Details

  • Last Online: 2 hours ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location: Hong Kong
  • Contribution Points: 573 LV5
  • Roles: VIP
  • Join Date: June 5, 2019
  • Awards Received: Finger Heart Award68 Flower Award298 Coin Gift Award8 Reply Goblin Award3 Lore Scrolls Award8 Drama Bestie Award2 Comment of Comfort Award2 Conspiracy Theorist1 Gaslight, Gatekeep, Girlboss1 Clap Clap Clap Award6 Drama Therapist Award1 Wholesome Troll1 Sassy Tomato1 Thread Historian2 Boba Brainstormer2 Lore Librarian2 Mic Drop Darling1 Big Brain Award4
Legend of the Magnate chinese drama review
Completed
Legend of the Magnate
8 people found this review helpful
by PeachBlossomGoddess Flower Award2
24 hours ago
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.0

Win Win vs Win All.

Legend of Magnate stands out as one of the better written historical business dramas. It is set in late Qing dynasty, a time of great turmoil in modern Chinese history. The story opens to the vast and icily inhospitable landscape of an exile colony in Ningguta. The real-location filming delivers an authentic and immersive sense of the desolation and at the very ends-of-the-earth feeling of this frigid winterland. Yet somehow, convict Gu Pingyuan, a falsely excused scholar from Anhui, was almost thriving as a fixer and general dogsbody for the incompetent military command of the Ningguta garrison. He smooths the way for the business dealings of Li Qin, the young scion of the Li family as well as that of itinerant merchant Fourth Master Chang and his daughter Yu'er. Thus begins a lifelong entanglement as they face headwinds on multiple fronts of an empire on its last legs.

After he escapes from Ningguta, Gu Pingyuan reinvents himself as a pawnbroker, banker, tea merchant and even dabbles in a salt monopoly. His exploits are legendary as he navigates savagely unethical business rivalries amid civil war and foreign interference. The business plots are tightly written and explain intricate business schemes and late-Qing era commerce and finance in a logical and engaging manner. The narrative is interwoven with civil war, political intrigue, betrayal, revenge, romance, family drama, diplomatic affairs and patriotism. With canny commercial instincts, sound judgement and a strong business ethics, Pingyuan fosters important alliances with other merchants, government officials and even rebels who pop up just in time to throw him a lifeline when needed. Undeniably his meteoric rise is is partly due to heavy plot armour aka sheer luck but the fast-paced, storytelling with high dramatic tension leaves little time to dwell on the convenient coincidences.

The massive social and economic upheaval wrought by the Taiping Rebellion occupies central stage in the first major arc of the drama. The complex motivations for this civil unrest that cost 20-30mm lives is sympathetically conveyed. It is surprising to see a rebel leader such as Li Cheng stop short of being glorified - or maybe Zhu Yawen's portrayal is simply too evocative. What is not needed is the romance - both female leads fall in love way too quickly and Bai Yimei's feelings in particular are not convincingly developed. Besides an uncanny ability to GPS hone in on her man across thousands of miles of desolate frigid wasteland, Chang Yuér also adds nothing to the plot. The character is quite well written but Sun Qian's childish line delivery and unnecessarily weepy interpretation failed to resonate with me. Li Chun's radical and dangerous Su Zixuan ended up being the most interesting and best acted female role in the show.

Cheng Xiao delivers a mature, down-to-earth portrayal of this humble scholar turned business prodigy; making his stellar feats somehow seem reasonable and hard won. He is surrounded by a talented and versatile cast that vividly brings the zeitgeist of difficult period of history to life. All the subplots build anticipation towards an epic day of reckoning between Gu Pingyuan and his arch-rival Li Wantang; they are parallel characters with opposite business philosophies - win win vs win all. Unfortunately their arc ends abruptly in a completely out of character and anti-climatic plot twist that is a nothing burger of a melodramatic cop out. This is deeply disappointing as I was looking forward to what could have been a riveting denouement between Cheng Xiao and Huang Zhi Zhong, one of the most versatile and compelling character actors in the industry. Even though Luo Yizhou's Li Qin surprised and impressed me in the final arc, it was a boring arc. The finale introduces new characters too late in the game and gets mired down in minutiae of government concessions, contract terms, trade treaties and law of the sea.

Overall this was one of the better period dramas of 2025. It is worth watching just for the on-location filming if nothing else. While the final two arcs were not good enough for this to merit an 8.5, it is definitely an 8.0+/10.0.
Was this review helpful to you?