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Light to the Night

黑夜告白 ‧ Drama ‧ 2026
Completed
Vikishen
12 people found this review helpful
9 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Every event has a center. Beyond it, ripples spread.

When I first saw the trailer, it immediately caught my attention, but the drama turned out to be very different from what I had expected — in the best possible way.

One thing I absolutely did not expect was for this drama to become such a tear-jerker. While the first 9 episodes contain many natural and genuinely funny moments, starting from episode 10 — and especially during the last 5 episodes — I cried my eyes out 😭

This is a 100% worth-watching investigation drama and definitely one of Wang Hedi’s best performances so far. His portrayal of Ran Fangxu was unforgettable.

The story revolves around the mysterious disappearance of a father and daughter at the elevator entrance of the Yuanlongli building in July 1997. The case deeply affects the lives of detectives He Yuanhang and Ran Fangxu, and it takes 18 years for the truth to finally come to light.

The drama switches between three timelines:
• 1997 — when the father and daughter disappeared
• 2002 — when the father’s skull was discovered
• 2015 — when the case was finally solved

The transitions between the timelines were done brilliantly and never felt confusing.

Even though the drama focuses on only one case, the plot is incredibly complex, filled with twists and turns that constantly keep you on the edge of your seat — and in the end, everything ties together perfectly.

I especially loved the 师父–徒弟 relationship development between He Yuanhang and Ran Fangxu. They truly became each other’s family. The actress Ren Min, who played Xiao He (He Yuanhang's daughter), even mentioned in an interview that for Xiao He, Ran Fangxu was like a mother 😂

After episode 10, seeing how much Ran Fangxu meant to both He Yuanhang and Xiao He was absolutely heartbreaking 😭

The drama also did an amazing job portraying grief, guilt, obsession, and the way one unresolved tragedy can leave deep scars on people’s entire lives.

“所有事件,必有中心。中心之外,必有涟漪。”
“Every event has a center. Beyond it, ripples spread.”

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Completed
alsg1301
13 people found this review helpful
10 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

hHard to let go

The acting performances are over the top, especially Dylan Wang as RanFangXu... absolutely brilliant, playing 3 life stages of the character.. rookie police officer Xiao Ran, captain Ran and uncle Ran...
LightToTheNight is a realistic drama ... miracles don't happen in real life, so in this drama... no matter how much we hope for a happy ending, to keep it real, that miracle won't happen...
Dylan Wang's LightToTheNight is a must see drama ... and then, you will want to rewatch it!!!
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Ongoing 28/28
MagnoliaCream
20 people found this review helpful
14 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 9.5

So realistic Dylan Wang was glammed down to portray a cop

This drama impresses in every aspect - the direction, writing and cinematography create an ambiance of mystery, sometimes bordering on horror, that draws the viewer into the investigation of a father and daughter who took an elevator to the 18th floor of a building and went missing for 18 years.

But what impressed me most was the acting, especially of Dylan Wang, PanYue Ming, Ren Min and the young He Xiao He. Dylan once again proves he can tackle any role with aplomb, able to portray each stage of a policeman's life believably, from an idealistic and bookwormish rookie to a passionate deputy captain police officer bent on solving a 5-year-old case, and finally, a Beijing lecturer. To portray a rookie cop, minimum makeup was used on Dylan. For his deputy officer look, some freckles were applied on his face that made him look darker. For his lecturer look, some wrinkles were added. Yet, in all these looks, his handsomeness still peeped through.

This is my first time watching Pan Yue Ming, Ren Min and the young He Xiao He and they are all good!

The story switches among three timeframes, 1997 when the father and daughter went missing, 2002 when the remains of a person connected to the case were found and 2015 when the case was solved. I think switching between timeframes is brilliant as associated scenes of the case in different timeframes are shown closely together. For example, the different and telling scenes when the same door that is opened in 2002 is opened in 2015. This technique of switching among timeframes requires viewers to focus on the drama to avoid confusion.

If you don't have the ability to focus, I suggest you drop the drama instead of giving it a low score when you get confused.

One unexpected element about this drama is that it is such a tear-jerker. I probably used up a whole box of tissues. This proves how effective the depiction of the story is and how well the characters are able to draw viewers in.

I also love the OST. It reminds me of Hollywood or BBC productions. It provides the appropriate background music to the visual elements.

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Completed
JulesL
11 people found this review helpful
10 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 7.5

Painful, haunting, and beautifully done

Underrated drama.

From beginning to end, "Light to the Night" is exceptionally well executed, with a tight and purposeful plot that never feels dragged out or unnecessarily complicated. Every episode builds naturally on the last, slowly revealing the heavy emotions behind the story while keeping the tension and mystery compelling throughout.

What impressed me most, however, was the acting. Dylan Wang delivers one of his strongest performances yet and once again proves how versatile he is as an actor. He convincingly carries every stage of his character’s life. Pan Yue Ming and Ren Min shine as well , and the performances across the cast feel authentic. The production also deserves credit for how naturally these transitions were handled. The styling and makeup changes are subtle rather than overdone, helping each version of the character feel believable, which makes the emotional moments hit even harder.

One of the drama’s biggest strengths is its storytelling structure. The narrative moves between three different timelines — the original disappearance in 1997, new discoveries connected to the case in 2002, and the eventual resolution years later in 2015. The transitions between these periods are handled incredibly well and often placed side by side in ways that deepen the emotional and investigative impact of a scene. Small details become meaningful when mirrored across timelines, such as revisiting the same location years apart and seeing how differently a moment unfolds with new context. It is a smart and immersive way of telling the story, though it definitely requires viewers to pay close attention in order to fully appreciate how all the pieces connect together.

Despite the heaviness of the plot, the drama also does a good job weaving humor naturally into the story. The lighter moments never feel forced or out of place. Instead, they provide small moments of warmth and relief. The humor helps balance the emotional intensity of the series without ever undermining the seriousness of the story.

The music is also used effectively. The soundtrack and instrumental pieces never overwhelm the scenes, but instead quietly deepen the emotions, especially during the reflective and heartbreaking moments. Some scenes linger long after they end because the combination of acting, directing, and music is done so well.

What makes the drama especially powerful is that the emotional conflicts are not driven by simple villains or forced misunderstandings, but by people genuinely trying to protect the ones they care for - only to end up hurting them in the process. The show captures that tragic side of humanity so well: how love, fear, guilt, and good intentions can become destructive when people make choices for others .

By the end, the tragic outcome feels inevitable yet still absolutely devastating. This is a mature, emotionally layered story with strong performances, thoughtful directing, and real emotional impact. Painful, haunting, and beautifully done.

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Completed
Lovezepar
19 people found this review helpful
10 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 5.5
Story 4.5
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

Mediocre Drama

Mediocre drama probably watched and probably going to be saved by Dylan Wang fangirls(given the high rating here) . One of the most disappointing dramas I have seen in a long while. An utter waste of excellent actors all around.
There was ZERO reason for RFX to die. ZERO. And the whole plot and mastermind is revealed in the last 2 episodes? WHAT IS THAT BS.
The drama made the Chinese police looks like Korean police in Kdrama, all because of the story. In the words of certain someone from the drama "We are all trying here" I now proclaim the director of this drama and everyone related in producing the plot as 'Watermelon Licker'.
Overall, disappointed, I was actually excited to watch Pan Yueming and Wang Hedi to work together, the whole death of RFX and slowballing of the drama completely killed the vibe, and then I was on sunken ship fallacy to see if there was anything salvageable, never got better, was also looking forward to see the FL since I watched her in Hold a court and was impressed by her acting.

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Completed
nightdews Flower Award1
6 people found this review helpful
9 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Notoriously Reputed Yuanlongli Building

The old and long-standing building of Yuanlongli is surrounded by many urban legends. Some say it is a ghost building that eats people, others say people vanish in black cloak with no bones left. Things go awry when a pair of father and daughter disappear on the 18th floor of the building in broad daylight, in front of numerous residents of the building. A rumor or an accident, an accident or a well-planned murder? A case spanning throughout three timelines at the cost of numerous innocent lives, what seemed like unconnected accidents were in fact a web of crimes leading into something even bigger and far darker.

The story starts off really well in terms of build-up. Starting it all with the disappearance of two living people right in front of people, slowly changing the superstitious belief into reasonable man made activities. I really enjoyed those little introductions and doubts they kept throwing at the beginning and unveiling the story slowly in each coming episodes. And then the chills down the spine when they started throwing clues at the end of episodes starting from ep 8 and 9!

Tho, I wish they could do a better job with the build up of main characters in primary episodes, I was starting to take them really unserious considering how casually they were predicting the entire incident writing a whole script of events based on few clues, and how malleably they kept on changing their predictions on the crime and criminal and labelling all that with fancy high-end terms. I really couldn't take the theory of investigating after predicting, cause that is what lead to constant closing and opening of this case. I really couldn't excuse all of it to lack of gadgets and technology. So in the beginning Ran Fangxu's collection of theories really did not impress me a single bit.

The story started to get hold of the characters after the second timeline, when they actually started concluding the case based on actual evidence and did not presume things unilaterally. I think that was when I finally started getting even more interested in the story.

The parallel storytelling of the second and third timeline kept me invested. Ran Fangxu slowly discovering issues after a co-incidental discovery and then the unveiling and consequences that followed. But the third timeline again lost its spark, while I was indeed into the unveiling of the mysteries, the way those mysteries were conveniently solved in the third timeline made the entire investigation humanly unrealistic. Everything was just conveniently there, there was a child in the building of yuanlongli who was conveniently a hacker and hence could solve every problem, people conveniently remembered the questions asked and investigations made 15 years ago by Ran Fangxu and were able to solve the case. Ran Fangxu's theories conveniently dropped the right clues at the right time, which solved the case easily in hours. I would have preferred if they put the same efforts in the third timeline that Ran put during his investigations while unveiling the story and discoveries made by Ran, so this part made the entire police team's job in the third timeline feel like plot supporters rather than actual job workers with crucial role.

Anyways, coming to the end, it still does not change the fact that the story had me hooked from the beginning and engaged until the end except a few episodes. Starting from the build-up to the suspense, the emotional engagement, the attachment to the characters' emotions everything was so beautiful and well done. Each character played their little role in the drama in bringing the story together. The plot twists were fun, tho I did manage to reach those predictions but seeing them actually happen was fun.

The one that surprised me the most was definitely Wang Hedi, while I would say he has a big room for improvement, this genre switch was indeed well handled by him.

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Completed
Bubble123
9 people found this review helpful
9 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 4
Overall 6.5
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.5
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

A Brilliant Masterpiece Ruined by a Messy, Ridiculous Ending

I am a big fan of chinese thrillers like i watched the classics thrillers before. When i heard this plot i was like yeah the plot is damn interesting even the trailer too. I was so excited for this to watch.

But met with disappointed messy climax, till 23 episode it was brilliantly exceuted but after seeing last few episodes made me realize damn i was expecting somebody else as killer. If you are thriller fan it seriously disappoints you with the messy ending for sure.

The points irritated me personally from thriller series pov

1) 2 of them girls did this all of these things when nobody watching them moving the body parts during day time?

2) Incense sticks makes even the room full of blood to cover up the stinky iron pungent smell , while dismemberment of a body.

3) For 18 years no clue and nobody in their homes got stinky smell from her flat and even in the drainage pipes too.

4) i seriously felt ending got rushed off with messy plot twists which was hurting the series itself. The build up they created, just to make it into boredom of 2 girls backstory.

5) i seriously loved Ran and HYH chemistry more than they claiming qiao and xumeng one. Qiao fooling both HYH and her daughter for nearly 18 years it is bizarre.

6) Qiao story ok but she called xumeng just to say like ran wanted me to surrender feels like seriously? Are you sharing with that psycho and just made her kill him and then after in 2015 timeline you are angry at her for killing Ran. It is seriously bizarre plot twist i ever heard.

7) Even qiao knows that xu meng killed yao , wu in same pattern she doesn't even know xumeng killed ran too is bit odd. And they are claiming them as a crime partners and on top of that sisters ?

Seriously disappointed ending from thriller perspective, they made all these build up to just go into vain, i loved the cinematography, cast performance and chemistry between the detective leads is just amazing which saved this whole series because of them.

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Completed
Ter22331
11 people found this review helpful
13 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 7.0
Story 5.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

Creating a mystery that's both complex and realistic is hard, but a solid attempt was made

This could have flourished as a 12 ep miniseries. It was just too big of a story, so the writer kept writing themselves into a hole and then needing to break realism to get out, e.g.:

1. He getting run over and the driver just sitting there allowing Ran to catch up.

2. Ran finding the palm-sized piece of evidence in a dumpsite in less than 5 minutes.

3. Ran's witnesses recalling vivid detail of a 13-year- old conversation.

I have so much more to say but MDL has space limits. 😞
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Completed
erymaya2023
11 people found this review helpful
10 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

if you like mystery and thriller, definitely must watch

It was a very entertaining 28 episodes. Also, refreshing to see Dylan played a serious role, too far from any idol image. He needs more role like this, suits him well. I did enjoy the dynamics between Ran and Lao He. It was a real pity the faith of Ran. I wish he didnt die. At one point, I was rooting for him and Su Qing, I think they look good together! I hate Xu Meng the most. Everyone played their role really well! Very convincing! The cinematography, the twist, the story line and the casts are all superb. Hope to see Pan and Dylan in another drama.
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Ongoing 20/28
may_dream1
12 people found this review helpful
13 days ago
20 of 28 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 10

No big actions, but nuances that touches your hearts

This is not your typical polices investigating cases after cases. Main plot is to solve the disappearance of father and daughter duo, but along the way, it shows relationships among senior and junior in the police station, father and daughter after a divorce, neighbors and colleagues and all in the community. It’s such a touching drama yet at the same time, making us keep guessing who are the murderers.

The best part for me is how good Dylan looks without make up, presenting himself bare-faced in current drama scenes where heavy make up are a norm. His micro expressions are so on point that I can’t see Dylan in Ran Fangxu. A totally new respect to this actor for his talent and skills.

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Completed
Diana_g
2 people found this review helpful
3 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0

Light to the Night — A Story About Obsession, Choices, and the Weight of the Past

Light to the Night stands out because of the way it tells its story through three different timelines, slowly revealing how one event changed everyone’s lives forever. What starts as a missing persons case, then a crime mystery case becomes something much deeper: a story about obsession, guilt, choices, and the consequences people carry for years.

The three main leads are the heart of the drama. Dylan Wang delivers one of his most mature and outstanding performances so far. His character starts off charismatic, funny, and full of energy, but across the timelines you slowly watch the obsession consume him, replacing that warmth with sadness and emotional exhaustion. He balances humor and pain incredibly well, making the character feel very human. The other two leads are just as strong, especially during the emotional confrontations where nobody feels completely innocent or completely guilty.

What makes the drama memorable is that the mystery itself eventually becomes less important than the emotional damage it leaves behind. Every character is trapped by decisions they made in the past, and the series constantly shows how one choice can quietly destroy lives over time. The atmosphere stays heavy, melancholic, and emotionally tense until the very last episode, which makes the ending hit even harder.

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Completed
jeoneungd
2 people found this review helpful
3 days ago
28 of 28 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 10

poignant and awesome storytelling

With so many Chinese dramas flooding streaming platforms today, too many fall into the same traps: fractured storylines, bloated casts, painfully stretched episodes, rushed endings, excessive CGI, and those gravity-defying wire-fu fight scenes that often feel more cartoonish than cinematic. Somewhere along the way, spectacle replaced storytelling.

But Light to the Night avoids nearly all of those pitfalls. What makes this series work is its restraint. Instead of constantly introducing new characters and subplots just to extend runtime, the drama stays grounded around a core group of people and a relatively confined setting. That focus gives the audience time to actually invest emotionally in the characters rather than merely trying to remember who everyone is.

And this is precisely why the show succeeds across 28 episodes without feeling unnecessarily padded. It proves that a drama does not need 40 or 50 episodes to create depth. Every episode here feels purposeful. Chinese dramas could learn from this approach: quality storytelling is not measured by duration, but by narrative discipline.

What impressed me most was how the tension continuously evolved. Just when you think you’ve figured out the mystery, the story quietly pulls the rug from under you. The twists are not cheap gimmicks inserted for shock value; they are carefully planted, making the audience question their own assumptions over and over again. That is intelligent writing. In an era where many dramas rely on visual excess, this series relies on suspense, atmosphere, and character psychology.

I also believe Pan Yue Ming absolutely stole the show as Detective He. His performance carried weight, subtlety, and realism. There was a quiet intensity in the way he portrayed the character that made every scene feel grounded. Yet credit must also go to Dylan Wang for understanding exactly what Captain Ran needed to be. Rather than overacting, he played the role with restraint, calmness, and composure, which balanced the series beautifully. Sometimes the strongest performances are the ones that know when not to be loud.

What ultimately separates this drama from many others is that it respects the intelligence of its audience. It trusts viewers to pay attention, to connect emotional nuances, and to sit with ambiguity instead of spoon-feeding every answer. That confidence is rare today.

In the end, Light to the Night reminds us that compelling television does not need endless episodes, flashy effects, or exaggerated action scenes. Strong characters, disciplined storytelling, and well-earned suspense are more than enough.

Tha final wave on the train in the end is how you end one of the best Chinese series.

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Light to the Night poster

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Statistics

  • Score: 8.0 (scored by 630 users)
  • Ranked: #2840
  • Popularity: #4583
  • Watchers: 4,142

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