
Dans la Chine du XVe siècle, un haut fonctionnaire du gouvernement à l'esprit vif nommé Tang Fan prend une pause dans ses activités de routine afin d'enquêter sur un meurtre, s'associant au garde spécialiste des arts martiaux Sui Zhou dans le but de résoudre l'affaire. Lorsque le propriétaire pacifique de la maison que Tang Fan loue est retrouvé mort, le duo enquête. C'est un suicide apparent, mais le couple enquêteur se rend vite compte que quelque chose ne va pas. Ils enquêtent et réussissent finalement à trouver un suspect qui, selon eux, a peut-être tué le propriétaire. Mais ils apprennent bientôt que ce meurtrier n'a pas agi seul - et n'est qu'un petit acteur dans un plan beaucoup plus grand. Alors qu'ils creusent plus profondément dans le crime, le duo se rend vite compte que quelque chose de très sinistre se prépare - y compris un complot pour lancer un coup d'État sanglant. Peuvent-ils arrêter le cerveau criminel avant la fin du temps imparti ? (La source: English = Viki || Traduction = Laskie de kisskh) ~~ Adapté d'un roman du même nom de Meng Xi Shi. Modifier la traduction
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- Português (Brasil)
Distribution et équipes
- Darren Chen Rôle principal
- Fu Meng Po Rôle principal
- Liu Yao Yuan Rôle principal
- Huang Yang Tian TianDong ErRôle Secondaire
- Liu Cheng JunJia KuiRôle Secondaire
- Alyssa Chia Rôle Secondaire
Critiques

Excellents acteurs
Le sujet de la série, c'est la résolution de cas par un limier, Tang Fan, petit fonctionnaire, magistralement joué par Chen Guan Hong, Sui Zhou de la garde impériale et Wang Zhe, eunuque de haut niveau, qui est l'espion de l'empereur.Ce que j'ai aimé :
- les acteurs, tous très bons, avec une mention spéciale à Chen Guan Hong ! Il joue un personnage très compliqué : fantasque, revanchard, impulsif, pétulant, très efféminé par moment et toujours en train de manger (ne pas regarder la série si on a faim).
- La production, très grosse. On se retrouve comme souvent dans les studios Hengdian et c'est toujours aussi beau.
- La cuisine et les repas, toujours très appétissants et instructifs ! Cela donne l'occasion d'avoir de belles scènes familiales avec tous les amis réunis.
- Le scénario, pendant 44 épisodes, est toujours intéressant, parfois drôle.
Ce que je n'ai pas aimé : (attention spoiler)
- Avec toutes les misères voire tentatives de meurtre que le dépôt de l'est et le chef de la garde impériale font à notre trio, c'est improbable qu'ils les laissent sans rien faire.
- A partir de l'épisode 45, ils deviennent tous idiots, et font n'importe quoi ! A la fin c'est même un coup de chance que l'empereur ne soit pas tué, sa fille ne retourne pas sa veste au dernier moment, il est mort !

The cook, the eunuch and the chowhound - a crime solving menage a trois.
This comedic drama features a wildly imaginative yet oddly fitting crime fighting menage a trois comprising of a low (sixth) ranked magistrate (Tang Fan), a high-ranked embroidered guard (jingyi wei; Sui Zhou) and an influential eunuch (Wang Zhi) with the emperor's ear. Their paths intersect on cases with national security implications and while they have different agendas and masters, their synergistic and mutually beneficial collaborations blossom into friendship. The three main characters are well written - their bromance, hilarious antics and interactions are this drama's greatest strength.With an irrepressible grin and a wicked gleam in his eyes, Darren Chen really hams it up with his cheeky, flirtatious and sometimes deliberately irritating characterisation of the titular Tang Fan, an idealistic young magistrate who is more of a chowhound than a sleuthhound. The talented and willowy Tang Fan is a very pretty boy with delicate and vivacious features who embraces his feminine side with abandon and is passionate, emotional, naggy, petulant, petty and vengeful. This outrageously funny character writes erotic novels to supplement his puny income, lives to eat, seems extremely well acquainted with the how to but yet can't cook to save his life. He happily moves in with the gorgeously taciturn, moody, much more masculine and deadly Sui Zhou who steals Tang Fan's heart with his ability to cook a mean meal. There is enough in their interactions and suggestive domestic arrangement to get the BL fans all hot and bothered without running afoul of Chinese censorship. And then of course there is Wang Zhi, the most morally grey and dangerous of the three. He approaches relationships transaction ally - "you scratch my back I'll scratch yours" and is unambiguous about his first loyalty to king and country. Newcomer Liu Yaoyuan's portrayal of the ruthless, calculating and yet inexplicably likable Wang Zhi nicely rounds out this kinky threesome. Between them, they are able to marshal resources from the lowest to highest reaches of society to solve their cases.
Set at the heart of the capital during the Chenghua reign of Ming Dynasty, the important characters and events of the period are nicely tied into the overall plot-lines. The surrounding characters were somewhat cliche but mostly well done from the "adopted daughter" Dong'er, the miracle doctor, the Oirats, Wang Zhi's beggar informants and the rare treat of a smart and hot emperor. The cases run the gamut from crimes of passion, corruption, larceny, terrorism and climaxes in a dangerous conspiracy reaching the highest ranks of government. Most surrounding characters including the villains have recurring roles in subsequent cases which gives them dimension and avoids the confusion of excessive character introductions with each new case. The cases shouldn't be taken too seriously; while they are fun and quite interesting, they are not that original or that difficult to solve and have some logic holes and are thus unlikely to satisfy a serious crime or mystery buff. The rhythm of the investigations frequently digress into inane and somewhat childish hit or miss comedic sketches that can go on for too long. There is a slight misogynist undertone to this drama - even the likable women have unflattering traits (stupid, noisy, whiny, irrational), or worse are power hungry, traitors, extremists or come to a bad end.
The tightly choreographed action scenes are signature Jackie Chan - lethal, gripping, high impact, extremely acrobatic and fluid poetry in motion. They are not excessive, do not drag on for too long and avoid the mid-combat slapstick moments he used to be so fond of; all good changes. The camerawork is stunning and very artistic, approaching movie quality. They obviously spared no expense with this and it shows.
For those who grew up on Jackie Chan, the Sleuth of Ming Dynasty is a fun romp down memory lane. There is a bit of the artistic Jackie Chan, the wacky whack-y Jackie Chan, the comedic Jackie Chan, the high testosterone Jackie Chan, the innovative Jackie Chan, the crass Jackie Chan and finally and pleasingly, the mature Jackie Chan. I outgrew his flicks ages ago - after awhile I found the hair rising stunts, high speed chases and exaggerated comedic routines repetitive, shallow and draining. So I am pleasantly surprised to see in this drama that maturity has toned down and balanced some (not all) of his more extreme inclinations while still remaining essentially Jackie Chan. It is also nice to see the uniquely Jackie Chan inspired Hong Kong wu da pan (武打片) sub-genre with its chauvinistic, contradictory, cynical, sarcastic yet sentimental and idealistic spirit has evolved for the better but is still innately the same.
This is highly entertaining and enjoyable if you don't look too hard at it or seek profound meaning. It is not always my sense of humor and the cases are solid but not exceptional so I rate it an 8.5 but I can see why others would call it a 9.0 or better.