Much inspired by the author of TVB Musings, I attempt something out of the ordinary news-relaying activity of GH. Purely my thoughts. Comments are highly appreciated. This is not a news article, so please do not repost elsewhere.
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Different upbringings, different circumstances, but the three characters share one profound description: bright, talented, ambitious and under-appreciated young men.
None of them were born evil. They turned evil. It’s not the society that is to be entirely blamed, but more so the lack of integrity in each and all three individuals. The critical point of turning evil, however, varies from one to the other.
Man Wei (Ambition, TVB 1993) lost his innocence very early in his childhood, witnessing his mother being raped and beaten by her “regulars”. It was probably her choice, but he saw himself as the ultimate cause as why his mother had to go on living such a life. Bottled up in him were rage, anger, and the boiling longing to break away. To change.
That’s where Man Wei met Kiu Lik (Vengeance, TVB 1992) and Tsui Ka Lup (Cold Blood Warm Heart, TVB 1996). Young, well-educated, they all believed they could change their lives for the better. They all have the willpower and the ability to make the changes happen. Nothing is wrong with wanting a better life.
What went wrong, then?
With Kiu Lik, it wasn’t the family hardship he had to face, but the idiotic favoritism his filthy-rich father practiced. He would have ended up better should he turn unfilial and walk away. Lik was so filial he wanted to prove himself to his father. Over, over, and over again, until he made the grave and desperate mistake of setting fire on the ruined shack housing a helpless old lady. It was right then and there that he crossed the line and let go of his principles. His choice!
Tsui Ka Lup didn’t have to deal with family hardship. He had no evil parent, either. In fact, he had a wonderful, loving family who doted on him. Everyone - his father, his mother, his adopted older brother, his little sister - was proud of him. Then why on Earth would he turn evil? It was as ridiculous as it was unfortunate, the loving nest did not quite prepare him for a dog-eat-dog world. And while his adopted brother scoped with the unfavored office politics in a clever, almost submissive manner, Ka Lup fought back in the most vulnerable way. The moment he accidentally pulled the trigger and killed his corrupted boss, Ka Lup’s life was quite over.
Quite, but not quite over in a sense that Ka Lup did have a lot of chances where he could actually stop striding the evil path and redeem himself. The same hold true for the others. Sadly, no-one took up the opportunity, except for Man Wei when it was already too late.
Regardless of how or why these men became villainous, they had all been slaved to their senses of pride, blinded by their internal rages, and succumbed to their thirst of power disguised in the quest for just. All awaited nothing but the smallest trigger to send the men downhill.
Especially when they had no integrity to keep their original believes from being wavered, altered, and thrown away.
Along the way, there were instants when those believes manage to find a moment of existence. Whenever they were there, Gallen made sure the audience see them through his eyes. “Villains, they are human to begin with.” Most humanly, and fatally helpless, must be when they were beside the loves of their lives. Villains do love.
Image courtesy of Gallen Baidu Board
At the very end, when Man Wei let his love go unscathed and came defiantly toward the police squad’s fire, when Kiu Lik victoriously escaped through a window just to fell several stories down, or when Tsui Ka Lup smirked arrogantly while blood dripping down his tall forehead, all to their destined death, what was left almost felt like pity.






kay | 15-Aug-07 at 6:12 pm | Permalink
Hi Mimosa,
This is the first time I see you post your thoughts. It is a very nice post, and I’m surprised why you’ve been hiding your writing skill for so long. Ha-ha.
Gallen acted well in villain roles. He easily fooled people with his handsome face. “Tsui Ka Lup” in Cold Blood Warm Heart was a memorable character. I thought “Ka Lup”’s selfishness and greed turned him evil. I hated him when he cheated “Ah Suet”. Yet, somehow, I must admit he did love her very much toward the end.
I really doubt Gallen’s new TVB series. It wastes his talent, don’t you think? Oh well, it’s a new change, I guess. Maybe he needs to take a break from “heavy” dramas and try on “light-hearted” ones. I do want to see him with Ada again. =]
Okay, I’m out of here. Keep surprising me with your future posts, darling!
esuom | 16-Aug-07 at 12:57 pm | Permalink
Interesting tots. I guess it’s ur love for him that propelled you to look beyond the surface and did an analysis of what took the villains to the path they chose. Perhaps those who look at these villains as purely audiences would never agree to ur “explanations and evaluations” here; on the contrary, those who love him may just blindly defend him. It certainly took time and understanding to look at the neglected facts and give a more fair and objective judgment, or I would rather say, evaluation of his roles. It triggered me to think deeper. Cool one!
Sere | 21-Aug-07 at 8:16 pm | Permalink
Oh what an excellent post! You should write more. Mimosa, would you recommend Ambition? I’m thinking of buying it.
Mimosa | 22-Aug-07 at 10:26 pm | Permalink
Dear Kay, esuom and Sere,
Thank you so much for your encouraging words. I was just so bored last Wednesday, being tied up in my dentist’s office, hence the entry. I figured if I could brave the dentist’s chair, why not try to bare my rather “unorthodox” thought, at least once, hehe…
One thing I have realized from reading Metal’s blog is that I don’t always agree with his point of view, yet that doesn’t stop me from enjoying his unique posts. Now having said that, I also need to add that I’m not as vain as hoping my thoughts would be entertaining just because they are… weird, haha… So many, many thanks for your warm reactions. That’s definitely a start! I’ll see if and when I have the nerve to put up another entry… My next dentist appointment, maybe?
Mimosa | 22-Aug-07 at 10:40 pm | Permalink
Kay,
As for WDLC, Gallen said he likes it (the script), so I’ll give the series the benefit of the doubt. At least he’s back “home” now, and I’m totally enjoying the fact that I don’t have to try so hard to find his news, at least for these couples of weeks.
(Special thanks to Jayne for updating Gallen’s news on a regular basis despite her health condition!)
Mimosa | 22-Aug-07 at 10:47 pm | Permalink
Sere,
Ambition’s plot has its edge. It also has a lot of violence. My brother actually complains that Man Wei “haunted” him, and my Mom wouldn’t let me watch Ambition when it first came out. So, unless you really want to watch it for Gallen’s performance then I’d recommend the series. Just prepare another light-hearted comedy near by so you could “de-tox” yourself,
MetalAZNWarrior | 04-May-08 at 11:19 am | Permalink
You should write more posts Mimosa!
I haven’t seen any of the series that you wrote about in this post, so I have nothing to comment, but the central idea about which you wrote is well supported. Good job!