Always and Ever
I watched a TV play published in Hong Kong this summer, named “Always and ever”, which told us a romantic story happened between a coupe. Due to the Curse that the heroin would be killed by the hero triple world as long as they loved each other, they enjoy but suffering their relationship.
Unfortunately in the lucky, God allowed them to change their fate. As a modern policeman, Mr Jinchang Yuan shot his girlfriend by mistake in an executing, at the moment the girl died, Mr Yuan’s soul flied away and traveled back to Song dynasty. Even more surprising, the soul stopped by and lived in Justice Bao’s body, who was a famous detector in Chinese history. Coincidently, the new “Justice Bao” met his girlfriend with another identification, a genius woman with broad knowledge in medicine. Sharing a great many experiences together, the woman swap all the terrible impression on this “Justice Bao”, and fell in love again. Doomed, the woman was decapitated by her lover again, thanks to an unjust case. When the girl’s blood sprang out, the hero’s soul left Mr Bao’s body and sat in Longhua Biao’s body, who was a rude and evil policeman in the fiftieth Hong Kong. Much harder this time, the couple played in opposite roles, which made it more difficult for the heroin to trust the man. Through countless explanation, conflicts, and hardships, the woman’s memory of both the former world and the later one was called back. And in this age, their love grew to climax. Shortly, the tragedy occurred as always. Good for them, the man came back to who he was in modern times, and they finally caught the opportunity to shift their fate in destined version. As expected, the whole story ended up with wonderful and pleasant result, the lovers reached marriage.
This story maybe not very classic itself, even a little crazy. However, some plots made it fantastic. Whatever circumstance it was, whoever their identifications designed, however dangerous it might