Lethal Weapons of Love and Passion | |
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Lethal Weapons of Love and Passion poster
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Genre | Wuxia |
Starring |
Raymond Lam Charmaine Sheh Bosco Wong Sonija Kwok Sharon Chan |
Opening theme | Chut Chiu (出鞘) performed by Raymond Lam |
Ending theme | Ling Wui (領會) performed by Raymond Lam |
Country of origin | Hong Kong |
Original language(s) | Cantonese |
No. of episodes | 40 |
Production | |
Running time | 45 minutes per episode |
Release | |
Original network | TVB |
Original release | January 5 – February 25, 2006 |
External links | |
Website |
Lethal Weapons of Love and Passion | |||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 覆雨翻雲 | ||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 覆雨翻云 | ||||||||||
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Transcriptions | |
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Standard Mandarin | |
Hanyu Pinyin | Fù Yǔ Fān Yún |
Yue: Cantonese | |
Jyutping | Fuk1 Jyu5 Faan1 Wan4 |
Lethal Weapons of Love and Passion is a Hong Kong television series based on Huang Yi's novel Fuyu Fanyun. It was released overseas in December 2005 and broadcast on TVB in January 2006.
Pong Ban (Derek Kok) mercilessly defeated three monks who protected the Rain-Ceasing Sword. The surviving monk took the sword and fled when Long Fan-Wan (David Chiang) arrives to stop Pong Ban. The monk then was later found by Hon Pak (Bosco Wong), who presented it to Yin Wong.
It is set during the early Ming Dynasty, after the overthrow of the Mongol Yuan Dynasty. Fung Heng-Lit (Raymond Lam), the Mongol prince, lost his childhood memories during a massacre by Emperor Zhu. Heng-Lit escaped the massacre and grew up in China, where he becomes the chief of a clan. Pong Ban tries, by all means, to regain Heng-Lit's childhood memory and groom him into being a prince, hoping that Heng-Lit may lead the Mongol rebels in a campaign to overthrow the Ming Dynasty. However, Heng-Lit has his own dream, in which the Mongols and the Han Chinese live together in harmony.
39th TVB Anniversary Awards (2006)