My Journey To You – Thoughts and Impressions Part 1 of 2

My Journey To You is a 2023 fantasy, Wuxia show (shows/films that are based in ancient China with martial arts warriors being capable of superhuman feats, like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon). It was highly anticipated owing to the amazing trailer (one of the best I’ve seen.)

Plot: The series tells the story of Yun Wei Shan, a spy longing for freedom, who infiltrates the Gong residence to complete a mission. In the eerie and treacherous Gong residence, she encounters love and friendship, embarks on a journey of self-discovery, and finds the determination to move forward. Together with the rebellious nobleman Gong Zi Yu, they grow and mature through their shared experiences. Streaming source: Iqiyi. (via mydramalist)

It stars: Yu Shu Xin (Yun Wei Shan), Zhang Ling He(Gong Zi Yu), Ryan Cheng (Gong Shang Jue) and Lu Yu Xiao (Shangguan Qian), Tian Jia Rui (Gong Yuan Zhi), Jolin Jin (Gong Zi Shang) and Sun Chen Jun (Jin Fan)

Written by: Edward Guo.

Series directed by: Edward Guo & Luo Luo

To keep the post from getting obscenely long, I’m going to split it into two. This post will be about the technical aspects of the show. Part 2 will focus on the characters.

I’ll talk about everything I liked before I get into the stuff that I didn’t.

Right off the bat, this show has some of the most gorgeous characters you’ll come across and this applies to both the men and the women. The costume and make-up departments do an amazing job making already attractive people look ridiculously attractive. They also help the actors really inhabit the world seamlessly. The costumes are especially incredibly detailed and intricate, you can see the care that went into crafting the look for each of these characters. Shout-out to Huang Wei (costume designer) and Shi Hui (Make-up)

One of the best aspects of the show is the cinematography by Wei Hong. This show is aesthetically beautiful, so many absolutely stunning shots. Chinese shows (and Korean shows) love slow-motion shots, and while at times, it can be a bit much, this show makes great use of them, especially during the fight scenes.

The cinematography is helped to a great extent by the excellent production design, courtesy Jiyao Zhang. Like the costumes, the production design too is detailed and intricate. The world feels fully realised and yet also lived in. Each of the different clan mansions, the Front Hill and Back Hill are so incredibly different and distinct that you can immediately tell where you are. An insane amount of hard work went into the show and it shows in every frame.

You can tell that they had a good budget to work with and every bit of it was spent on making the show look as stylized as possible, there is not an ounce of realism to be found here, cue slow-motion beautiful hair flying shots. (Every day I bemoan my inability to make gifs) But the screengrabs below illustrate the beauty of the show, it’s so gorgeous that you could literally use screengrabs as wallpapers.

The fight scenes in the show are some of the best I’ve seen. They are intense and thrilling and always coherent, you can always tell who’s fighting who. The fight scenes are also so aesthetically pleasing, like an exceptionally deadly dance. Really commend the fight coordinators for the amazing fight choreography and the actors who pulled it off so convincingly. These fights weren’t easy and add in the freezing conditions and you have some really tough shooting conditions.

Now, we come to the not-so-great stuff.

First off, the marketing. The show was marketed and advertised as an action fantasy show and while there is action and it is excellent, it’s not an “action” show. The main focus of the show is on the characters and the internal power struggle of the Gong family. There are also whole scenes, sometimes making up the bulk of an entire episode which are just conversations. I’ve seen a lot of viewers disappointed and it makes sense. they thought they were coming for action and instead they got verbose conversations.

The pacing also comes to a near-halt in some of these scenes and instead we’re treated to lengthy expositions which isn’t necessarily a bad thing but it becomes tedious when it happens repetitively.

Now, let’s come to the worst thing about the show, it’s ending, specifically the last 5 minutes. This end is ridiculously, mindbogglingly bad when you consider that there is almost no confirmation on a 2nd season. It’s just such a bad idea to end on a cliffhanger like this. If they wanted to leave things open for a potential 2nd season, they could have ended with the Wufeng elders coming together at that character’s home, possibly to hold them ransom or something, like literally anything else.

if you’re planning on watching this show and I do recommend it, keep in mind that it does get slow and don’t watch the last 5 mins of the show. Trust me, you’ll like the show a whole lot more if you follow that approach.

Part 2 is here.

One thought on “My Journey To You – Thoughts and Impressions Part 1 of 2

Leave a comment