A Well-Rounded Medical/Slice-of-Life Drama
8.25 rating
Having grown up watching Hong Kong TVB dramas, I haven’t watched any in 20 years. I finally decided to pick up “Kids Lives Matter” after reading some good reviews and comments. With dramas so accessible these days, I am glad I don’t have to rent or subscribe to my local Chinese TV station. I watched this on YouTube (USA region).
I would say “Kids’ Lives Matter” is part medical drama and part slice-of-life drama. For better or for worse, it is a well-rounded one. The drama not only touches on medical cases and patients, but also focuses on friendships, family relationships, slight romance and hospital politics. If you want a little of everything, this is a good drama for you. But if you want to watch exciting action and in-depth discussion of mysterious and complicated medical cases, then you might not be satisfied.
I found the whole drama to be very calm. Compared to other Asian and Western medical dramas I’ve watched, I don’t feel a sense of urgency in the cases (even the supposedly urgent ones). The hospitals look brightly lit and clean, everyone has big offices with sweeping views. This PUBLIC teaching hospital looks like a fancy hotel or office in a skyscraper. Even if the drama focuses on pediatric surgeons with cute wallpapers and stickers in the pediatric ward, everything is just too squeaky clean.
Though it’s lacking in intensity, I do find a lot of heart in this drama. The cases might not be heart-pumpingly exciting, but the patient stories and their relationships with the doctors are great. There are a couple cases that I especially like, e.g. a mother wishes her daughter’s tumor is bigger so that she can qualify for government subsidy, or the double liver transplant of the two boys who became friends. I also like seeing how the surgeries are performed on a smaller screen and can still see the actors' faces during the surgery. Having the name of the surgery displayed in English and Chinese is also great.
There’s quite a lot of hospital vs. med school vs. doctors politics in this drama. From start to finish, politics is behind everything. When the Hard Team is created, I thought I would see more exciting ‘hard’ cases but I am sorely disappointed. And who names a team “Hard Team”? What an unoriginal and crappy name for a team of elite doctors. The purpose of Hard Team seems to be all about power struggles, and not so much the hard cases.
I do enjoy the friendship of the trio. This trio of best friends has very different personalities and dynamics. But scenes with them are the most fun, no matter if they are against each other, or supporting each other. Romance is not the focus of this drama. There are subtle romances which could be sweet, or dissatisfying to the watcher. I think with the three romance storylines, I like the one between Max and Can the most, even though they are not the main leads.
I do enjoy the final episode when everything comes back in full circle. Most of the loose ends are tied, except for a couple very minor plots of side characters.
Overall, I would recommend this if you want a well-rounded light medical drama. But beware that the medical cases are all about children, so if you don’t want to see sick children suffering, please do not watch this drama. Rounding this to a 8.5 rating to give it a little boost so more people will watch this.
Completed: 12/3/2022
Having grown up watching Hong Kong TVB dramas, I haven’t watched any in 20 years. I finally decided to pick up “Kids Lives Matter” after reading some good reviews and comments. With dramas so accessible these days, I am glad I don’t have to rent or subscribe to my local Chinese TV station. I watched this on YouTube (USA region).
I would say “Kids’ Lives Matter” is part medical drama and part slice-of-life drama. For better or for worse, it is a well-rounded one. The drama not only touches on medical cases and patients, but also focuses on friendships, family relationships, slight romance and hospital politics. If you want a little of everything, this is a good drama for you. But if you want to watch exciting action and in-depth discussion of mysterious and complicated medical cases, then you might not be satisfied.
I found the whole drama to be very calm. Compared to other Asian and Western medical dramas I’ve watched, I don’t feel a sense of urgency in the cases (even the supposedly urgent ones). The hospitals look brightly lit and clean, everyone has big offices with sweeping views. This PUBLIC teaching hospital looks like a fancy hotel or office in a skyscraper. Even if the drama focuses on pediatric surgeons with cute wallpapers and stickers in the pediatric ward, everything is just too squeaky clean.
Though it’s lacking in intensity, I do find a lot of heart in this drama. The cases might not be heart-pumpingly exciting, but the patient stories and their relationships with the doctors are great. There are a couple cases that I especially like, e.g. a mother wishes her daughter’s tumor is bigger so that she can qualify for government subsidy, or the double liver transplant of the two boys who became friends. I also like seeing how the surgeries are performed on a smaller screen and can still see the actors' faces during the surgery. Having the name of the surgery displayed in English and Chinese is also great.
There’s quite a lot of hospital vs. med school vs. doctors politics in this drama. From start to finish, politics is behind everything. When the Hard Team is created, I thought I would see more exciting ‘hard’ cases but I am sorely disappointed. And who names a team “Hard Team”? What an unoriginal and crappy name for a team of elite doctors. The purpose of Hard Team seems to be all about power struggles, and not so much the hard cases.
I do enjoy the friendship of the trio. This trio of best friends has very different personalities and dynamics. But scenes with them are the most fun, no matter if they are against each other, or supporting each other. Romance is not the focus of this drama. There are subtle romances which could be sweet, or dissatisfying to the watcher. I think with the three romance storylines, I like the one between Max and Can the most, even though they are not the main leads.
I do enjoy the final episode when everything comes back in full circle. Most of the loose ends are tied, except for a couple very minor plots of side characters.
Overall, I would recommend this if you want a well-rounded light medical drama. But beware that the medical cases are all about children, so if you don’t want to see sick children suffering, please do not watch this drama. Rounding this to a 8.5 rating to give it a little boost so more people will watch this.
Completed: 12/3/2022
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