

Mingta is a bit like Baby Spice, with attitudes of Ginger when dealing with Sila, whom she befriended during childhood when he was living under his birth name of Tor. That is until he surrenders his heart to her without letting her know about it, keeping the outward appearance of a David statue in a mental Gallery of Academic Arts in Bangkok rather than Florence. Mingta is Sila’s light and the person that scourges inside his heart, like a widespread contagious source of love he stubbornly treats like an epidemical annoyance, determined on stopping him checkmating the king at all costs. Performance wise, Thanapob Leeluttanakajorn aka Tor, is spot on in shifting conceptual meanings amongst a handful of distinctive facial expressions in a matter of seconds each one more reverberating than the prior one each one just as riveting. This is his dark side of love and one huge complexity it is. He is a broken man, a child named Tor inside the adult named Sila. Sila is not adept at public displays of compassion for fear of his loved ones being dragged into the web of vindictiveness he has weaved around him to reach his goals, with one exception, however: Min. He’s implacable, he’s ruthless and he holds a universe of resentment inside his heart, but to those he cares about, he enforces a vicious taciturnity as an act of kindness to protect them from himself, and from the vileness he disburses with his words and actions which does not always work in his favour, as he realizes when he has to save and/or protect Min. Sila is not moved by evil, he is moved by his perception of justice, his own private distorted view of the term, the lawful concept that rules all men, him excluded. This thirst for retribution stems from his low self-esteem, forcing him into hiding his needs to experience love in its essence, comfort, and inner peace while requiring a great deal of patience and inner battles with himself.

He’s very methodical and strategic, planning things step by step to reach his ultimate goal: destroy those who have hurt him. Sila is a very angry man, and a very patient one, who knows that the right timing is, well, when he chooses it to be. Hua Jai Sila shows that there is the light within darkness and warmth within an ice cold heart! Considered dead by his family, he comes back years later to seek revenge on those who hurt him.Ī male torturous Cinderella, aka a modern-day Heathcliff obsessed with dispensing hell around him, like a member of the Black Dagger brotherhood dispatching evil creatures minus the supernatural shebang in a spiral of violence against the bad guys.

A boy who was mistreated by his stepmother miraculously survives drowning. This story does not advertise face cream at all, promote beauty or quick fix-ups to solitary lives, despite having a very simple premise. Each with identical, unimaginative slogans conjured up by a team of marketers to sell the ignis fatuus (deception) of youth and beauty to insecure women, as if a facial cream was the El Dorado of low self-esteem, and could miraculously solve their unhappiness within themselves. Reinventing the wheel is all the rage today, hence the proliferation of remakes everywhere, like anti-ageing creams sold in supermarkets, pharmacies, beauty stores etc. Hua Jai Sila is a remake of the same-titled Lakorn that aired in 2007 on Channel 5 in Thailand. Harmony, patience, peace, joy, and contentment versus sadness, disillusionment, fear and repression of positive inner emotions. Love, however, is about light and darkness, a dichotomy of emotions that have described the word since its conception, like Sila: locus amoenus (happy place) and locus horrendus (the opposite). Love, which female magazines have serialized along with the notions of a perfect man, a perfect wedding, a perfect dress, and a perfect relationship, is the culmination of those Disney princess story expectations, to endorse happy fantasies in children ignoring self-love, and the adult model-like production of unrealistic ideals, which eventually end up in divorce. * Please be aware of major spoilers ahead! * Dynastykat & Sherri James on behalf of all fans who love lakorns, thank you for subbing Hua Jai Sila! Thank you! Thank you! Before reading this article, as fans who enjoy watching lakorns, let's take a moment to thank Dynastykat & Sherri James Muse who have subbed this project for the international lakorn fandom to enjoy.
