Sinful Debt

Sinful Debt

A screenshot from ep. 1
Also known as
  • Sinful Debts[1]
  • The Wages of Sin
Traditional
Simplified
Mandarin Niè Zhài
Shanghainese Nyih Tsa
Created by Huang Haiqin
Based on Educated Youth
by Ye Xin
Written by Ye Xin
Directed by Huang Shuqin
Starring
  • Zhao Youliang
  • Yan Xiaopin
  • Jin Xin
  • Wu Mian
  • Wu Jing
  • Wang Huaying
  • Tu Ruying
  • Li Jiayao
  • Li Ying
  • Dong Rongrong
  • Li Yanbo
  • Luo Zhenhua
  • Hai Jia
  • Yang Chengyun
Narrated by Liang Shan
Opening theme "Shei Neng Gaosu Wo" (谁能告诉我) by Li Chunbo
Ending theme "Nali You Wo De Jia" (哪里有我的家) performed by Xie Liangzi and Fire Bird
Composer(s) Zou Huiming
Country of origin China
Original language(s)
  • Shanghainese
  • Mandarin
  • some English, Japanese
No. of episodes 20
Production
Executive producer(s) Qian Qingqing
Producer(s) Cai Yongrui
Cinematography
  • Liu Lihua
  • Xinghao
Running time 45 minutes
Release
Original network Shanghai Television
Original release January 9, 1995 (1995-01-09)
Chronology
Followed by Sinful Debt 2 (2010)

Sinful Debt[2][3][4] is a 1995 Chinese television drama directed by Huang Shuqin and produced by Shanghai Television. It was written by Ye Xin, based on his 1992 novel Educated Youth.[5] The series follows five innocent-eyed teens (all portrayed by first-time actors) who travel more than 2000 km from remote Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture to Shanghai searching for their unacquainted parents — former sent-down youths who in order to return home (in the late 1970s or early 1980s) abandoned them in the countryside. They teens did not expect, however, that their unannounced arrivals would create myriads of economic and relational problems for their urban parents, many of whom already remarried with new families.

The poignant tearjerker hit home with a national audience, particularly those affected by the devastating Cultural Revolution (1966–76) and its Down to the Countryside Movement, registering a record-setting 42.62% audience share in Shanghai.[6] According to reporter Yu Liangxin of the Shanghai Times, when more than 20 reporters sat together to watch the drama, most cried their eyes puffy.[7] The dialogue is mostly in Shanghainese, and the TV series is generally considered a representative TV drama of Haipai culture.

The series was also shown in Vietnam in 1997 and became a hit as well. A sequel also written by Ye Xin, Sinful Debt 2, was first shown in 2010, returning many of the older actors from the original series.

Cast and characters

References

  1. Cai, Jiaying (2011). Commodification and Crime: A Comparison of Literary Representations of New York and Shanghai Since the 1980s (PDF) (Ph.D. thesis). University of Nottingham.
  2. Huang, Yiju (2014). Tapestry of Light: Aesthetic Afterlives of the Cultural Revolution. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-28553-8.
  3. Zheng, Zhuyi (2011). Stereotyping of Women’s Images Portrayed in Prime Time Chinese TV Series from 1979 to 2008: Has the Picture Changed Over Time? (M.S. thesis). Iowa State University.
  4. Huang, Yiju (2011). Wounds in Time: The Aesthetic Afterlives of the Cultural Revolution (PDF) (Ph.D. thesis). University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
  5. Yan, Haiping (2013). "Inhabiting the City: Tropes of "Home" in Contemporary Chinese Cinema". China Review. 13 (1): 93–135.
  6. "Between Town and Country". Shanghai Star. 2005-04-07.
  7. 沪语版《孽债》重播:又到泪流满面时
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