This review may contain spoilers
"You have made your bed, now lie in it."
Back to the Origin is a 40-episode drama available on iQIYI that dives into the world of influencers, digital agencies, the real price of ambition and what that means for your ordinary life.
The premise is already interesting: Zhang Ran quits her simple overseas job as an international buyer to accept a very lucrative offer from an MCN in China, the kind of company that manages content creators, and pulls her husband into the influencer world with her, facing misunderstandings, fame, and unrealistic expectations.
As the story moves forward, you realize this series is not about shocking plot twists or over-the-top events, it is about people. The script lets the characters feel human instead of turning them into stereotypes, and there are no magical surprises, only the consequences of small everyday decisions. It is "literally" about reaping what you sow.
At the beginning, the main couple feels like the kind of partnership that supports each other through hard times, but once they enter the world of digital fame, their personas slowly replace who they really are. The socialite persona is fake, the personal shopper persona is fake, his job as a chemistry PhD becomes a facade, his degree starts being used like an empty symbol, and internet celebrities in general feel fake. The protagonists basically trip over the same stone twice in two different countries, and the more they try to fix their lives, the worse everything gets, showing that the idea of starting over is often just self-deception, pride, and the human tendency to run away from reality when it becomes too hard.
The second couple’s relationship also starts showing cracks as the series progresses. They seem harmonious, but they want completely different things from life. She dreams of comfort and stability while he wants recognition and success. Even though they love each other, their values about work, family, and the future are incompatible. She stayed with him because she once wanted the life he had, while he always wanted the life she had, and that mismatch eventually comes at a high cost.
In the end, the series delivers a very realistic and harsh message. The characters never understood the essence of their failures. They only remembered how they failed, not why, and that is why they repeated the same mistakes.
There is also a younger group of characters that works as a contrast to the two couples. They make mistakes too, but they have time, support, and the willingness to learn. The two storylines barely connect, which feels intentional because the show wants to highlight the difference between repeating patterns and breaking the cycle.
By the end, you realize that for ordinary people, every decision has the potential to make life better or worse. That is exactly what makes this story so intriguing. It does not try to comfort the audience, it simply shows life as it is, both melancholic and satisfying at the same time.
The premise is already interesting: Zhang Ran quits her simple overseas job as an international buyer to accept a very lucrative offer from an MCN in China, the kind of company that manages content creators, and pulls her husband into the influencer world with her, facing misunderstandings, fame, and unrealistic expectations.
As the story moves forward, you realize this series is not about shocking plot twists or over-the-top events, it is about people. The script lets the characters feel human instead of turning them into stereotypes, and there are no magical surprises, only the consequences of small everyday decisions. It is "literally" about reaping what you sow.
At the beginning, the main couple feels like the kind of partnership that supports each other through hard times, but once they enter the world of digital fame, their personas slowly replace who they really are. The socialite persona is fake, the personal shopper persona is fake, his job as a chemistry PhD becomes a facade, his degree starts being used like an empty symbol, and internet celebrities in general feel fake. The protagonists basically trip over the same stone twice in two different countries, and the more they try to fix their lives, the worse everything gets, showing that the idea of starting over is often just self-deception, pride, and the human tendency to run away from reality when it becomes too hard.
The second couple’s relationship also starts showing cracks as the series progresses. They seem harmonious, but they want completely different things from life. She dreams of comfort and stability while he wants recognition and success. Even though they love each other, their values about work, family, and the future are incompatible. She stayed with him because she once wanted the life he had, while he always wanted the life she had, and that mismatch eventually comes at a high cost.
In the end, the series delivers a very realistic and harsh message. The characters never understood the essence of their failures. They only remembered how they failed, not why, and that is why they repeated the same mistakes.
There is also a younger group of characters that works as a contrast to the two couples. They make mistakes too, but they have time, support, and the willingness to learn. The two storylines barely connect, which feels intentional because the show wants to highlight the difference between repeating patterns and breaking the cycle.
By the end, you realize that for ordinary people, every decision has the potential to make life better or worse. That is exactly what makes this story so intriguing. It does not try to comfort the audience, it simply shows life as it is, both melancholic and satisfying at the same time.
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