Brother's Keeper (2013 TV series)

Brother's Keeper
巨輪

Brother's Keeper promo poster
Also known as Big Wheel
Genre Dramatic programming
Created by Amy Wong
Written by Ng Siu-tung
Starring Ruco Chan
Linda Chung
Edwin Siu
Kristal Tin
Louise Lee
Louis Yuen
Theme music composer Yip Siu-chung
Tang Chi-wai
Opening theme "巨輪" (Wheel of Time)
by Edwin Siu & Ruco Chan[1]
Country of origin Hong Kong
Original language(s) Cantonese
English
No. of episodes 32
Production
Executive producer(s) Catherine Tsang
Producer(s) Amy Wong
Location(s) Hong Kong, Macau
Running time 45 minutes
Production company(s) TVB
Release
Original network TVB Jade, HD Jade
Picture format 1080i (HDTV)
Original release 23 September – 1 November 2013
Chronology
Related shows Brother's Keeper II (2016)
External links
Website programme.tvb.com/drama/brotherskeeper/
Brother's Keeper
Traditional Chinese 巨輪
Simplified Chinese 巨轮
Literal meaning "big wheel"

Brother's Keeper (Chinese: 巨輪; literally "big wheel") is a Hong Kong television drama serial produced by Amy Wong and TVB. It premiered on 23 September 2013 on TVB Jade in Hong Kong. The final two episodes aired back-to-back on Saturday, 2 November 2013. The plot is based on the story of Koi Kei Bakery, which is also the show's main sponsor.

The serial, set between the years 1980 and 2013, depicts the moral life struggles of two half-brothers Kiu Tin-seng (Ruco Chan) and Lo Wai-son (Edwin Siu) during the late and post-colonial periods of Hong Kong and Macau. Historical events that were set against this era, including Hong Kong's 1980 Touch Base Policy, Macau's relaxed immigration laws of 1982, the 1991 goldsmith robberies, the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong and Macau to China in the late 1990s, the 1998 Hong Kong financial crisis, the 1999 Macanese triad wars, the 2003 Hong Kong SARS outbreak, and the 2008 Hong Kong financial recession, serves as some of the key plot vehicles that drive the changing fates of the brothers and their families.[2]

Development for Brother's Keeper began in mid-2012. A teaser trailer was unveiled at TVB's 2013 Sales Presentation event, which was held on 8 November 2012. The trailer premiered on TVB Jade on 24 November 2012.[3] The serial was also exhibited as one of eighteen TVB grand television drama productions at the 17th Hong Kong International Film & TV Market in March 2013.

The sequel, Brother's Keeper II, was released in 2016.

Production

Filming

A costume fitting press conference was held on 19 September 2012, and principal photography began in Hong Kong in late September 2012. A camera commencement blessing ceremony was held on 17 October 2012.

Production relocated to Macau on 21 November 2012.[4] On 19 December 2012, the crew resumed shooting in Hong Kong. The final scenes of the drama were completed on 1 February 2013. Macau's Koi Kei Bakery is a major sponsor for the serial.[5]

Plot

Brother's Keeper is a story about two brothers of the same mother but different fathers, "Sam" Kiu Tin-seng (Ruco Chan) and Lo Wai-son (Edwin Siu). Sam was born in Hong Kong, the son of Chow Yuk-mui (Louise Lee) and Kiu Sum (Lee Kwok Lun). Due to Kiu Sum refusing to marry Chow Yuk-mui, Yuk-mui decided to take Sam to Foshan, China to start anew. In Foshan, Yuk-mui got married with Lo Fu-shing (Lau Kong) and gave birth to Son a few years afterwards.

Not long after, the family of four decided to cross the border to start a new life in Hong Kong. The family of four eventually got separated with Sam ending up in Hong Kong, while Yuk-mui, Fu-shing, and Son ending up in Macau.

The two brothers lived very different lives in the course of the next 20 years. The very hardworking and ambitious Sam managed to graduate from college and became a police officer like his biological father, Kiu Sum. He has a girlfriend named Rachel Cheuk (Linda Chung) whom he is willing to do anything to fulfill her dreams of opening a fashion store. In order to achieve his goal, he seduces Fabio (Ankie Beilke) and uses her in the process. In addition, Sam also has an ambiguous relationship with a triad member named Keung Yung (Louis Cheung) who later caused Sam to end up in jail.

Son, who is very simple-minded, only wants to live a peaceful and comfortable life in Macau. He is good friends with Yiu Man-ying (Krystal Tin) and Lung Fei (Louis Yuen). In order to avoid his abusive father (Fu-shing), Son works with his mother (Yuk-mui) at a restaurant. The lives of the two brothers, Sam and Son began to change after they meet up again. The two brothers in the series will go from 20 to 50 years old. This also shows the phrase "rags to riches" as Son becomes a rich businessowner from a poor young boy.

Cast and characters

Main cast

Independent, clever, and talented, Sam is a distinguished police officer for the Royal Hong Kong Police Force, taking him only five years to get promoted from the sergeant rank to the chief inspector rank. Sam is Chow Yuk-mui's eldest son, sired by Kiu Sum, who is also a Hong Kong police officer. Rejected by his biological father, Sam suffers through a tremendously difficult childhood and is emancipated by his parents at an early age. Sam is regarded as the serial's main tragic hero. Though he is innately a good-hearted person,[6] his tragic flaws—ambition and greed—eventually leads to his downfall by the end of the story.

Brother's Keeper is Chan's sixth collaboration with producer Wong. His breakout performance in Wong's 2011 TVB legal drama The Other Truth—his third collaboration with Wong—was what led Wong to cast Chan as the lead actor for most of her newer works. Chan expressed that he has high expectations for the serial and compares its time-lapsing scope to the likes of critically successful dramas such as The Greed of Man and Vanity Fair.[7]

The younger son of Chow Yuk-mui, Son is sole offspring of Mui's only marriage with Lo Fu-shing. Due to his father's poor business, Son spends most of his time in the streets of Macau to handle his own peanut brittle vendor business. Resourceful, persistent, and confident, Son's small mobile food business eventually expands to a large multi-chained bakery shop, the Pasterilia Lo Son Kei. The simple-minded Son serves as a foil to Sam's guileful character. Son's story from rags to riches is also inspired by the real-life story of Leong Chan-kuong, the owner of Macau's most famous bakery shop, Koi Kei[8]

Moses Chan was originally cast for the role of Son, which was announced simultaneously with Ruco Chan's casting in the late summer of 2012. In August 2012, approximately a month before the serial was to commence shooting in Hong Kong, Chan was reassigned to play opposite Wayne Lai in TVB's legal drama, Will Power.[9] After Siu replaced Chan, the character of Son was rewritten to be younger.

Rachel is the second daughter of Lau Lai-kuen, who is the second wife of the wealthy Philip Cheuk. Despite her parent's objections, Rachel insists to date Sam. With Sam's help, Rachel eventually fulfills her dream of owning her own fashion boutiques to sell her own brand designs. She was involved in love triangle with Sam and Son for more than 20 years.

Wong had been wanting to work with Chung ever since she started production on her 2012 comedy, No Good Either Way in late 2011. Chung was one of the first cast members of Brother's Keeper that was announced in mid-2012. On her role, Chung said, "The role grew up overseas, so I naturally get to speak English! I grew up in Canada as well... speaking English dialogue is a very comfortable feeling for me."[10]

Peevish, boyish, but loyal, Ying is one of Son's closest childhood friends. Ying falls in love with Son and is a major supporter in Son's quest to open up his multi-chain business.

Educated overseas, Lung hails from a wealthy family in Macau, and is the heir of his family business, although he prefers to work as an insurance sales agent. Despite his family business being one of the biggest rivals of Pasterilia Lo Son Kei, Fei and Son are best friends. Fei has an obvious crush on Ying, but he is supportive when Ying begins to date Son.

Recurring cast

Reception

Critical response

Brother's Keeper has received generally positive reviews from critics. On Douban, the serial received a rating of 7.7 out of 10 based on over two thousand votes.[11]

Ratings

The following is a table that includes a list of the total ratings points based on television viewership. "Viewers in millions" refers to the number of people, derived from TVB Jade ratings (including TVB HD Jade), in Hong Kong who watched the episode live. The peak number of viewers are in brackets.

# Timeslot (HKT) Week Episode(s) Average points Peaking points Viewers (in millions) AI Rank Ref.
1
Mon – Fri, 8:30 pm
23 – 27 September 2013
1 — 5
26
31
1.67 (1.99)
#1
2
Mon – Fri, 8:30 pm
30 September – 4 October 2013
6 — 10
26
28
1.67 (1.80)
#2
3
Mon – Fri, 8:30 pm
7 – 11 October 2013
11 — 15
26
28
1.67 (1.80)
#2
4
Mon – Fri, 8:30 pm
14 – 18 October 2013
16 — 20
27
30
1.73 (1.93)
#1
5
Mon – Fri, 8:30 pm
21 – 25 October 2013
21 — 25
27
30
1.73 (1.93)
#1
6
Mon – Fri, 8:30 pm
26 October – 1 November 2013
26 — 30
26
29
1.67 (1.86)
#1
7
Sat, 8:30 pm
2 November 2013
31 — 32
29
32
1.86 (2.05)
#1

Accolades

TVB Awards Presentation 2013

References

  1. "Tang Chi-wai's Weibo". Weibo (in Chinese). Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  2. "Brother's Keeper - The Change of Destiny". TVB Weekly #796 via Baidu (in Chinese). Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  3. Addy (29 October 2012). "Big Wheel is the Most Anticipated Drama of 2013". JayneStars. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  4. "Kristal Tin's Weibo". Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  5. "Moses Chan exits Brother's Keeper". On TVB (in Chinese). 25 October 2013. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  6. "Ruco Chan touches his ear in every episode". Apple Daily (in Traditional Chinese and Cantonese). 16 October 2013. Retrieved 17 October 2013.
  7. "Linda Chung and Ruco Chan travel back to the 1980's". Oriental Daily (in Chinese). 26 October 2012. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  8. "Edwin Siu leading over Ruco Chan in Brother's Keeper". Sudden Weekly #921 via IHKTV (in Chinese). 22 March 2013. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  9. "Moses Chan turns down Brother's Keeper to work with Wayne Lai". Sina (in Chinese). 29 September 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  10. "A year of harvest for Linda Chung". Fashion and Beauty #474 via IHKTV (in Chinese). 23 January 2013. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  11. "Brother's Keeper at Douban". Douban (in Chinese). Retrieved 6 October 2013.
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