitely revisit it on a rainy day, especially having now seen some of the BTS content and deleted scenes.

Without censorship, this show would have been stellar. It is still worth a watch, though, if you fill in some blanks. To quote another articulate netizen: "Do I rate the show I saw? Or the one I'm pretty sure they made?"

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