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Pssst... I'm watching Emerald Hill. Perhaps you should too
The Straits Times
|April 13, 2025
If we don't tell our own stories, who will do it for us? That's why it is important to support local artists and shows.
I was chatting with several colleagues recently and we started talking about Adolescence, the four-part Netflix series that has impressed everyone with its thought-provoking story about a teen killing, its one-take filming technique and its teenage star, Owen Cooper, a.k.a. "the Lionel Messi of acting".
Adolescence is world-class, no doubt about it. Then someone brought up the latest season of The White Lotus, the hit HBO series about privileged American tourists, and remarked on a lack of dead bodies in the early episodes.
"You should watch Emerald Hill. There are two deaths within the first three episodes," I told them.
I could almost hear a pin drop.
I know, I know. Many people no longer watch Singapore dramas and some would even proudly proclaim that it has been years since they last watched one.
A common refrain is that local shows cannot match world-class dramas from elsewhere.
For sure, Emerald Hill - The Little Nyonya Story, an ambitious Mediacorp drama centred on a Singapore Peranakan family in the 1950s to 1970s and airing on Channel 8 now, is hardly ground-breaking.
There is nothing that innovative about how the 30-part show was filmed: There is no dazzling aerial drone footage like in Adolescence, for instance; and Emerald Hill's storyline can be unintentionally comical, such as when the patriarch of the Zhang clan, played by Rayson Tan, chokes to death on a glutinous rice ball.
And yes, the drama has many, many flaws, as pointed out by my astute friends - all loving critics of local dramas - from villains with no backstory to protagonists stoical beyond belief, from too much exposition to the cheesy way in which the show tries to explain Peranakan or Straits Chinese culture.
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