The Legend of Kublai Khan

The Legend of Kublai Khan, also known as Legend of Yuan Empire Founder, is a Chinese television series based on the life of Kublai Khan and the events leading to the founding of the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty in China. The series started shooting in 2011. It premiered at the 2013 Shanghai Television Festival from 11–13 June 2013,[2] and was first aired on HBS from 21–30 July 2013.[1] The series was directed by Tsui Siu-ming and starred Hu Jun as Kublai Khan, Charmaine Sheh as Chabi in the main leads, with Cai Wenyan, Wu Yue, Tang Guoqiang, Gao Fa, Steven Ma and Ray Lui as part of the supporting cast.

The Legend of Kublai Khan
Also known asLegend of Yuan Empire Founder
Traditional忽必烈傳奇 / 建元風雲
Simplified忽必烈传奇 / 建元风云
MandarinHūbìliè Chuánqí / Jiàn Yuán Fēngyún
GenreHistorical drama
Written byHasi Bagen
Directed byTsui Siu-ming
Presented byLi Hua
Zhou Shidu
Yu Dong
Sheng Luosong
Kong Deming
Cao Fang
Wu Huai'en
Wang Guangzhong
Liu Hong
Xi Hongyi
Du Daning
He Ling
Guo Li
Liu Zhanhui
Cheng Lidong
Jin Tingting
Wu Weimin
Wang Jingyi
Tian Jun
Zheng Yuxia
Li Ying
Xiaoning
Zhang Huayong
Hou Li
Wu Zhiling
Wang Liqiao
Luo Yi
StarringHu Jun
Charmaine Sheh
Cai Wenyan
Wu Yue
Tang Guoqiang
Gao Fa
Steven Ma
Ray Lui
Ba Sen
Hasi Gaowa
Xie Miao
Xu Xiangdong
Du Yiheng
He Yanni
Wang Huilai
Xu Dongmei
Huang Jianqun
Zhang Yan
Debbie Goh
Liu Xiaoxiao
Zhang Jingda
Jin Tingting
Opening themeQiankun Wu Di Bu Baorong (乾坤无地不包容) performed by Tsui Siu-ming
Ending themeLeishui Daluo Le Hualei (泪水打落了花蕾) performed by Jin Tingting
Composer(s)Luo Jian
Country of originChina
Original language(s)Mandarin
No. of episodes50
46 (Hong Kong release)
Production
Executive producer(s)Wang Xiangwen
Zhang Ping
Fan Xiaojun
Feng Wei
Liu Yipeng
Su Jianrong
Liu Haiming
Wang Guang
Chang Sheng
Zhang Zili
Wang Haitao
Guo Zhijian
Zhao Wei
Tu Tu
Zhao-Yan Guozhang
Xu-Li Fengming
Producer(s)Zhou Shidu
Sheng Luosong
Feng Jing
Xi Hongyi
Tang Xuan
Zhu Xianqing
Zhang Linshu
Bu Xiaofeng
Di Nannan
Wang Liqiao
He Qing
Production location(s)China
CinematographyGuan Jianxiong
Editor(s)Li Jian
Running time45 minutes per episode
Production company(s)
  • Hainan Province Film and Television Production Centre
  • Tianjin Beifang Film Group
  • Bona Film Group
  • China International Culture and Art Centre
  • Beijing Yangguang Shengtong Culture Art
  • Jiuzhou Audio-Visual Publishing
  • Beijing Dongfang Investment Managing
  • Inner Mongolia Shiqi Group
  • Beijing Ruyi Jixiang Television Planning
  • Beijing Zhongshi Meixing International Culture Media
  • Alpas Grasslands Culture Tourism Development
  • The Travel Channel
  • Qilin Net (Beijing) Film Culture Media
  • Guofu Film (Beijing) Culture Media
  • LeTV.com
DistributorSheng Luosong
Release
Original networkHBS[1]
Original release21 July (2013-07-21)[1] 
30 July 2013 (2013-07-30)[1]

Plot

The series, spanning over 70 years, romanticises the life of Kublai Khan and the events leading to the founding of the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty in China.

Kublai was born in 1215 as a son of Tolui, the fourth son of Genghis Khan. At the time, Töregene, the wife of Ögedei (Genghis Khan's third son), sees Tolui as a potential threat. As Tolui gains more glory for his victories in battle, Töregene becomes worried about whether her husband will be selected by his father as his successor. She also feels uneasy because the young Kublai is highly favoured by his grandfather.

Ögedei eventually succeeds his father as the Great Khan of the Mongol Empire. After Tolui is poisoned to death by Töregene, his sons, under the leadership of their eldest brother Möngke, want to avenge their father. Töregene plans to accuse Möngke and his brothers of plotting a rebellion if they seek to avenge their father, and hopes to use the opportunity to eliminate Tolui's family. At this critical moment, Kublai and his mother, Sorghaghtani, manage to calm down his brothers and get them to stay low while secretly building up their forces.

Following Ögedei Khan's death, Töregene becomes the Regent of the Mongol Empire for some years until her son, Güyük, is elected as the new Great Khan. When Güyük dies in a conflict against his cousin Batu, his wife Qaimish takes over as the Regent for a brief period of time until Möngke becomes the new Great Khan.

A few years later, after Möngke dies in a battle against the Song Empire at Diaoyu Fortress, Kublai and his younger brother Ariq Böke engage in a power struggle to seize the succession. Kublai eventually overcomes his brother and secures his position as the Great Khan after defeating all his rivals. He conquers China and establishes the Yuan dynasty with him as its first emperor.

Cast

  • Hu Jun as Kublai
    • Su Jiahang as Kublai (young)
  • Charmaine Sheh as Chabi
  • Cai Wenyan as Töregene
  • Wu Yue as Ariq Böke
    • Lao Huanjie as Ariq Böke (young)
  • Tang Guoqiang as Genghis Khan
  • Gao Fa as Möngke
    • Lei Haotian as Möngke (young)
  • Steven Ma as Liu Bingzhong
  • Ray Lui as Tolui
  • Ba Sen as Ögedei
  • Hasi Gaowa as Sorghaghtani
  • Xie Miao as Širemün
  • Xu Xiangdong as Huochi
  • Du Yiheng as Hao Jing
  • He Yanni as Yunlin
  • Wang Huilai as Dong Wenyong
  • Xu Dongmei as Kusa'er
  • Huang Chien-chun as Güyük
    • Jin Bo as Güyük (young)
  • Debbie Goh as Qaimish
  • Zhang Yan as Yelü Chucai / Yelü Zhu
  • Liu Xiaoxiao as Hao Qin
  • Zhang Jingda as Hulagu
    • Zhang Bolun as Hulagu (young)
  • Jin Tingting as Yina
    • Zhang Jiaojiao as Yina (young)
  • Sengge Renqin as Chilaun
  • Dao'erji as Subutai
  • Lu Ying as Anchen
  • Liu Sibo as Fifth Princess
  • Luo Huimiao as Alandar
  • Ji Shuai as Liu Taiping
  • He Ya'nan as Tana
  • Wang Lu as Kaidu
  • Li Hua as Yesutai
  • Menghe Wuliji as Chagatai
  • Hongtong Batu as Jochi
  • Sude Siqin as Bo'orchu
  • Siqin Bilige as Batu
  • Gangte Mu'er as Shiban
  • Dao'erji as Godan
    • Liu Shijia as Godan (young)
  • Baoyin Gexige as Mukha
  • Dong Ming as Baodi
  • Wang Zhengping as Reverend Haiyun
  • Jiang Yongbo as Ahema
  • Anna as Fatima
  • Dalielihan Hade'er as Suhe
  • Bate'er as Buhe
  • Sulide as Batu
  • Fan Yu as Qašin
  • Suyou Lesiren as Yesu
  • Hong Chang as Li Tan
  • Yan Linfei as Wang Jian
  • Yong Qing as Narisong
  • Tao Ri as Taozi
  • Tang Zhaokang as Jinhua
  • Wudamu as Bateng
  • Wang Xueqian as Zhenjin
  • Yijile as Khochu
  • Lan Tian as Hutu
  • Jiang Haotong as Naohu

Broadcasts

RegionNetworkDatesNotes
Mainland ChinaHBS21–30 July 2013Released under the title The Genius of War – Kublai (打仗天才忽必烈)[1]
Malaysia8TV11 September – 19 November 2013
TaiwanGTV19 December 2013 – 17 January 2014Released under the title Da Mo Fengyun (大漠風雲)
Hong KongTVB HD Jade23 December 2013 – 28 February 2014Released under the original title Legend of Yuan Empire Founder (建元風雲)
United StatesKTSF21 March – 29 May 2014Released under the title The Genius of War – Kublai (打仗天才忽必烈)

Production

The Legend of Kublai Khan was produced at a cost of about 150 million yuan.[3]

Awards

The Legend of Kublai Khan won the Golden Angel Award for Outstanding Television Series and Best Director of Chinese TV Series at the 2013 Chinese American Film Festival.[4]

Controversy over title renaming

The Legend of Kublai Khan was released under the title The Genius of War – Kublai (打仗天才忽必烈) when it was aired on Hunan Broadcasting System (HBS) in July 2013. Apparently, this was done without the approval of the producers, and the reason behind the renaming is believed to be that HBS wanted to attract higher viewership. Director Tsui Siu-ming and lead actor Hu Jun expressed unhappiness over the renaming; Hu even wrote on his weibo, "Who changed the title? What genius of war?", and added an angry emoticon.[3]

gollark: I guess I could engage in a lyric-style censorship campaign?
gollark: And the audit log, but apparently everyone has that.
gollark: Oh, and deleting them.
gollark: Except pinning messages.
gollark: For one thing, I have no actual powers.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.