The little sister lives a glamorous life in the eyes of the outsiders in the big city. When she was younger, her older sister ran away with her lover. After many years, the older sister suddenly appears in her life again. Underneath the deep love between the two sisters, there are hidden secrets. (Source: Chinese = Douban || Translation = kisskh) ~~ Adapted from the web novel "Da Qiao Xiao Qiao" (大乔小乔) by Zhang Yue Ran (张悦然). Edit Translation
- English
- Русский
- हिन्दी
- Español
Where to Watch The Unseen Sister
Subscription
Cast & Credits
- Zhao Li YingQiao YanMain Role
- Xin Zhi LeiDa QiaoMain Role
- Huang JueShen Hao MingMain Role
- GemYu LiangSupport Role
- Vivienne TienXiao YangSupport Role
- Wang Zi WeiFang LeiSupport Role
Reviews
Qiao Yan is a successful actress with an overly clingy manager. She’s rigidly unhappy and desperately seeking her freedom from the life she’s living. Her manager has other plans for her future and is unwilling to take no for an answer. Into this abyss her pregnant sister from Myanmar walks in. Her sister is looking for her deadbeat husband who is trying to escape his gambling debts. Due to Qiao’s secret slipping out, a long list of people line up to extort an exorbitant amount of money from her. Qiao will have to decide how far she’s willing to go to protect herself.
The characters were thinly and inconsistently written. The old, “if I’d had the opportunities you had, I’d be a famous actress and wealthy instead of you,” trope was used because yeah, life just works that way. Anyone can become rich and famous. That petulant phrase was overused. The older sister’s emotions and ethics swung back and forth like a pendulum. Her husband was utterly vile and made me wonder why she stayed with him.
What actually intrigued me about this film was that the entertainment industry was shown to be a patriarchal, capitalistic den of iniquity where wealthy men thought they owned the talent and could do what they wanted with them. I’d heard rumors about this type of behavior for years, just never thought I’d see a Chinese movie airing that dirty laundry. (I write this knowing Hollywood has had its issues, too. It’s always a problem when people hold unchecked power.) They also showed the negative side of the “one child” rule. Another shocker.
The story itself was uneven and dragged on too long. The actors did the best they could with the material. The movie Qiao was shooting gave Zhao Li Ying more of a chance to shine than the actual movie she was in. The Unseen Sister was watchable, but could have been better.
20 August 2025
Triggers: Lots of smoking if that bothers you
Attempted Sexual Assault
Dismembered finger
Was this review helpful to you?
Great Cast, Underdeveloped Relationships
I watched this for Xin Zhi Lei and Huang Jue, only to learn that Zhao Li Ying is a big deal too.This is a rather simple story about an older sister that sacrificed her future to secure the future of her younger sister. Younger sister becomes a successful actress and brand ambassador, whereas older sister is stuck in an unpleasant life in Myanmar. Older sister's husband decides to extort money from the saved younger sister, and chaos ensues.
Having slept on this film, I think I see a major story issue problem. The husband was a device to introduce desperation and violence to the story, to keep it from being a thoughtful character piece. And that was a huge mistake here. His character should have been erased entirely.
In screenwriting there's a very important question the writer must answer correctly: who's story is this? I don't believe it was the younger sister's story at all. I believe it was the older sister's story of sacrifice given paid off with filial abandonment.
The evidence here is the final scene where the sisters are hanging out together at a street vendor, kind of like best of friends. Well, if they were capable of being such friends, why weren't they already on this page together? Why did older sister show up so mad? Clearly she was dismissed and forgotten, but as the awkward mid-story flashback revealed -- they left on good terms.
I also believe the casting should have been reversed, where Xin Zhi Lei was the big famous actress and brand ambassador, since... she already is one, lol. I would have made the victimized sister more sympathetic, less attractive.
This is that tragedy when a rough draft isn't refined but made into a film instead. The film is certainly watchable, and the direction and production values are solid -- if not sometimes compelling -- but I have so many other Chinese films I'd recommend to someone before I'd recommend this one I'm sorry to say.
Was this review helpful to you?
Recommendations
There have been no recommendations submitted. Be the first and add one.













1


