Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Silent Walls
View on Wikipedia| Silent Walls | |
|---|---|
Promotional poster | |
| 密宅 | |
| Genre | |
| Screenplay by | Kate Feng Yi-en |
| Story by | Nurel Anwar |
| Directed by | Rowena Loh, Wong Kuang Yong |
| Starring | 1938: Tasha Low Ayden Sng Mindee Ong Tay Ying Charlie Goh 1963: Foo Fang Rong Shane Pow Ferlyn Wong 1988: Macy Chen Alfred Sng Desmond Shen Desmond Ng 2023: Jojo Goh Andie Chen Bernard Tan Chen Shucheng |
| Country of origin | Singapore |
| Original language | Mandarin |
| No. of episodes | 20 |
| Production | |
| Executive producers |
|
| Production company | Ochre Pictures |
| Original release | |
| Network | Mediacorp Channel 8 |
| Release | 15 March – 11 April 2023 |
Silent Walls (Chinese: 密宅) is a 2023 Singaporean thriller television series telecast on Mediacorp Channel 8 and produced by Ochre Pictures. It stars Tasha Low, Ayden Sng, Mindee Ong, Tay Ying, Charlie Goh, Foo Fang Rong, Shane Pow, Ferlyn Wong, Macy Chen, Alfred Sng, Desmond Shen, Desmond Ng, Jojo Goh, Andie Chen, Bernard Tan and Chen Shucheng.[1][2][3] The series centres around a mansion and the lives of its occupants in 1938, 1963, 1988 and 2023.[4][5]
Cast
[edit]Controversy
[edit]The 1988 storyline features a gay relationship between Kai De (played by Alfred Sun) and his much older dance instructor boyfriend Nigel (played by Adam Chen). Nigel eventually dies from an unspecified sexually transmitted disease, which is heavily implied to be AIDs.
Silent Walls was criticised by the LGBT community in Singapore for perpetuating harmful gay stereotypes. Most notable, LGBT media platform Dear Straight People condemned the storyline for perpetuating the notion that gay men are predators and have sexually transmitted diseases.[6]
In response to the criticism, Mediacorp Channel 8 issued a statement insisting that 'they didn't set out to perpetuate any stereotypes'.[7]
Awards and nominations
[edit]| Year | Ceremony | Category | Nominees | Result | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Asian Academy Creative Awards | Best Promo or Trailer (national winner - Singapore) |
Silent Walls trailer | Won | [8] |
| Best Single Drama / Telemovie / Anthology Episode | Silent Walls – 2023 | Won | |||
| ContentAsia Awards | Best Asian Feature Film/Telemovie | Silent Walls – 2023 Telemovie | Nominated | [9] | |
| Silent Walls – 1938 Telemovie | Nominated |
Star Awards 2024
[edit]| Accolades | Category | Nominees | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Star Awards 2024 | Best Director | Rowena Loh | Nominated |
| Best Screenplay | Kate Feng and Rowena Loh | Nominated | |
| Best Actor | Andie Chen | Nominated |
References
[edit]- ^ Chia, Jolynn (20 March 2023). "Minor characters in local TV dramas lack flavour, says Mindee Ong". AsiaOne. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- ^ Chia, Jolynn (15 March 2023). "Desmond Shen 'doesn't really want to act anymore', shares why he returned anyway". AsiaOne. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- ^ 李妙楠 (3 February 2023). "一年只拍一部戏 黄晶玲:重质不重量". Lianhe Zaobao. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- ^ Lee, Jan (5 March 2023). "Ghosts of TV's past: Long-time-no-see S'pore actors return for eerie drama Silent Walls". The Straits Times. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- ^ 蔡欣盈 (21 March 2023). "窥探豪宅里的性爱、血腥 本地剧揭暗黑人性". Lianhe Zaobao. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- ^ "Singapore Drama 'Silent Walls' Pushes Harmful Stereotype: Gay Character Is A Groomer with AIDS: Mediacorp". Dear Straight People. 3 April 2023. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- ^ "Mediacorp explains LGBTQ+ character portrayal in drama 'Silent Walls', says they didn't set out to perpetuate any stereotypes: Mediacorp". Mothership. 5 April 2023. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
- ^ "Full List of National Winners 2023" (PDF). Asian Academy Creative Awards. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
- ^ "2023 Nominees – ContentAsia Awards". 22 July 2023. Archived from the original on 2023-07-22. Retrieved 22 July 2023.
Silent Walls
View on GrokipediaPremise
Narrative Structure
Silent Walls unfolds through a multi-era narrative framework, chronicling the misfortunes of successive families inhabiting a single, cursed mansion in Singapore across 1938, 1963, 1988, and 2023. In each period, a new family takes residence, only for tragedy to claim one member, perpetuating a cycle of death tied to the property's hidden malevolence.[6] The structure adopts a non-linear format, alternating episodes or segments between timelines to interweave parallel plotlines and reveal causal connections retrospectively. This technique builds suspense by juxtaposing contemporary discoveries with historical echoes, emphasizing how unresolved sins from earlier eras reverberate forward.[1] [7] The 2023 storyline anchors the narrative as the primary thread, triggered by the unearthing of skeletal remains in a nearby forest on an unspecified date in that year, prompting investigators to probe the mansion's archives and unearth documents that flashback to prior occupants. These revelations frame the anthology elements, culminating in a convergence where past events explain present perils.[5] Over 20 episodes, each airing 60 minutes from March 15 to April 21, 2023, on Mediacorp Channel 8, the series maintains episodic closure within eras while advancing an overarching mystery of familial curses and concealed crimes.[8]Central Themes
Silent Walls examines the enduring consequences of buried secrets within familial and domestic spheres, portraying the house as an entity that silently preserves histories of betrayal, loss, and unresolved conflict across four distinct eras in Singapore's history: 1938, 1963, 1988, and 2023. Each storyline depicts a family unit disrupted by hidden truths—ranging from personal deceptions to intergenerational grievances—that culminate in tragedy, underscoring a motif of inescapable legacy where past actions inexorably influence present fates.[1][9] A prominent theme is the corrosive effect of uncommunicated resentments and societal constraints on intimate relationships, often leading to isolation and self-destruction. In the mid-20th-century segments, for example, characters grapple with external prejudices and internal suppressions that fracture bonds, resulting in deaths by violence, illness, or suicide, as the "silent walls" symbolize barriers to empathy and disclosure.[6][9] This pattern recurs, highlighting how lack of confrontation with underlying tensions perpetuates cycles of misfortune rather than resolution. The series further delves into the interplay between individual agency and deterministic forces, whether supernatural or historical, within the confines of the home. The house itself emerges as a quasi-character, its unchanging structure contrasting Singapore's rapid societal transformations, to emphasize themes of stasis amid change: secrets entombed in its architecture mirror broader cultural reticence about painful histories. Tragedies in each era—triggered by discoveries of bodies or revelations of prior events—reinforce the idea that truth, once unearthed, disrupts but does not necessarily redeem.[1][8]Plot
1938 Era
In 1938, the storyline follows Gu Zhen Zhu, a young woman from Shunde province in China, who emigrates to Singapore after taking a vow of celibacy to support her family financially.[10] Despite opposition from her relatives, she accepts a position as a majie (live-in housekeeper) in the opulent household of the Burmese-Chinese Wu family, a wealthy clan residing in the enigmatic mansion central to the series.[11] There, Gu works under the stern senior majie Qin Fang Yan and interacts with the family's private tutor, Liang Wen Hui, who educates the Wu sons, Tian Li and Tian Hua.[12] As Gu adapts to her duties amid the household's rigid hierarchies and cultural expectations of the era—reflecting Singapore's colonial multicultural society—she grapples with unforeseen romantic attractions that test her personal vows.[11] The narrative unfolds against the backdrop of the mansion's oppressive atmosphere, where Gu encounters inexplicable disturbances and begins to unearth concealed family secrets, including betrayals and suppressed histories linked to the property's past occupants.[13] These revelations escalate into supernatural phenomena, foreshadowing the recurring pattern of misfortune that afflicts inhabitants across the series' timelines, culminating in loss and unresolved hauntings.[7] The segment, spanning the first five episodes, emphasizes the isolation of migrant domestic workers in 1930s Singapore, drawing on historical contexts like the influx of Chinese laborers and the socioeconomic divides in colonial urban life, while integrating thriller elements of psychological tension and ghostly presences within the walls.[8]1963 Era
In 1963, the storyline centers on Chen Xiu Ya, a westernized Chinese woman and advocate for women's rights under Singapore's newly enacted Women's Charter of 1961, which promoted monogamy, equal partnership in marriage, and protections against domestic violence. She marries into a wealthy, superstitious Peranakan (Nyonya) family residing in the enigmatic mansion, bringing along her loyal servant An Lan. This union pits Xiu Ya's modern, progressive ideals against the family's entrenched traditions, rituals, and beliefs in curses and ancestral spirits, creating immediate cultural and ideological friction within the household.[4][11] As Xiu Ya attempts to assert her autonomy and challenge patriarchal norms, she uncovers layers of familial discord, including jealousy, hidden resentments, and the pervasive influence of the house's ominous history. The narrative delves into themes of a supposed family curse, where superstitious practices exacerbate interpersonal conflicts, leading to psychological strain and tragic outcomes. An Lan's role as confidante and observer heightens the intrigue, as events unfold amid the era's social transitions in post-colonial Singapore, where Western influences clashed with Peranakan conservatism.[11][14] The era's plot builds tension through domestic revelations and supernatural undertones tied to the mansion's walls, culminating in events that echo the series' overarching motif of concealed horrors across generations. Key figures in the Peranakan family embody resistance to change, with rituals and omens underscoring causal links between past secrets and present misfortunes, without reliance on unsubstantiated paranormal explanations beyond the characters' beliefs.[4]1988 Era
In 1988, the Jin family occupies the enigmatic house amid Singapore's evolving social landscape, inheriting not only their ancestral property but also layers of concealed familial tensions. Jin Kai Ting, the eldest daughter and a capable heir to the family-run Jin Tang Coffee House business, assumes control following her parents' demise, navigating corporate rivalries and internal betrayals that place a target on her back.[15][16] The storyline escalates when Kai Ting awakens in a hospital bed after an unexplained incident, suffering amnesia regarding the preceding events; her brother, Jin Kai De—a young dance student recently returned from abroad—visits to apprise her of the circumstances, including the mounting suspicions surrounding the family.[17] Kai De harbors a clandestine homosexual relationship with Nigel, his much older dance instructor, which introduces themes of forbidden desire and societal stigma in 1980s Singapore, where such liaisons carry severe personal and legal risks under prevailing anti-sodomy laws.[6][18] Tensions culminate in the murder of Wan Ling, a key figure connected to the family, with Kai De emerging as the primary suspect, prompting investigations that unearth jealousies, inheritances disputes, and possible supernatural influences tied to the house's history. Kai Ting relocates temporarily to associate Jia Hao's residence for safety, piecing together Kai De's whereabouts and the motives behind the killing, which expose betrayals rooted in romantic entanglements and business greed.[19] The era's arc concludes in tragedy, mirroring the house's pattern of claiming a victim per generation, as suppressed secrets—ranging from illicit affairs to vengeful spirits—unravel the Jin lineage.[7][11]2023 Era
In the 2023 storyline, set in contemporary Singapore, bestselling thriller novelist Feng Ke Xuan and her newlywed husband, tech entrepreneur Zheng Hao Jie, purchase the long-abandoned mansion and move in, seeking a fresh start.[20][21] On a rainy night, Ke Xuan reports a murder to the police after experiencing visions or disturbances, prompting authorities to uncover a female corpse buried in the backyard, which triggers an investigation into the property's hidden history.[22] As the couple settles in, supernatural occurrences and discoveries—such as concealed documents, ghostly apparitions, and structural anomalies—reveal connections to the mansion's past occupants across 1938, 1963, and 1988, framing the narrative as a mystery thriller where each era's tragedy echoes in the present.[23] Ke Xuan, leveraging her writing expertise, pieces together the interwoven family secrets, including betrayals, hidden crimes, and a pervasive curse tied to the house, while interpersonal tensions with Hao Jie and external investigators escalate.[20] The plot adheres to the series' pattern wherein one family member per era meets a fatal end due to the mansion's malevolent influence, culminating in revelations that expose causal links between historical events and the 2023 murder, emphasizing themes of inherited trauma and unresolved sins.[24] This contemporary arc serves as the framing device, intertwining with prior timelines through a mysterious narrator who unveils the dark undercurrents of wealth, deception, and mortality afflicting the affluent families.[25]Production
Development and Writing
Ochre Pictures, a Singaporean production company, developed Silent Walls as an original Mandarin-language thriller miniseries for Mediacorp Channel 8, with the script focusing on a haunted house motif linking family tragedies across generations.[26] The narrative writing employed a non-linear structure, interweaving stories from 1938, 1963, 1988, and 2023 to reveal escalating secrets triggered by a modern murder investigation and the discovery of buried remains.[1] [3] This approach built suspense through incremental disclosures of the house's history, where each era's plot arc culminates in a death, implying causal ties rooted in inheritance, betrayal, and concealed crimes rather than overt supernatural forces.[5] Script development involved a team effort, with contributions from writers who integrated period-specific details, such as post-war recovery in 1938 and economic shifts in later decades, to ground the thriller in empirical historical context.[27] The series totaled 20 episodes, airing weekdays from March 15 to April 14, 2023, allowing for detailed character backstories and plot convergence in the final era.[28]Filming and Technical Aspects
Principal photography for Silent Walls occurred primarily at the heritage Seah Im House, a colonial black-and-white bungalow on Seah Im Road in Singapore, which portrayed the enigmatic central house across the 1938, 1963, 1988, and 2023 eras.[29][30] This real location's aged architecture and isolated setting enhanced the thriller's suspenseful atmosphere without relying on constructed sets.[31] Cinematography was handled by Alan Ang, focusing on capturing the house's inherent eeriness to underscore the narrative's themes of hidden secrets and misfortune.[32] Filming at the site involved period-specific set dressings and lighting adjustments for each era, though specific technical equipment details remain undisclosed in production reports. The choice of practical location over digital recreation emphasized causal realism in depicting the house's enduring presence through decades.[33] During shoots, the production faced minor disruptions from environmental incidents, such as a window panel falling unprompted and a tree collapsing near the set, which cast members attributed to the site's reputed spiritual activity but which did not impede overall progress.[29][30] These events, while anecdotal, fueled on-set discussions mirroring the series' supernatural undertones.Cast
1938 Cast
The 1938 storyline of Silent Walls, set in pre-World War II Singapore, centers on the Wu family and their household staff, with a new majie (housekeeper) arriving from Shunde province to serve the affluent household, uncovering initial layers of the mansion's secrets.[1] This era, covered in episodes 1-5, features a cast portraying domestic tensions and supernatural hints amid colonial-era opulence.[16] Key performers include Tasha Low as Gu Zhen Zhu, the inexperienced yet resilient new majie whose arrival disrupts the household dynamics.[12] [34] Mindee Ong portrays Qin Fang Yan, the veteran majie who mentors the newcomer while harboring her own guarded past.[12] [16] Ayden Sng plays Liang Wen Hui, the family tutor responsible for educating the Wu children, adding an intellectual outsider's perspective to the intrigue.[16] [34] The Wu family siblings are depicted by Tay Ying as Wu Tian Li, the daughter navigating family expectations, and Charlie Goh as Wu Tian Hua, her brother entangled in the household's unfolding mysteries.[34] These roles emphasize interpersonal conflicts and the era's social hierarchies, with the actors drawing on historical details like majie migration patterns from southern China to Singapore's domestic service.[1]| Actor | Role | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Tasha Low | Gu Zhen Zhu | New majie from Shunde province [12] |
| Mindee Ong | Qin Fang Yan | Senior household majie [12] |
| Ayden Sng | Liang Wen Hui | Tutor to Wu children [16] |
| Tay Ying | Wu Tian Li | Wu family daughter [34] |
| Charlie Goh | Wu Tian Hua | Wu family son [34] |
1963 Cast
The 1963 storyline of Silent Walls depicts a westernized Chinese bride entering a superstitious Peranakan household, highlighting cultural clashes and family secrets. Foo Fang Rong stars as Chen Xiu Ya, the ailing first wife of the family patriarch, whose deteriorating health exacerbates household tensions.[1] Shane Pow portrays Lin Zhen Ping, the authoritative head of the family, adhering to traditional Peranakan beliefs amid suspicions of infidelity and supernatural influences.[1] Ferlyn Wong plays An Lan, the second wife—a modern, educated Chinese woman who arrives with her loyal servant, disrupting the established dynamics and drawing the family into conflict.[1][11]| Actor | Character | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Foo Fang Rong | Chen Xiu Ya | First wife, portrayed as frail and resentful toward the new bride.[1] |
| Shane Pow | Lin Zhen Ping | Patriarch enforcing superstitious rituals in the household.[1] |
| Ferlyn Wong | An Lan | Westernized second wife introducing external influences and sparking intrigue.[1][11] |
1988 Cast
The 1988 storyline of Silent Walls, set across episodes 11–15, depicts the Jin family's internal conflicts over a contested will following the death of their matriarch, centered on the descendants of a post-war coffee shop founder. Macy Chen leads as Jin Kai Ting, the ambitious daughter who assumes control of the family business amid suspicions of foul play. Alfred Sng portrays her sibling Jin Kai De, whose ambitions clash with familial duties. Veteran performer Desmond Shen, returning after a long hiatus from acting, embodies the authoritative patriarch Jin You Fu, whose decisions shape the inheritance dispute. Desmond Ng plays Shen Jia Hao, a relative entangled in the family's secrets.[36][37][38] Supporting roles include Tracer Wong as the Peranakan wife, adding cultural depth to the household dynamics reflective of 1980s Singaporean society. The ensemble's performances emphasize generational tensions and hidden motives, with Shen's portrayal noted for its commanding presence.[7][37]| Actor | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Macy Chen | Jin Kai Ting | Lead; inherits and manages family enterprise |
| Alfred Sng | Jin Kai De | Brother; involved in inheritance conflicts |
| Desmond Shen | Jin You Fu | Patriarch; oversees family legacy |
| Desmond Ng | Shen Jia Hao | Family associate; uncovers secrets |
| Tracer Wong | Peranakan wife | Supporting; represents cultural traditions |
2023 Cast
The 2023 era of Silent Walls, comprising the final five episodes aired from April 6 to April 11, 2023, on Mediacorp Channel 8, focuses on contemporary inhabitants uncovering the house's lingering mysteries across generations.[40] This segment features veteran actress Angela Ang in the role of Aunty Lu, marking her return to local television after an extended absence.[7][37] Key cast members for this storyline include:| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Angela Ang | Aunty Lu [7] |
| Cheryl Chou | Angela [32] |
| Desmond Ng | Shen Jia Hao [32] |
| Tracer Wong | Supporting role[7] |
| Desmond Shen | Supporting role[7] |
