
"Razor's Edge", which will land on Beijing Satellite TV's Red Star Theater on March 20, 2017, tells the story of a turbulent story that took place around the Harbin Pseudo-Manchuria Police Department in the 1930s. The drama is produced by Gao Jinxi and Lü Yue as the chief producers, and written by famous screenwriters Xu Weicai and Yu Fei.
The drama is made up of a series of case-solving stories, with a compact structure and interlocking links. Relying on the "ice city" of Harbin, it mainly tells the story of Xu Congliang, a small person who was not amazing in the Harbin Pseudo-Manchuria Police Department in the 1930s, who, in the sinister internal struggle of the Police Department, won the appreciation of Jin Sanpu, director of the Police Department, out of his admiration for Guan Haidan, chief of the Criminal Section of the Police Department, and admiration for the Communists, who helped Guan Haidan turn the crisis into safety in the operation of suppressing razors one after another.
On March 8, Beijing Television held a screening of "Razor's Edge". Producer Gao Jinxi, screenwriters Xu Weicai and Yu Fei shared the creative process behind this play. Screenwriters Xu Weicai and Yu Fei frankly said that they are "logical control" of each other, Yu Fei has served as the screenwriter of "Six Groups of Serious Cases", and Xu Weicai is also from the creation of suspense novels, so brain-burning spy suspense dramas like "Razor's Edge" are their specialties for both screenwriters.
When it comes to plot design, the two screenwriters said that the show is basically based on five episodes as a unit, each small story is interlocked, not only the story rhythm is fast, but also prefers to create a tense atmosphere, putting the protagonist to death, "When the audience watches it, they will think that he must be dead." "Yu Fei said to first set up an impossible task, and then find a special way to complete this task, so as to connect the various characters to each other." This design of the bottom is difficult, but we are doing this specifically to try to reach such a height. ”