#TheRebel #叛逆者 #ZhuYilong #朱一龙 #TongYao #童瑶
USE OF MISE-EN-SCENE AND NARRATIVE ELEMENTS TO CREATE MEANING - Lin Nansheng + Zhu Yizhen
-- added a section on the use of Walt Whitman's One's-Self I Sing
in the section on Whitman. I can't believe I forgot about this key
scene. 😅 Also, other minor grammar, spelling & formatting errors]
Preface:
Preface:
I have already written a review on this series if you would like to read it,
please
CLICK ME. That review is spoiler-free. Unlike the review, this post will have
SPOILERS, please read at your own risk. Also, this post assumes
that you have already watched the entire series because there won't be a
synopsis and references to scenes won't be in chronological order.
I had originally written these additional comments as part of the review but it kept expanding, so I decided to finish the review and publish it first, if not it might go the way of the many posts that I have started and never finished. 😁
I had originally written these additional comments as part of the review but it kept expanding, so I decided to finish the review and publish it first, if not it might go the way of the many posts that I have started and never finished. 😁
I have also decided to write at least one more post on
The Rebel because I have enough material already written to start it
but I will need time to finish it and that will probably take a while which is
part of the reason why I'm splitting up the post again. When that post
is done, I will edit this post and post that link too. If time permits
and I still retain an interest in writing more about the series, I might still
write one more. When either one of those posts gets completed, I will
rewrite this paragraph and post the links here.
(Timecodes may vary slightly depending on which version of the series you
are watching. Some episodes of the version I used had some
advertisements & trailers. If time permits in the future, I
might go back and fix the TC using a version without advertisements. If I
do so, I will note it here.)
(For capsule reviews and links to other reviews of Tong Yao's work,
please CLICK ME)
While they were a really radiant couple in the beginning, the relationship
between Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen at the beginning of The Rebel was
always built on sand. That's partially because the duration of their
relationship in the beginning wasn't very long and partially because Lin
Nansheng had an agenda. They didn't take too long to topple this
sandcastle because The Rebel isn't about romantic love.
However, this also meant that the series had to figure out a way to suggest
that this couple, whose relationship began in the worst possible way, would
somehow still be linked emotionally and spiritually through the many years
that they remained apart.
The series makers didn't go with the love at first sight plot device because that's not a very good foundation for a love that's supposed to span 13 years, of which a large part of it was spent either apart physically or emotionally. Physically, simply because they were often not in the same city or even if they were, they deliberately did not come into contact. Emotionally because Zhu Yizhen, in particular, had built up walls in her heart after she discovered Lin Nansheng’s true motive in getting close to her. In the last arc of the story, Lin Nansheng himself also deliberately dug an emotional chasm between the two of them to keep her safe.
The first piece of music is the one we first hear when Lin Nansheng observes
her at the basketball court. The second piece is actually used as the
instrumental theme song for the series but is also used diegetically when
they play Tchaikovsky The Seasons June: Barcarolle together on the
piano. The Rebel actually hired world renown pianist Lang Lang
to play The Seasons June: Barcarolle and they also hired
experienced composer Zhang Yilin (张镒麟) to be overall in charge of the OST of the series
which indicates how seriously they took their music in the series.
The second time we hear this piece of music in the background is after Zhu Yizhen has brought Lin Nansheng back to her house to nurse him back to health. [Episode 09 TC 17:43] It is used in the background under a series of shots cut together in a montage to represent the passing of time. Under her care, Lin Nansheng makes steady progress, he begins to walk with the aid of a walking stick and they also spent time reading books together in the garden. The time they spent together during this period was probably some of the most idyllic moments of their lives, barring the pesky bugs of course. Zhu Yizheng slapping at the bugs bugging her is an interesting detail. Perhaps it was indicative that these sunny, blissful perfect days can't last and that there was already trouble buzzing at the edges, ready to strike and crack open these perfect days reveal the biggest defect in their relationship then.
While 篮球场的心动 is only used non-diegetically, the second piece of music that links the two is used both diegetically and non-diegetically.
This second piece of music is Tchaikovsky's The Seasons June: Barcarolle. The previous piece of music is only used to evoke emotion and create symbolic meaning, this second piece serves two functions. Like the first piece, it is sometimes used in the background to remind the viewer of the intangible link between the two but it's also often used in the series as a very specific memory of a moment in time. It's a reminder of a simpler time in their lives when they were in love and nothing else mattered. Even though Lin Nansheng was there on a mission but by that time, he had already been smitten by her. [Episode 9 TC 28:19] Interestingly, initially he was standing behind her as she plays the piece, at that point, he was possibly thinking of using her memory of her mother and father to make an emotional connection with her. But soon after, he takes it a step further and joins her at the piano, it's something Zhu Yizhen's father had not done. From the moment they played that duet together, their hearts were forever intertwined.
Aside from that intangible memory of that afternoon when they played the piano together, there is also a physical manifestation of that memory and that's in the form of the vinyl record that Lin Nansheng had purchased as a gift for Zhu Yizhen. Just before his scam to deceive Zhu Yizhen was revealed, Lin Nansheng walked past a bakery. What drew him into the bakery wasn't the bakes but the music. [Episode 11 TC 04:09] He entered the bakery and convinced the baker to sell him the vinyl record with the intention of giving it to Zhu Yizhen. This LP contained a recording of Tchaikovsky's The Seasons June: Barcarolle.
Thou born to match the gale, (thou art all wings,)
To cope with heaven and earth and sea and hurricane,
Thou ship of air that never furl'st thy sails,
Days, even weeks untired and onward, through spaces, realms gyrating,
At dusk that lookist on Senegal, at morn America,
That sport'st amid the lightning-flash and thunder-cloud,
In them, in thy experiences, had'st thou my soul,
What joys! what joys were thine!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
One of the things I found interesting about this series is that the romance
between Lin Nansheng (Zhu Yilong 朱一龙) and Zhu Yizhen (Tong Yao 童瑶) is a
relatively unusual one. In most TV series, even if the romance is a
turbulent one and the couple may spend a lot of time apart; still a romantic
relationship where a couple spends 13 years apart except for brief awkward
meetings where they try their best not to act on their feelings is not a
common storyline. Even when they were pretending to be a married
couple during World War II in Shanghai, they were hardly your usual romantic
couple. They were very respectful of each other's mission and chosen
sides. On the surface, they mostly maintained a professional
relationship but in their hearts, they were trying their best not to act
upon their growing affection. What makes this even more unusual is
that this relationship began as a fraudulent one. When Lin Nansheng
approached Zhu Yizhen, he had an agenda. He had been sent there to try
and enter the upper levels of the Communist underground via the young
university undergraduate.
The series makers didn't go with the love at first sight plot device because that's not a very good foundation for a love that's supposed to span 13 years, of which a large part of it was spent either apart physically or emotionally. Physically, simply because they were often not in the same city or even if they were, they deliberately did not come into contact. Emotionally because Zhu Yizhen, in particular, had built up walls in her heart after she discovered Lin Nansheng’s true motive in getting close to her. In the last arc of the story, Lin Nansheng himself also deliberately dug an emotional chasm between the two of them to keep her safe.
To make it work, they had to build a stronger foundation and they didn't
have a lot of time for it too. So what the script did instead, was to
suggest that theirs was a meeting of the minds and souls, that is, they were
soulmates. This was a smart thing to do because this is the only
reasonable way to explain why even after all that they had been through,
they would both remain emotionally tied to each other. This was why
the scene at the dance hall was so important. Previous to this, Zhu
Yizhen had no interest in the men around her and it was only after the
conversation in the dance hall that she began to feel a connection.
What The Rebel did to suggest that the two were soulmates throughout
the years after their first encounter was to use several narrative elements
and music, both diegetic and non-diegetic, to remind viewers that the couple
has always been linked emotionally and spiritually to each other no matter
where they are. This suggestion started from as early as the
basketball scene with the use of music. A lot of thought and effort
was put into this because they kept building and layering with several
different elements throughout the series till the very end.
Music
Two pieces stand out whenever one thinks of the two of them and no other character in the series seems to have any particular piece of music of significance attached to them. While using thematic music is not uncommon in films, it's not used as often in dramas because it is much harder to maintain consistency. The decision to use theme music for the couple was not only a bold one but also one that really paid off because it really enhanced the feeling that they were spiritually tied together from the beginning to the end of the series.
Two pieces stand out whenever one thinks of the two of them and no other character in the series seems to have any particular piece of music of significance attached to them. While using thematic music is not uncommon in films, it's not used as often in dramas because it is much harder to maintain consistency. The decision to use theme music for the couple was not only a bold one but also one that really paid off because it really enhanced the feeling that they were spiritually tied together from the beginning to the end of the series.
[Episode 07 TC 17:20] I particularly like the piece that they use when Lin
Nansheng first sees Zhu Yizhen on the basketball court. This is the
first time we hear this piece. This piece is by Zhang Yiling and the
composer called it 篮球场的心动 lánqiú chǎng de xīndòng
(literal translation: The Heartbeat of the Basketball Court) in a
Weibo post published by his studio.
For some reason, it kept reminding me of Michael Nyman's
The Heart Asks Pleasure First from The Piano. Not that
the pieces are the same or that similar. It's that same feeling I
first felt when I heard Nyman's piece in The Piano. In this
scene, as the music swells to the visuals in slow-mo, Lin Nansheng's heart
feels the exhilarating thrill of the discovery of something ethereal,
something transcendent, something divine. This scene is particularly
important for him because he will go on to love no other than her.
This evocative piece of music seems to represent Zhu Yizhen and their
subsequent relationship in the most idealised form in his heart.
The second time we hear this piece of music in the background is after Zhu Yizhen has brought Lin Nansheng back to her house to nurse him back to health. [Episode 09 TC 17:43] It is used in the background under a series of shots cut together in a montage to represent the passing of time. Under her care, Lin Nansheng makes steady progress, he begins to walk with the aid of a walking stick and they also spent time reading books together in the garden. The time they spent together during this period was probably some of the most idyllic moments of their lives, barring the pesky bugs of course. Zhu Yizheng slapping at the bugs bugging her is an interesting detail. Perhaps it was indicative that these sunny, blissful perfect days can't last and that there was already trouble buzzing at the edges, ready to strike and crack open these perfect days reveal the biggest defect in their relationship then.
We hear 篮球场的心动 again when Lin Nansheng thinks of her just
after Zhu Yizhen helps to set up Chen Moqun. [Episode 15 TC 4:09] It’s
snowing and as he thinks of her and the music plays, her voiceover also
plays above that. As Lin Nansheng remembers reading together with Zhu
Yizhen, he remembers her speaking passionately about her ideals and he
remembers that first dance together. As he recalls all this, he burns
documents from the case file of their investigation on her; most
significantly the sheet of paper stating his fake identity in the
school. Symbolically, it seems like Lin Nansheng wants to burn away
his regret; this deed that has come between them. All the shots of his
memories of her are in black and white too because, at this point in time,
he knows that those moments and the purity of her love for him are now lost
to him.
The fourth time we hear 篮球场的心动 is in the last
arc of the series in Episode 35 [TC 41:35]. This is pretty significant
since we have not heard this piece of music since Episode 15. Lin
Nansheng meets his contact in Shanghai and it’s Lao Ji aka Fisherman.
After he gives Lao Ji information about a captive Communist underground
member, he hesitantly asks about Zhu Yizhen. Lao Ji tells him that
she’s doing well and misses him too but to keep them both safe, he can’t
tell either of them more. Lin Nansheng is just happy to hear that
she’s doing well. The music begins to play and we cut to Zhu Yizhen
busy transmitting a message via Morse Code. The message she’s relaying
is about the captive Lin Nansheng was telling Fisherman about.
Although both of them don’t know it yet, they are once again linked together
spiritually. This time, they are finally on the same side and they are
even working on a mission together, linked symbolically by this piece of
music.
As 篮球场的心动 continues to play, we transition to
a scene of Zhu Yizhen in her home. She looks around calmly and
exhales an inaudible sigh as her father and the servants descend the
steps. She joins her father, smiles a very slight half-smile and as
they take one more look around, she looks sad because she knows that this
would be their final time in this home. As she gazes wistfully at
her father again, she is only able to manage a reassuring smile after he
tells her to leave with him. As they leave the house in their car,
it’s snowing outside just as it is snowing where Lin Nansheng is. In
this context, the snow seems to symbolize that the relationship between
Lin Nansheng & Zhu Yizhen has cooled. It’s only after the car
exits the frame that the music plays its final note. The finality of
that last note signals that all their lives have been irrevocably changed.
The final time we hear 篮球场的心动 is when Zhu Yizhen
goes and retrieve the brooch that Lin Nansheng had given her. The
brooch was damaged in an earlier incident and she had finally managed to
get it fixed in this shop in Shanghai. Once the box containing the
brooch reached her hands, the first strains of this piece of music can be
heard. [Episode 39 TC 10:12] As she inspects the brooch carefully,
the camera zooms in and she breaks into a slight smile as her eyes take on
an emotional shine.
As she walks out of the jewellery shop, we realise that Lin Nansheng is
actually watching her from a café across the road. As the music plays,
he follows her and sees her with Meng Annan. The other people around
her call her Mrs Shen and it is obvious that they regard Meng Annan as her
husband, the music continues to play under the visuals till she enters her
own shop and he leaves.
Interestingly, the music didn't change to another more ominous piece even
after Lin Nansheng sees her with Meng Annan. This sequence happens
immediately after two previous scenes. The first one is when Lan
Jiexin proposes a fake marriage to Lin Nansheng and the second scene is when
Lao Ji says that that the organization has approved it and that he knows
that Lin Nansheng still loves Zhu Yizhen. The use of this piece here
is significant because Lin Nansheng is about to enter a fake marriage and
Zhu Yizhen is already pretending to be married, yet both of them are still
emotionally linked to each other and this piece of music makes it abundantly
clear.
While 篮球场的心动 is only used non-diegetically, the second piece of music that links the two is used both diegetically and non-diegetically.
This second piece of music is Tchaikovsky's The Seasons June: Barcarolle. The previous piece of music is only used to evoke emotion and create symbolic meaning, this second piece serves two functions. Like the first piece, it is sometimes used in the background to remind the viewer of the intangible link between the two but it's also often used in the series as a very specific memory of a moment in time. It's a reminder of a simpler time in their lives when they were in love and nothing else mattered. Even though Lin Nansheng was there on a mission but by that time, he had already been smitten by her. [Episode 9 TC 28:19] Interestingly, initially he was standing behind her as she plays the piece, at that point, he was possibly thinking of using her memory of her mother and father to make an emotional connection with her. But soon after, he takes it a step further and joins her at the piano, it's something Zhu Yizhen's father had not done. From the moment they played that duet together, their hearts were forever intertwined.
There is a particularly poignant scene in the series when Zhu Yizhen is
hiding out in Lin Nansheng's place during World War II in Shanghai.
[Episode 28 TC 31:43] Lin Nansheng was feeling particularly
despondent. Zhu Yizhen had just helped him to change the dressing for
his wound. She silently watches him for a moment, hesitates like she
wants to say something but he looks away. With concern in her eyes,
she tells him to take his medication properly and to eat properly, then his
wounds would heal quickly. After his short reply, the smile fades from
Zhu Yizhen's face and she looks serious, worried and hesitates as she takes
a deep silent breath, her mouth moves slightly like she wants to say more
but hesitates again, begins to get emotional and blinks frequently to hold
it back before deciding to turn away and go towards the window
instead.
She draws his attention initially by talking about the snow outside.
Finally, after a long moment of hesitation, she decides to comfort him with
some words that he had used to comfort her after they thought that Lao Ji
had been killed. Zhu Yizhen tells him that she doesn't know what had
happened to him but she wants to remind him that he once told her that they
have to survive because to live on is to have hope. However, he
doesn't respond and instead turns away, his head bowed. On seeing that
what she had said had not made a difference, her eyes reveal her concern and
uncertainty as she exhales quietly but deeply. She then turns away
from him as she takes another quiet but deep breath, looks out the window
and begins to hum The Seasons June: Barcarolle. Lin
Nansheng reacts slightly even though his head remains bowed. She
continues to hum the tune as she plays it out with her fingers on the
window.
Throughout the whole scene, there has only been ambient sound and then her
humming. As she continues to hum the tune, Lin Nansheng begins to get
emotional. As the strains of a piano begin, Lin Nansheng exhales
audibly and smiles. Hearing him react, she starts to tear, her face is
taut with tension as she tries to control her emotions but she can't hold
back a quick slight smile; as though she's quietly glad that he's no longer
silently disheartened. Lin Nansheng is also trying to contain his
emotions and he remembers her playing at the piano in her old home in
Shanghai.
By this time, the non-diegetic music has taken over and we can no longer
hear Zhu Yizhen humming the tune but we know she's still humming it because
two shots later we can still see her in the background sadly playing out the
notes on the window pane. As she continues to hum and play the notes,
he recalls in a flashback how he had gone to her side at the piano and sat
with her. We then cut back to the present time as he finally decides
not to hold back anymore. He moves swiftly towards her and impulsively
hugs her from behind.
Once he hugs her and presses his face into hers, the piano is joined by a
crescendo of strings as though a tsunami of emotions hit both of them and
even Zhu Yizhen who's been so good at suppressing her emotions cannot help
but give in. Instead of pushing him away, she moves her arm from the
window and draws him nearer. This is the first time since their
reunion in Shanghai that they have so openly showed affection for one
another. As they share this rare intimate physical and spiritual
moment in their lives, both of them seem to now be recalling that one
afternoon where things were so much simpler. Just two people in love
playing the piano together. A close-up of their two hands playing is
followed by a close-up of their arms where Zhu Yizhen pulls him ever more
urgently towards her. This match cut is lovely because it emphasises
even more that they now share this flashback of that day. Zhu Yizhen
doesn't get many flashback sequences which makes this even more
significant. What's more, this is a shared flashback with Lin
Nansheng. As they continue to hug by the window, the music slowly
reaches a melancholic end and crossfades with the cold sound of the snow
falling outside.
This whole scene is nicely bookended by shots of snow
falling. Both shots just before and just after this scene is of
snow falling furiously outside. The audio in both snow falling shots
is also simply the sound of the snowstorm and there is no music, except that
the second shot of snow is a cross-fade from the music to the sound of the
snowstorm. When the sequence cuts from the snow shot to the shot of
Zhu Yizhen changing the dressing for Lin Nansheng, the audio change is quite
apparent. The sound of the snow falling is actually much louder
compared to the calm and quiet of the room the couple is in. You can't
even hear the snowstorm from inside the room, it's as though the calm in
this room belies the storm that surrounds them. Perhaps this calm even
hides the storm that is in their hearts. Regardless, this calm seems
to suggest that they are currently secluded from the outside world; this is
their shared world. It's also this quietness that helps to accentuate
Zhu Yizhen's humming and the music score that takes over simply because what
preceded it was so quiet. When we can still hear the diegetic sounds
in the scene, their shared world was that physical space, when the music
takes over and when even the diegetic sounds fade out, their shared world is
in their souls. And while there is a snowstorm raging outside, we
don't see it through the windows and we don't hear it at all. At that
moment in time, nothing else mattered to them.
This is a particularly nice scene. The pair had been spending much of
their time awkwardly not talking about their feelings about each
other. Zhu Yizhen, in particular, had been very taciturn. He's
been wanting to say more and she's been trying not to let her feelings show
by too much more. Both of them just trying to show via their actions
rather than their words that they both care. So when the moment
finally happens, even though they don't make any verbal declarations of
love, the moment when they finally express their love for each other, that
emotional impact is so much greater. The use of music, sound design
and editing really added to this scene. Both Tong Yao and Zhu Yilong's
performances were also so beautiful here; so little said but so much more
implied.
[Episode 30 TC 34:03] There is another scene in Hong Kong when Lin Nansheng
was recovering in an apartment that Zhuo Qiuming had placed him in. He
was feeling particularly despondent again and as he is staring at his
medication, he begins to play the notes of the
The Seasons June: Barcarolle on the table, just as Zhu Yizhen had on
the windowpane in Shanghai. As he does so, he has another flashback of
that afternoon when both Zhu Yizhen and he played the piano together.
There is a fade down and then fade up to Zhu Yizhen standing alone and lost
in thought in Jiaxing* where she had been brought to after she was
shot. The music continues to play as an audio transition. As is
often the case in the series, we don't know what Zhu Yizhen is thinking of,
she's holding a leaf in her hand but her mind is in another world.
It's likely that she too is thinking of those moments with Lin Nansheng when
he was still Xu Liwen because The Seasons June: Barcarolle plays
on for quite a lot longer.
As she ponders, holding on to that leaf in her hand, she is also surrounded
by greenery. This little interesting detail is of some
significance. Firstly, the couple is linked ideologically by Walt
Whitman's Leaves of Grass. While this isn't exactly a leaf from
grass, it's still a leaf nonetheless.
(See the section on Whitman below) Also, the leaf that Zhu
Yizhen is holding in her hand is dark green which is the colour of the more
mature leaves of Summer. While the couple is not linked significantly
by Nature, they are linked by Tchaikovsky's
The Seasons June: Barcarolle and June is a Summer month. Hence,
this, in addition to the background music, implies that she too is thinking
of Lin Nansheng and, like him, she is also thinking of the days that they
spent together.
Green leaves also often imply hope, revival and renewal. At this point
in the story, they both don't yet know if the other had survived but Lin
Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen still hold on to those memories and still hold on to
hope. Also, interestingly, soon after the music fades out, Zhu
Yizhen's contact in Jiaxing brings the news of her new assignment and
probably the best news she has heard for some time. Lao Ji is alive
which means hope, revival and renewal for Zhu Yizhen.
*{Aside: Jiaxing is a very significant place in the history of the
Communist Party of China. The official history of the CPC states
that the founding of the party was announced on a small red boat on Nanhu
Lake in Jiaxing, Zhejiang.
CLICK ME}
[Episode 43 TC 38:10] Perhaps one of the most important recollections of Zhu
Yizhen playing The Seasons June: Barcarolle on the piano occurs in
the final episode of the series. By this point in the series, both the
viewers and Lin Nansheng don't know if Zhu Yizhen is still alive.
After she had been shot in the final episode and had fallen into the river,
both Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen were separated. He has been trying to
find her for some time but to no avail. He had just received news that
they were still unable to locate Zhu Yizhen and that his new posting meant
that he had to leave the area the next morning. This also meant that
he could no longer wait near Shanghai for news of her. He imagined her
playing the piano and he cried as he recalled all the people he had cared
about who have now been lost to him. Zhu Yizhen was part of that
montage sequence. Lin Nansheng has slowly come to accept that Zhu
Yizhen may no longer be alive.
LP - vinyl record
Aside from that intangible memory of that afternoon when they played the piano together, there is also a physical manifestation of that memory and that's in the form of the vinyl record that Lin Nansheng had purchased as a gift for Zhu Yizhen. Just before his scam to deceive Zhu Yizhen was revealed, Lin Nansheng walked past a bakery. What drew him into the bakery wasn't the bakes but the music. [Episode 11 TC 04:09] He entered the bakery and convinced the baker to sell him the vinyl record with the intention of giving it to Zhu Yizhen. This LP contained a recording of Tchaikovsky's The Seasons June: Barcarolle.
This LP makes a few significant appearances in the script after Lin Nansheng
bought the LP from the baker. The first time was after Zhu Yizhen had
impulsively gone to Lin Nansheng's dorm room to try and convince him to
switch sides. She was so absorbed in her own thoughts and the
subsequent struggle that she did not even see the LP and the accompanying
note on the table. More importantly, after Chen Moqun had taken the
knife from Lin Nansheng, he flung it on the desk on top of the note that Lin
Nansheng had written. Lin Nansheng had written "送给怡貞希望你喜欢“
which translates to something like "For Yizhen hope you like it". What
is significant is that after Chen Moqun threw the knife on the note, it fell
on top of the word "希望" (hope). Symbolically, Chen Moqun had "cut"
the hope from both Chen Moqun and Zhu Yizhen's lives in that instance.
[Episode 25 TC 19:55] After the explosion that "killed" Lao Ji, Lin Nansheng
brings Zhu Yizhen back to his home to hide there temporarily. To keep
her mind off things, she decided to clean his home and in doing so, she
found the LP, the note and the wrapping paper that she had used to wrap the
volume of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass that she had gifted
him. It's the first time she had seen the note. Soon after, Lin
Nansheng returns with a suitcase of clothing and other items that he had
bought for her. She has had barely any time to digest this information
and didn't even have time to hide the note. The ensuing scene has the
two of them awkwardly trying to pretend that the note meant nothing to them.
While he stumbled over his words, she spent the entire time since she opened
the door for him avoiding his gaze. Her eyes kept looking away as
though she was afraid that if she looked for too long into his eyes, it
might betray her long-hidden feelings for him. She finally abruptly
tries to offer him a drink to distract themselves from the awkwardness of
the situation but instead, he chose a fast retreat, found an excuse and left
the house. This is nice and nuanced work from both actors. This
scene also included one of Zhu Yizhen's few flashback memories, the LP
(implying that piece of music and that moment when they played the piano
together), the wrapping paper (implying Walk Whitman's poems) and also the
chocolate that he had bought for her in the suitcase he left her. With
so many things to trigger Zhu Yizhen's feelings, her defences had begun to
weaken considerably at this point in time.
Quicksand years that whirl me I know not whither,
Your schemes, politics, fail-lines give way-substances mock and elude me;
Only the theme I sing, the great and strong-possess'd soul, eludes not,
One's-self must never give way - that is the final substance - that out of all is
sure,
Out of politics, triumphs, battles, life, what at last finally remains?
When shows break up, what but One's-Self is sure?
The LP makes another significant appearance in [Episode 39 TC 12:38] when
Lin Nansheng had followed Zhu Yizhen back to her shop and home in Shanghai
in the last arc of the series. While there, he sees Meng Annan and
learns from the conversation they have with a neighbour that Zhu Yizhen
and Meng Annan are "married". This was soon after he had also
decided to enter into a fake marriage with Lan Xinjie. While Lin
Nansheng didn't show any expression while seeing Zhu Yizhen and Meng Annan
together, he returns home in the very next scene and plays the LP of the
recording of Tchaikovsky's The Seasons June: Barcarolle. As
he lies down on his couch, he plays out the notes of the piece of
music on his arm and he is transported to another time in his mind.
The LP even makes it into the flashback montage that Lin Nansheng has when
he imagines Zhu Yizhen playing the piano in [Episode 43 TC 38:10].
Walt Whitman
Walt Whitman's book of poems Leaves of Grass is another important
item that is used to link Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen. Whitman is
said to be a supporter of democracy but because of his egalitarian and
humanist views, he was also well regarded by the socialists.
[Episode 7 TC 19:20] When Zhu Yizhen is reciting the poem
To the Man-of-War-Bird, the poem on the board is yet another
Whitman poem. That poem is titled Quicksand Years, although
what the lecturer has written on the board isn't complete.
Your schemes, politics, fail-lines give way-substances mock and elude me;
Only the theme I sing, the great and strong-possess'd soul, eludes not,
One's-self must never give way - that is the final substance - that out of all is
sure,
Out of politics, triumphs, battles, life, what at last finally remains?
When shows break up, what but One's-Self is sure?
The key takeaway from this poem is that even during the years where
quicksand seems to want to suck a person down, "One's-self must never give way - that is the final substance - that out
of all is sure," Even in the most difficult of times, one must not
lose one's soul. That's a particularly appropriate poem for Lin
Nansheng who only had his soul to hold on to when all that he believed in
had crumbled away.
The poem that Zhu Yizhen recites is the final stanza in Whitman's
To the Man-of-War-Bird.
To cope with heaven and earth and sea and hurricane,
Thou ship of air that never furl'st thy sails,
Days, even weeks untired and onward, through spaces, realms gyrating,
At dusk that lookist on Senegal, at morn America,
That sport'st amid the lightning-flash and thunder-cloud,
In them, in thy experiences, had'st thou my soul,
What joys! what joys were thine!
(for the full poem CLICK ME)
This scene is a key scene in understanding the relationship between Zhu Yizhen and Lin Nansheng. Zhu Yizhen was clearly distancing herself from the events in the hall by sitting in the back row in the hopes that no one would ask her to dance. She had also gone there in her school uniform rather than a nice dress, implying that she didn’t want to be part of the practice where a girl dresses up to compete for a man’s attention at a dance. It is in this context when Lin Nansheng asks if he can join her and begins to chat with her.
After Lin Nansheng asks Zhu Yizhen why she doesn’t join in the dance, she explains that she doesn’t particularly like dancing because women are placed in a passive role. Her eyes light up when Lin Nansheng not only says with conviction that he understands but he also successfully explains why and earnestly adds that he felt that it was unfair. Lin Nansheng had unwittingly found a way to connect with Zhu Yizhen and she begins to tell him passionately about her opinions about the social conventions that have been placed on women and on herself. She then continues to proclaim that she felt that she had the capability to serve the country just like men do and perhaps, not just do more but also do more meaningful things. When she realised that she had been somewhat carried away and had revealed too much, she breaks off and looks away, slightly embarrassed. This is when Lin Nansheng brings up Whitman.
The Whitman poem that Lin Nansheng uses is One’s-Self I Sing.
One’s-Self I sing, a simple separate person,
Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.
Of physiology from top to toe I sing,
Not physiognomy alone nor brain alone is worthy for the Muse, I say the Form complete is worthier far,
The Female equally with the Male I sing.
(for the full poem CLICK ME)
This isn’t the full poem; they stop at the line that talks about equality between men and women. They added a nice little touch when after Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen takes turns reciting the poem, they both say the last line about equality together, united in their beliefs. Then the music crescendos, the young couple laugh freely and happily. At that one moment, she’s not a Communist agent and he’s not someone trying to infiltrate the organisation she belongs to. They are two people who understood each other perfectly.
Whitman penned this poem after having weathered a very stormy night out on
the sea in a sailing ship. Relived and weary after surviving the
night, Whitman observed a magnificent Man-of-War-Bird flying in the
skies. Even though he felt insignificant when compared to the soaring
bird, he still admired the bird and appreciated its ability to survive and
fly tirelessly for days and weeks. Whitman felt that if the bird had
his soul, what joys he could experience. Perhaps there is even a hint
of enviousness on Whitman's part.
Perhaps here, the choice of this poem indicates Zhu Yizhen's state of mind
at that point in time or perhaps, even the ultimate goal she had set for
herself in life. She's full of ideals and aspires to do more.
Then, she was only a university undergraduate and just "a speck, a point on
the world's floating vast." But she wants to be part of something
magnificent. She envies the majestic bird and wants to be as capable
as the Man-of-War Bird, able to weather all storms, tirelessly and
effortlessly. One thing is certain, Zhu Yizhen sets very high
standards for herself. She was only able to recite this poem with ease
because she had already memorised it three days earlier. Later in the
series, every time we see her at "work", her movements are practised and
precise. Even under duress, she never loses focus. And Zhu
Yizhen always takes responsibility even when the fault isn't hers or not
entirely hers.
I must say that I found this scene quite delightful. While Tong Yao's
accent was overly American, she recited the poem with great aplomb and that
cheeky wink was the cherry on the cake. That self-confidence, that
youthful brashness and fearlessness are all nicely captured by Tong Yao
here. It's not hard to see why Lin Nansheng would find Zhu Yizhen so
captivating; she was unlike any girl he had met previously. This was
right after the basketball scene too when Zhu Yizhen had taken charge after
the umpire became injured and where Lin Nansheng had been so enthralled with
her.
The scene in the lecture hall is only the beginning of a series of times
that Whitman’s Leaves of Grass is used. One of the most
significant moments that Whitman’s poems are used is at the school dance
when Zhu Yizhen and Lin Nansheng finally have their first proper
conversation [Episode 8]. Previous to this, Lin Nansheng had
been trying to engage Zhu Yizhen in conversation but she had deliberately
placed him at arm's length. She was cordial but distant and he even
though he tried to use Whitman to draw her out after he returned her notes
to her in Episode 7, she didn’t fall for it. Instead, it aroused her
suspicions and she had gone to his department to do a simple check on him to
see if he was really who he claims to be.
This scene is a key scene in understanding the relationship between Zhu Yizhen and Lin Nansheng. Zhu Yizhen was clearly distancing herself from the events in the hall by sitting in the back row in the hopes that no one would ask her to dance. She had also gone there in her school uniform rather than a nice dress, implying that she didn’t want to be part of the practice where a girl dresses up to compete for a man’s attention at a dance. It is in this context when Lin Nansheng asks if he can join her and begins to chat with her.
After Lin Nansheng asks Zhu Yizhen why she doesn’t join in the dance, she explains that she doesn’t particularly like dancing because women are placed in a passive role. Her eyes light up when Lin Nansheng not only says with conviction that he understands but he also successfully explains why and earnestly adds that he felt that it was unfair. Lin Nansheng had unwittingly found a way to connect with Zhu Yizhen and she begins to tell him passionately about her opinions about the social conventions that have been placed on women and on herself. She then continues to proclaim that she felt that she had the capability to serve the country just like men do and perhaps, not just do more but also do more meaningful things. When she realised that she had been somewhat carried away and had revealed too much, she breaks off and looks away, slightly embarrassed. This is when Lin Nansheng brings up Whitman.
The Whitman poem that Lin Nansheng uses is One’s-Self I Sing.
One’s-Self I sing, a simple separate person,
Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.
Of physiology from top to toe I sing,
Not physiognomy alone nor brain alone is worthy for the Muse, I say the Form complete is worthier far,
The Female equally with the Male I sing.
(for the full poem CLICK ME)
This isn’t the full poem; they stop at the line that talks about equality between men and women. They added a nice little touch when after Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen takes turns reciting the poem, they both say the last line about equality together, united in their beliefs. Then the music crescendos, the young couple laugh freely and happily. At that one moment, she’s not a Communist agent and he’s not someone trying to infiltrate the organisation she belongs to. They are two people who understood each other perfectly.
[end of Ver. 2]
In [Episode 11 TC 9:41] Zhu Yizhen also gives Lin Nansheng a copy of the
original edition of the English version of the book. This is right
before Lao Ji tells her that Lin Nansheng isn't Xu Liwen but someone who had
been sent by the Juntong to get close to her. After she hands him the
book wrapped in paper, she grew impatient when he took his time to open it
and she eventually took over and unwrapped it before handing it over to him
again. It's a tiny but nice detail. At this point in time, she
still has the impulsiveness of youth. This isn't something you'll see
in her later in the series. The Zhu Yizhen later in the series is more
careful, patient and deliberate.
Also after Lin Nansheng changes allegiance and begins work with the
Communist underground, the book he was instructed to use to decode coded
messages is the Chinese version of Leaves of Grass. This is
also the book that Zhu Yizhen uses to decode messages sent to
her.
Whitman is used to tie both Zhu Yizhen and Lin Nansheng together from the
beginning of their relationship to the end of the series. This
narrative element is not merely something that exists in their memories and
it's not just a few volumes of the physical item that pops up in their
lives. This is unlike the pen that Zhuo Qiuming gives to Lin Nansheng
twice in the series and pops up each time Lin Nansheng thinks of Zhuo
Qiuming. There seems to be no real significant meaning attached to the
pen except that it reminds Lin Nansheng of this deep and lifelong
friendship. In Lin Nansheng's and Zhu Yizhen's case, however, Whitman
isn't just a tangible item that exists in their lives, it also has
intangible meaning. It's something that symbolises the meeting of
their minds because Whitman's poems mean something more to them, it
represents their common ideals and beliefs. Whitman's poems were also
used to describe their nature or their situation or to indicate what laid in
their future. Even when they were apart, even when they were on
opposite sides, their ideals and their passion for the people and their
country keep them connected throughout all those years.
Brooch
To underline the importance of the Zhu Yizhen and Lin Nansheng relationship,
there is yet another narrative element that connects the two and that is the
brooch that Lin Nansheng gave to Zhu Yizhen when he was hiding her from the
Japanese in Shanghai. He buys her an exquisite French-made brooch in
Episode 27 of a series. The design of the brooch is edged with gold
and is a reddish-white butterfly with a pearl attached to it.
The choice of a butterfly is interesting. Butterflies are not only
beautiful but are often associated with metamorphosis, transformation,
rebirth and resurrection. The butterfly starts out as an egg before
it transforms into a caterpillar before it becomes a cocoon, and then the
caterpillar "dies" before it breaks forth into a beautiful
butterfly. Perhaps this foreshadows Zhu Yizhen's fate. At the
end of this series, Zhu Yizhen was gravely injured and Lin Nansheng pushes
her and falls into the river with her in a bid to save her. However,
he loses her and for a period of time, we do not know if she
survived. At one point, when Lin Nansheng imagines her at the piano
playing The Seasons June: Barcarolle, he also recalls in a
flashback montage all the people that he had come to care for but have
already die, Zhu Yizhen was one of them.
There seemed to be a suggestion then that Lin Nansheng had come to accept
that he might never see her again. However, a few shots before the
credit roll, we hear a voice call out to Lin Nansheng. It's Zhu
Yizhen and for a while, we aren't sure if he was imagining it till we see
a "reborn" Zhu Yizhen. Like a butterfly, Zhu Yizhen has been
transformed. She's laughing, carefree and happy as she sings with
some children and playfully poses, presumably, for photos with Lin
Nansheng. Interestingly, she has her two plaits again. This
harkens back to the time when she was still a university undergraduate and
when she was at her most exuberant; where she was at her happiest and
freest.
While there is certainly room for an interpretation that Zhu Yizhen only
survived spiritually and only reunited with Lin Nansheng in his mind and
memories, it's worth noting that the official The Rebel Weibo account, as well as Tong Yao's and Zhu Yilong's accounts,
indicate otherwise. They all posted on Weibo on the night of the
release of the final episode and they all indicate that she does indeed
survive for real and reunites with Lin Nansheng physically.
Butterflies in Chinese culture also have other symbolic meanings. It
is often used to symbolise love and the undying bond between two lovers
which is an appropriate way to describe Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen's
relationship. This idea mostly stems from The Butterfly Lovers story. This is quite representative of their love. Both
Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen loved no other in the series. Even
though they were on opposite sides for much of the series, they still care
deeply for each other and found enough common ground to help each other in
times of need.
The scene when Lin Nansheng actually gives Zhu Yizhen the brooch was after
he had decided that he would undertake a dangerous mission to kill Chen
Moqun. Then, he did not know if he would make it back alive, hence, he
decided to buy Zhu Yizhen a gift. Since he never gave her the LP of
the recording of Tchaikovsky's The Seasons June: Barcarolle, this
became the first memento that he had managed to give her. After he had
returned to the house with groceries for Zhu Yizhen, he tells her that he
still has things to do and asks if she would retreat to her room while he
works. She waits in the room in silence till she hears him leave and
the door close behind him. She swiftly gets up from her chair and
enters the living room but he had already left. [Episode 27 TC 39:44]
After considering for a moment, she goes to the window to watch his
retreating back with worry and concern. After she turns away from the
window, she sees a box on the table.
Lin Nansheng had placed a small box containing the brooch on her embroidery
and placed it on the table. Zhu Yizhen picks it up in curiosity and
opens it. She's deeply moved and a beautiful smile slowly spreads over
her face as she caresses the pearl with her thumb. However, a sense of
sadness soon creeps into her smile as though she knows that there is a
deeper reason for this unexpected gift. She continues to touch the
brooch before she sinks slowly and wearily into the chair. He had
silently given her an expression of his love for her and she understood that
but also feared for his safety.
The next time we see the brooch after Lin Nansheng had given it to Zhu
Yizhen is when she eagerly put it on in [Episode 29 1:54]. She had
just made dinner and was about to have a meal with Lin Nansheng before she
anticipated that they would be separated for a long time again. It was
obvious from her anxious expression when she was trying to decide where to
pin it and when she preened herself in the mirror that this meeting with him
was very important to her. Previously, after he had given her a token
of his love for her, she had not yet had the opportunity to show her
acceptance of it. But, alas, this dinner was not to be.
Soon after putting on the brooch, Zhu Yizhen sees a large group of policemen
gathered downstairs, outside her apartment. She knows that they are
there for her so she escapes by climbing out of the neighbour's
window. As she's trying to escape, she meets Lin Nansheng who's
looking for her too. She asks him to escape without her because she
feels that they both can't die there together. He looks at her,
glances at her brooch intently, grabs her hand and moves off.
Although, this isn't the best of circumstances for him to see that she had
worn the brooch he had given her, still the fact he took an extra look at it
before they fled that street corner together meant that it meant something
to him that she wore it.
We see the brooch again just as Zhu Yizhen was recovering from her gunshot
wound. [Episode 30 TC 22:37] She grasps the brooch too tightly in
her hand and then ventures out of the hospital even though she has yet to
recover fully. She has difficultly walking too much and too far but
she still struggles to find a jeweller to try to get the brooch
fixed. At this point in time, Zhu Yizhen doesn't know Lin Nansheng's
condition and whether he is still alive. Her own doctor had told her
that it isn't easy to recover from a gunshot wound to the lungs and that
she should try and believe in miracles, i.e. hope. Hence, the brooch
has become even more important to her as it is her one and only physical
memento of Lin Nansheng now.
Perhaps the most poignant scene with the brooch is [Episode 32 TC
31:53]. Just as Zhu Yizhen is about to escape from Hong Kong with
her father and the other businessmen, she excuses herself from her
father's side and hurries toward the ship's deck. She fastens the brooch
as she enters the deck and hangs back amongst the crowd while looking out
for Lin Nansheng. As always, Zhu Yizhen is careful.
When she finally sees him, she moves to the railing and smiles an
emotion-filled but radiant smile. We've not seen Zhu Yizhen so open
with her feelings since her undergraduate days. Even as she left her
father's side to come to the deck, she had maintained an impenetrable
expression, though her taut body language and her shallow breathing
betrays her. After she spots him and approaches the railing, she is
still trying to contain her excitement but she fails and finally smiles a
teary smile. It's the first time they have seen each other since
they were wounded and separated in Shanghai, hence, this is also the first
time that they have seen each other since they both found out that they
had both survived. This is a momentous but also a bittersweet moment
for them because they can only view each other from a distance.
Although they cannot be together, they are both overjoyed that the other
person still lives because as Lin Nansheng said in a previous scene, being
alive is hope. There is no dialogue in this scene because they are
really too far to even say anything to each other but words are not needed
because their eyes and their expressions do all the talking for them.
Later, after her return to Shanghai, while out on a mission, Zhu Yizhen
sees that Lin Nansheng has returned [Episode 35 TC 9:30] and she is
visibly troubled about it. When she meets Lao Ji to give him the
results of the mission [Episode 35 TC 14:41] she feels compelled to
confess to Lao Ji that she still cares for Lin Nansheng and she implies
that she's anxious about it because they are supposed to be enemies.
Lao Ji listens to her heart-breaking confession with compassion but is
unable to give her real comfort.
[Episode 35 TC 20:11] After she returns home, she takes out the brooch,
looks at it pensively and is lost in thought. When Meng Annan knocks
to ask to enter the room, she swiftly hides it under a handkerchief.
After Meng Annan leaves the room, she takes the brooch out and looks sadly
at it before carefully wrapping it up in her handkerchief and placing it
in a drawer, as though she's putting her "heart" and her feelings hidden
away in the drawer.
The brooch shows up again in [Episode 37 TC 13:47]. Lin Nansheng is
following Chen Moqun because he is trying to get evidence to prove that
Chen Moqun and Wang Shian have a connection. Unfortunately, he is
thwarted by Meng Annan which turned out to be a blessing in disguise
because he ends up walking past a jeweller shop where he sees the restored
brooch sitting in the store window. There is a nice reflection of
the brooch on his suit, perhaps indicating that he too has a metaphorical
"brooch" in him. This discovery is significant for Lin Nansheng for
another reason. He will eventually use this brooch to find out where
Zhu Yizhen lives.
The final time we see the brooch is in [Episode 39 TC 10:12]. As
described in greater detail in the music section, Zhu Yizhen had come to
pick it up at the jeweller's and she's pleased to see it whole
again. She has had the opportunity to get this brooch fixed in
Shanghai since she's moved back again for some time. However, she
had chosen to keep it hidden in the drawer till she saw Lin Nansheng
again. She had previously confessed that she was unable to
completely rid her heart of him to Lao Ji but in the end, she still chose
to make this broken brooch whole again. Although she feels that she
has to be wary of him and perhaps even try and change her feelings for
him, by this scene, it seems like she has decided to embrace that
contradiction for now.
What I really wished they did with the ending in the last episode was to
continue with the use of the brooch. I felt that it would have been
perfect if she had worn that brooch when she called out to him and when he
turned around, he would have been able to take his time to admire it
resting on her chest without them both being divided by time and
distance. She would then be able to fully express her love for him
by proudly displaying it and he would have been able to fully receive that
love. Instead, they never cut back to her and the camera only
remained on Lin Nansheng which deprived Zhu Yizhen of what would have been
a well deserved full-on cathartic release. It also deprived viewers
of experiencing that moment with her. Poor Zhu Yizhen, unlike Lin
Nansheng, has been suppressing her emotions for about 2/3s of the series
and in the end, we still only get a weeping Lin Nansheng. What a
wasted opportunity for what could have been a powerful moment and what a
waste of how much they had done with the brooch till now.
Chocolate
The final prop of significance linking Lin Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen is
chocolate. Chocolate is often used as an expression of love, passion,
affection and concern which is why it is often used as a gift. In
The Rebel, Lin Nansheng also uses it to express his love, concern and
to lift her spirits. After he observed that Zhu Yizhen likes
chocolate, he started buying it for her later in the series.
In The Rebel, the first time we see chocolate in the series is
when Zhu Yizhen pulls it out of her bag and gives one piece to her friend
while she nibbles on a piece of her own. [Episode 7 TC 17:59]
Zhu Yizhen had just sneaked in from the basketball game. She is busy
chatting with her friend and sneaking a little snack to go with it instead
of paying attention to her lecturer. Lin Nansheng is sitting at the
back of the hall and while he is seen paying attention to the lecturer, he
must have observed that Zhu Yizhen likes chocolate.
[Episode 25 TC 22:48] After the couple saw the explosion that "killed" Lao
Ji, Lin Nansheng is frantic when Zhu Yizhen breaks down and later in a rare
moment of candour, she revealed the pain and guilt it was causing her.
He comforted her with some words of wisdom and a bowl of noodles then.
Still, when he bought her some necessities like several changes of clothing,
he took care to buy her chocolate to cheer her up too. It was a
gesture that Zhu Yizhen really took to heart because, in a later scene,
these pieces of chocolate will come to mean something more to her and also
bring her comfort.
[Episode 26 TC 34:35] In an earlier scene, after reading the newspapers that
state that Lin Nansheng had "died" and where she had subsequently covered
her tear-filled eyes in despair, Zhu Yizhen now sits in silence, lost in
thought. Soon after that, she remembers that Lin Nansheng had given
her a name card and told her that she could use that to contact him in an
emergency. She searches desperately through her purse and in her haste
she pulls out the name card but did not notice that she had also pulled out
a piece of chocolate that she had dropped onto the table. She turns to
leave the room, pauses, hesitates and thought the better of it. She
turns back again and as she places the name card on the table, she bends
over and holds onto the table for support as her body sags a little.
As she breathes heavily, she remains undecided before she regains her
composure after some effort and then sinks wearily into the chair
again. Her eyes shift restlessly, betraying the turmoil beneath her
tautly held face before she abruptly realises that her hand had fallen on
something on the table. As she picks it up, she realises that it was a
piece of chocolate that Lin Nansheng had given her and as she struggles hard
to prevent herself from shedding tears, she grasps onto the piece of
chocolate as tightly as she grasps on to hope.
The sound design and music are very nice in this scene. In the
beginning, there is no music, just the silence of the room Zhu Yizhen is
in. It is so quiet, you can't seem to even hear ambient sound.
It feels cold, lonely, empty and in another space. It's like how Zhu
Yizhen must be feeling, isolated and detached. Then suddenly after she
snaps out of her trance, we hear the sound of her rummaging through her
purse, the chaos of that sound emphasising the franticness in her
heart. Then just as she pulled out the name card and the chocolate
from her bag, we hear the first strains of the music. First starting
with the melancholic sound of the violins before the melody builds and more
instruments join in. It's only after she sits down and has regained
some control of her emotions that the music ends and we cut to the next
scene.
There is no dialogue in this scene only sound, music, mise-en-scene and
performance. Most of the meaning had to come from the actress
herself. Nice work from Tong Yao here, subtle and nuanced. It's
exactly how Zhu Yizhen should be.
The final time we see chocolate is in [Episode 27 TC 37:49]. It's the
same sequence like the one where he gives her the brooch but this happens
just before that. He's about to go on a dangerous mission and he had
bought her some supplies. Aside from some groceries, he had bought her
chocolate too. Interestingly, the series makers make a particular
point about this. As he is unpacking the groceries, his back is to her
and he tells her where to place the keys when she leaves in the next few
days. She hesitates briefly and with a hint of concern, she asks him,
if this means that he wasn't going to be returning for a long time.
After she asks him this question, he freezes. The camera shot is a
Mid-shot and tilts down, following his hands and stops as his hands with the
boxes of chocolate stop moving, in the middle of the frame emphasising the
abruptness of the moment and the importance of the boxes of chocolate.
The packets of chocolate hang mid-air in his hands for some time before we
finally cut to a two-shot with Lin Nansheng in the foreground and Zhu Yizhen
in the background. As Lin Nansheng tries to decide what to say, she
continues to look intently at his back. She can't read his meaning so
she waits patiently. He finally turns after some time, looks directly
at her and says that he will definitely be back as soon as possible.
She senses that something is wrong, raises her eyes slightly to try and meet
his but quickly avoids his gaze, nods, her eyes still lowered as though she
doesn't wish to let him see her concern and disbelief before she
finally makes a sound of acknowledgement. He asks her to return
to her room for a while because he has something he needs to do. She
finally does look at him but her breathy okay and her hesitancy before she
leaves and her change of expression right before she walks away betrays the
worries she has internally.
Just as she walks away and approaches the door to her room, Lin Nansheng
turns towards her and at almost the same time she turns back towards him
quickly and somewhat impetuously, this juxtaposes with her previously
measured way of walking away which suggests that she's lost a little control
of her emotions. This movement reminds me so much of the kind of move
you see in musicals, as though they want to come towards each other
passionately. However, they both hold back.
As a slight smile begins to build at the edge of Zhu Yizhen's lips, Lin
Nansheng looks intently at her. The shot cuts back to her and she
smiles a small but reassuring smile even as her eyes carry a touch of
sadness. On seeing her smile, he returns a sad half-smile.
After she sees his smile, she blinks her emotionally laden eyes and breaks
eye contact. There is a slight tremble in her lower lip before she
closes it into a determined straight line, turns quickly and walks briskly
into the room before closing the door.
This is a lovely scene powered again mostly by mise-en-scene and
performance. There is a lot that is left unsaid. Their concern
for each other is presented in actions and even in inaction. It's
obvious they want to say more and do more but they both refrain.
As has been typical of many of the Lin Nansheng x Zhu Yizhen scenes after
her return to Shanghai, Lin Nansheng does most of the talking in this
scene. In this scene, even though he talks more than her, he keeps it
pretty neutral and doesn't touch on anything emotional. Instead, how
he tries to express his feelings for her is by buying her stuff. He
buys her groceries so she doesn't have to leave the house too much. He
buys her chocolate because he knows she likes it and he buys her something
pretty, ie. the brooch. Zhu Yizhen, on the other hand, barely says
anything at all. She says a total of three short sentences, one word
and used exclamative particles twice in this scene. As she'd been
doing a lot of, she prefers to study him and likes to watch him
wordlessly. And when she wants to express her concern for him, she
mostly uses actions. She wants to know if he's eaten, when he says he
has, she pours him water to drink. When he puts the groceries away,
she looks at him and suddenly she thinks of another thing she can do for him
and goes to make his bed. When he says he needs her to go back to her
room so that he can get some work done, she complies after she gives him a
comforting smile.
The music in this scene is nice too. They use a version of Tchaikovsky
The Seasons June: Barcarolle which is one of the pieces of music that
link the couple. At first, we just have a quiet piano playing.
Then just after Zhu Yizhen asks him if he will be gone for a long time, the
deep sounds of the cello kick in seemingly representative of Lin Nansheng's
internal voice. At the same time, they introduce some higher notes,
possibly from a harp, and this seems to represent Zhu Yizhen waiting
expectantly for an answer. After he says that he will definitely try
and be back as soon as possible, more instruments join in and the music
builds and dips at the moment when they both turn to face each other.
Then it increases in volume and intensity and builds even more near the end
of this sequence till after she sits down after opening the box that
contains the brooch.
This is the last time we see chocolate in the series because after this Lin
Nansheng and Zhu Yizhen will be separated for some time. When they
meet again, he won't have the opportunity to give her any more gifts.
While they were able to work together in some capacity in the middle of the
series because they had a common enemy, i.e. the Japanese, by the last
section of the series they were well and truly on opposite sides. By
then, the Japanese had already lost the war and the fight was now between
the Kuomintang and the Communists. Although Lin Nansheng had already
defected to the Communists, Zhu Yizhen will not know that till the final
episode and Lin Nansheng was not able to tell her that till then too.
CONCLUSION
I must really commend the series makers for putting so much thought into
building this relationship. This was not the easiest of relationships
to build given how many constraints the script and the series makers placed
on themselves. Both Tong Yao and Zhu Yilong did an excellent job too
with expressing the contradictions and the internal conflict that their
characters had to deal with when it came to their relationship. The
two actors had a lot of chemistry too which helped make this relationship
where so much is left unsaid work.
I do wish that they had given Zhu Yizhen a more momentous and emotional
moment at the end of the series. I really wished they had cut back to
her and finally allowed this character to let out all the emotion she had
suppressed for 2/3s of the series. Seriously, Zhu Yizhen deserves at
least that. But alas, they still chose to just focus as much as
possible on Lin Nansheng which is something that I felt was a flaw in
The Rebel and something I also expressed in the review on the
series. I felt that that was a mistake because it just felt like such
an injustice for Zhu Yizhen not to finally get her moment. Also,
because I can imagine just how much more impactful that would have been, it
just felt like such a wasted opportunity.
Tong Yao had a difficult job because her character was the most guarded,
reserved, restrained and taciturn in the series which meant that many scenes
had to be played very subtly and very nuanced. I thought she did a
very good job but I know that some people on Weibo wanted her to go bigger
and was critical of her for not going bigger. I, however,
disagree. I think this interpretation of Zhu Yizhen is the correct one
and I agree with director Zhou You for directing Tong Yao to play it this
way. I wish to address this by writing about this character and why I
liked this character in my planned third post on this series. (Hopefully, I
will be able to finish that sooner rather than later. 😅 )
Finally, if you made it this far. Thank you for reading. I know
the review and this post were pretty long. I hope you enjoyed reading
it as much as I enjoyed writing it. If you would like to discuss the
series, I would be happy to but please do keep it civil, thanks.
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