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2014 multi-national TV series or program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
One Child is a 2014 BBC and Sundance TV drama miniseries. Following its initial two-night premiere on Sundance TV, it aired as part of the BBC's China season in 2016, where it was shown over three sixty-minute episodes. The series follows a girl called Mei Ashley (Katie Leung) who discovers that she has a brother, Li Jun (Sebastian So), that she never knew about and that he is due to be sentenced to death for a murder he did not commit.[1]
One Child | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama |
Written by | Guy Hibbert |
Directed by | John Alexander |
Starring | Katie Leung Elizabeth Perkins Donald Sumpter |
Country of origin | United Kingdom Hong Kong |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | Hilary Salmon |
Cinematography | Matt Gray BSC |
Production company | Sundance TV |
Original release | |
Network | Sundance TV |
Release | 5 December – 6 December 2014 |
One Child aired in sixty-minute episodes for its UK release,[1] but originally aired in ninety-minute episodes as a two-night special event.[2][3] For its digital release on streaming platforms, it has retained the three-episode format presented here.
# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Episode One" | John Alexander | Guy Hibbert | 17 February 2016 (UK) | |
Mei was adopted from China as a baby by parents living in the United Kingdom. She gets a message from a Chinese journalist called Pan Qianyi telling her that she has a brother who is due to be executed for a crime he did not commit. | |||||
2 | "Episode Two" | John Alexander | Guy Hibbert | 24 February 2016 (UK) | |
Mei hires a private detective, Lin Zhouqing, to make the witnesses change their police statements to the truth. | |||||
3 | "Episode Three" | John Alexander | Guy Hibbert | 2 March 2016 (UK) | |
The final hearing for Li Jun is held and Mei is offered a choice. |
One Child is set in Guangzhou but was filmed in Hong Kong and Britain, as under Chinese law before anything is filmed all scripts have to be approved by the Chinese government but this law does not apply in Hong Kong as it is an administrative region.[4][5]
"In order to film in China the whole project needs to approved and we didn’t attempt that. We didn’t imagine that the scripts would be approved,"
— Interview with Hilary Salmon (executive producer), Radio Times.[4]
"while the drama depicts a clear case of police corruption, the Chinese Government are making strides in tackling similar problems and that they have “nothing to fear” from the drama."
— Interview with Guy Hibbert (writer), Radio Times.[4]
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