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Begin Again chinese drama review
Completed
Begin Again
1 people found this review helpful
by Nelly
Jun 27, 2025
18 of 18 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 9.0

A Slice of Life Worth Biting Into:Macau by the Sea

I don’t usually start drafting a drama review , especially not after just one episode. But there’s always a first, and Begin Again (2024) caught me off-guard in the most refreshing way. I pressed play expecting background noise and somehow ended up emotionally invested, mildly obsessed, and googling “what’s rent like in Macau?” by the 30-minute mark.

1. Hallo Macau – Are You Always This Photogenic?

Macau has made the occasional cameo in dramas, but this? This feels like a love letter to the city. It’s not just the casino skyline or aerial shots for flair, it’s the narrow streets, early morning jogs by the sea, the kind of neighbourhood cafés where people actually bump into each other (without coffee spilling or fate intervening, thank God). If Shanghai had a quieter cousin and Taipei had a more stylish sibling, Macau would be their well-adjusted middle child. I’ve seen enough to want to get lost there on purpose.

2. The Cast: A Surprisingly Perfect Ensemble

Elvis Han as Han Jun Hao

He continues to confuse my expectations in the best way. Loved him in Fake It Till You Make It, thought that was his lane. But here he is again, giving us Han Jun Hao: a former sportsman teetering on the edge of burnout and self-doubt, trying to figure out who he is when the medals stop shining. He’s got that dependable charm with just enough emotional bruises to keep things interesting. Somehow, Elvis makes it all believable, even the part where he's basically a walking existential crisis with great posture.

Zhong Chu Xi as Chen Jia Hui

Our female lead, Jia Hui, played by the ever-captivating Zhong Chu Xi, walks into Macau on a business assignment and accidentally stumbles into the kind of self-realisation people pay therapists for. She’s sharp, stylish, and clearly capable, but you get the sense she’s been living on autopilot, checking boxes without asking who gave her the list. She’s not a tragic workaholic or an overly quirky mess (bless the writers for this); she’s just... figuring it out. And you can only root for her already.

Amy Chen as Mai You Ge

Mai You Ge — now this is the girl you meet once and instantly want in your group chat. Amy Chen plays her with a warmth that makes you want to sit next to her on a park bench and spill your whole life story. She’s sweet but not naive, grounded but quietly curious about the world beyond her routine. And just when you think she’s coasting along in the background…

Enter: Sunny Sun as Xu Jun Le

…in walks Xu Jun Le, and suddenly there’s a second love story forming and I’m hooked. Sunny Sun, personal revelation, frankly, brings a softness and ease to this character that feels lived-in. Jun Le is the kind of guy who smiles at strangers, rides a bike like it’s a religion, and doesn’t care about optics. While his best friend Han Jun Hao was out chasing glory and trophies, Jun Le stayed back and learned how to be. Yes, he comes from money, but you'd never guess it, unless you count how good he looks doing absolutely nothing. Sunny’s performance is quiet, confident, and utterly magnetic. Where has this man been hiding?

3. Begin Again – Finally, a Slice of Life That Feels Real

I’d nearly given up on C-dramas when it came to portraying real people with real problems. Too many times, “slice of life” turns into a soulless parade of plot devices or monologues disguised as dialogue. But Begin Again feels... honest. Four people at different crossroads, pulled together not by fate or dramatics, but by the gentle, inevitable rhythm of life.

Each character has a reason for being in Macau, but none of them quite know what they’re really looking for. They’re not running toward love, they’re just trying to stop running from themselves. And when they do connect, love doesn’t come crashing in like a wave; it seeps in like light through a cracked window. Quiet. Patient. Just enough to make them stay.

Final Thoughts (aka My Unasked-For Emotional Investment)

Begin Again feels like a promise, of warmth, of thoughtful pacing, of characters who grow instead of spiral. A quiet burn, but one that respected my time,my intelligence and made me want to book a one-way ticket to Macau and let the city fix my life too.

Writer's note: Watch out for Han Jun Hao and Xu Jun Le's legendary bromance( they even got same middle name 😂)
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