The Legend of Qin (TV series)

This article is about the CG Chinese animated TV series directed by Robin Shen. For other uses, see The Legend of Qin (disambiguation).
The Legend of Qin
Created by Sayling Wen (original story)
Written by Robin Shen
Directed by Wu Yun
Robin Shen
Voices of Feng Junhua
Shen Dawei
Shen Lei
Huang Yiqing
Sun Ye
Zhai Wei
Hong Haitian
Opening theme Moonlight by Anson Hu
Composer(s) Westlife
Country of origin China
Original language(s) Chinese
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 104
Production
Executive producer(s) Robin Shen
Producer(s) Chen Qianyuan
Robin Shen
Production company(s) Sparkly Key
Broadcast
Original airing 2007

The Legend of Qin (Chinese: 秦时明月; pinyin: qín shí míng yuè), aka Qin's Moon is a CG Chinese animated TV series written and directed by Robin Shen (Shen Leping). The story is based on the novel of the same name by Taiwanese writer and entrepreneur Sayling Wen (Wen Shiren). It is China's first 3D wuxia animation, produced by Sparkly Key Animation Studio(Sparkly Key) in Hangzhou, Zhejiang. The title means "The bright moon of Qin Era", quoted from a famous poem. Here it also contains the names of the two heroes. Ming (bright) is the hero Tianming, Yue (moon) is the heroine Yue-er.

This TV series was broadcast around Chinese New Year in 2007. The background of this TV series is begin from the building of the first Chinese empire: Qin to the end of the Capital of Qin which named XianYang been compromised by the soldiers from Chu. The span of this series is 30 years(including memories). It shows a juvenile named Tianming, who has the blood of heroes, grew up to a hero, as well as changed the development of the history with his ability. It is an inspirational TV series which combines martial arts, fantasy, history together with each other, and leads the audience to witness the surging, magnificent and beautiful ancient Chinese world two thousand years ago.

Story

The Legend of Qin follow through the Qin dynasty time when the Emperor of the Qin, King Zheng conquers the other 6 nations and unified the whole of China to the rise of the king of Western Chu, Xiang Yu, who capture the capital city, Xianyang.

The story circles around a young protagonist, Jing Tianming who carries the blood of a hero turning from a weak and ignorant young boy into a great hero, who single-handedly changes the process of history.

Following the story, different moments of history and folk's myth will be re-light, heroes and swordsman that causes the change of history will appear in the land of unrest and chaotic times of great china. Young protagonist, Tianming whose life is as strong as weeds that survive in the era of change, among the chaos, the face of violence in the regime, dangerous enemies, difficult family relationships, friendship, love, the profound changes, reincarnation of sorrows and joys, eventually the end of this era became the start of a new era of decisive force, the brilliant achievements of a romantic legend.

Characters

For a list of all the characters, see List of Qin's Moon characters.

Episodes

For a list of all the episodes, see List of Qin's Moon episodes.

Settings

The Machinery City

The headquarters of Mohists. A city built among the mountains and cliffs, guarded with machines and traps. Mohists live here together and call this city "The Paradise In Human World". Tianming, Ge Nie arrive at the City in Season 1, Wei Zhuang and Qin's armies capture the City in Season 2, and in Season 3 after Wei Zhuang's retreat, Yan Dan orders the self-destruction of the City to hide the "last secret" which is still unknown now.

Sanghai

This is the east border of Qin, the coast of the sea. In real history, the emperor sent people to sail to the ocean, seeking for the way of living forever. After the destruction of the Machinery City, Mohists come to Sanghai to work their next plan.

Others

Airing

Four seasons have been broadcast as well as three special editions and the movie. The fifth season is currently airing. There is a total of 7 seasons.[1]

The airing was not only in China,but also in Vietnam,Cambodia,and Burma.

External links

References