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Rebirth chinese drama review
Completed
Rebirth
21 people found this review helpful
by Fanstar99
16 days ago
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 2
Overall 2.0
Story 1.0
Acting/Cast 9.5
Music 9.5
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

losing in deep forest.

For people coming from Season 1: Luo He (洛河), Chu Qiao’s mother and the former leader of the Han Shan Alliance (寒山盟), had mastered this technique. Before her death, she transmitted about 80% of her Han Bing Jue power to Chu Qiao, designating her as the new heir of the Wind and Cloud Decree.

The “Wind and Cloud Decree” is not a physical token, it manifests as a flower-shaped birthmark (often described as a red spider lily / 彼岸花) that appears on the successor’s shoulder once the Han Bing Jue is fully awakened.

Yuwen Yue uses “ice arrows” both to train Chu Qiao and to save her during the wolf hunt.

Xiao Yu as elder sister of Xiao Ce crown prince now call li ce crown prince; represents a brilliant narrative choice: a female power player whose strength is not only martial, but also intellectual, political, and emotional. Her “bending sword” is more than a weapon, it symbolizes her ability to adapt, strike unpredictably, and protect her kingdom without relying on overt domination. The fact that she can stand toe-to-toe with Yuwen Yue in both strategy and combat makes her one of the most satisfying characters in the drama.

In Season 2 (rebirth), these elements are largely missing. There are 3 of likely reasons:

1. The original concepts were more complex and dramatic, and the new production simplifies things, focusing mainly on Yuwen Yue (as a Zhuge –type strategist), Yan Xun, and A’Chu.
2. Budget constraints, especially for visual effects. Depicting ice-based internal energy like Han Bing Jue requires heavy VFX, so many scenes fall back on metaphor (frozen lakes, breath vapor, frost on arrows) instead of fully visualized abilities.
3. The producer is lazy and needs money fast because they knew the first drama was huge, so the second is an easy money grab.

It’s a noticeable contrast: Chinese animation often goes all-out with overpowered visual spectacle, while live-action dramas tend to scale things back, sometimes at the cost of depth and impact.
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