Wealthy Mrs. Li moves her family from Luoyang to Bianjing to find husbands for her five daughters. Despite initial struggles, the family works together to establish a business and search for... Read allWealthy Mrs. Li moves her family from Luoyang to Bianjing to find husbands for her five daughters. Despite initial struggles, the family works together to establish a business and search for suitable matches.Wealthy Mrs. Li moves her family from Luoyang to Bianjing to find husbands for her five daughters. Despite initial struggles, the family works together to establish a business and search for suitable matches.
Browse episodes
Joseph Zeng
• 2025
Yunrui Li
• 2025
Lyric Lan
• 2025
Qing Zhao
• 2025
Jin Mi
• 2025
Mingde Li
• 2025
Yongqi Liang
• 2025
Featured reviews
In my opinion this TV show has an interesting setting with a family full of woman and their mother trying to find husbands for her daughters.
Especially the woman in the family and their "helpers" are very good actors. The mother is just great and being so enotional she is really great at expressing her emotions.
There are a few characters which might be a bit overacting, espacially in moments which are supposed to be funny. This maybe might be a bit too much, but I think it is a common thing in chinese series.
There are a lot of sympathic characters also among the "potencial" husbands.
In my opinion it is a very good mixture of comedy and a bit of drama too. Without becoming to esagerately dramatic like many other Chinese series, luckily. Therefore it is always entertaining and I'm waiting each day for the episode being published the next day to continue watching it!
Of course there are a few typical moments too, for which you would say them to be unrealistic and in which people in reality would just clearly talk with each other and clarify them. Where you sit there and just say; come on! Just tell her! Or tell him what you think! But to create artificially more drama they don't. But those are just small things in the overall great and entertaining series!
-> If you aren't a person who wants to have a fully logical series and who says that is not realistic for each single thing, but if you just want to have fun and to be entertained, this will be the right series for you.
From me a full recommendation!
Especially the woman in the family and their "helpers" are very good actors. The mother is just great and being so enotional she is really great at expressing her emotions.
There are a few characters which might be a bit overacting, espacially in moments which are supposed to be funny. This maybe might be a bit too much, but I think it is a common thing in chinese series.
There are a lot of sympathic characters also among the "potencial" husbands.
In my opinion it is a very good mixture of comedy and a bit of drama too. Without becoming to esagerately dramatic like many other Chinese series, luckily. Therefore it is always entertaining and I'm waiting each day for the episode being published the next day to continue watching it!
Of course there are a few typical moments too, for which you would say them to be unrealistic and in which people in reality would just clearly talk with each other and clarify them. Where you sit there and just say; come on! Just tell her! Or tell him what you think! But to create artificially more drama they don't. But those are just small things in the overall great and entertaining series!
-> If you aren't a person who wants to have a fully logical series and who says that is not realistic for each single thing, but if you just want to have fun and to be entertained, this will be the right series for you.
From me a full recommendation!
I'm really surprised at the low-ratings this Chinese drama has received. It deserves better. Yes, it's uneven in places, it drags at the end--and the acting chops of the numerous characters range from overly-dramatic to reasonably competent to blanked out, poker-faced bots. BUT...by and large the female leads are magnetic, energetic, and convincing as the five clever and spirited Li sisters-all of them in the market for a marital match made in heaven.
What the ladies get instead is a plethora of trouble, involving in-laws and outlaws and just plain craziness, as each daughter, in turn, finds what appears to be the "perfect match," but in fact--is not.
Mother Li (played by an outstanding actor) has her work cut out for her. For each of the five, she has to find an appropriate husband, with a modicum of wealth and a propitious astrology chart-someone belonging to a socially respectable, congenial family. And, of course, she has to provide each of her five girls with a sufficient dowry.
Is Mother Li looking for someone her daughters will like and get along with? Strike that last requirement. Personal compatibility was pretty low on the priority list in that day and age.
Not to worry, though, these incredible women are all resourceful, capable, and able to finesse the various situations--marital, familial, and legal--as well as the chauvinistic society they find themselves in. Not all of their shenanigans work as planned and the plot isn't always believable. In fact, the fifth daughter's marriage situation was so ridiculous that I fast forwarded through most of it. Shades of "I Love Lucy" reruns in some of the antics. Her attempts to whip her would-be spouse into shape (and I do mean "whip") went on waaay too long. Personally, I don't find marital abuse funny, no matter how richly deserved or who's doing it.
It would have been nice if the servants were depicted as real human beings instead of props for the nobles to use as they saw fit.
But the costumes and hairdos are to die for. And the absolutely delightful "lion contest" in episode 32 made up for a lot of the cheesier moments.
Who knew that 1000 years ago the Chinese city of Bianjing was such a nest of vipers?
What the ladies get instead is a plethora of trouble, involving in-laws and outlaws and just plain craziness, as each daughter, in turn, finds what appears to be the "perfect match," but in fact--is not.
Mother Li (played by an outstanding actor) has her work cut out for her. For each of the five, she has to find an appropriate husband, with a modicum of wealth and a propitious astrology chart-someone belonging to a socially respectable, congenial family. And, of course, she has to provide each of her five girls with a sufficient dowry.
Is Mother Li looking for someone her daughters will like and get along with? Strike that last requirement. Personal compatibility was pretty low on the priority list in that day and age.
Not to worry, though, these incredible women are all resourceful, capable, and able to finesse the various situations--marital, familial, and legal--as well as the chauvinistic society they find themselves in. Not all of their shenanigans work as planned and the plot isn't always believable. In fact, the fifth daughter's marriage situation was so ridiculous that I fast forwarded through most of it. Shades of "I Love Lucy" reruns in some of the antics. Her attempts to whip her would-be spouse into shape (and I do mean "whip") went on waaay too long. Personally, I don't find marital abuse funny, no matter how richly deserved or who's doing it.
It would have been nice if the servants were depicted as real human beings instead of props for the nobles to use as they saw fit.
But the costumes and hairdos are to die for. And the absolutely delightful "lion contest" in episode 32 made up for a lot of the cheesier moments.
Who knew that 1000 years ago the Chinese city of Bianjing was such a nest of vipers?
10graciego
While loving my deep dive into k-dramas, I had not yet found a Chinese series to my taste until stumbling across this one. It was so good that when I finished the last of the 36 (yes, 36 full-length!) episodes, I went back to the beginning and started all over again.
The writing and the acting were both top-notch If I had a quibble, it would be that the spoiled character of the youngest daughter began to become grating towards the end.
Because there are 5 daughters, a foster daughter plus their eventual husbands, not even counting the mother and various side characters, there are a LOT of people to keep straight. I appreciate how well the personalities were revealed and developed, making the series a rich and satisfying experience.
Would love to see more dramas like this.
The writing and the acting were both top-notch If I had a quibble, it would be that the spoiled character of the youngest daughter began to become grating towards the end.
Because there are 5 daughters, a foster daughter plus their eventual husbands, not even counting the mother and various side characters, there are a LOT of people to keep straight. I appreciate how well the personalities were revealed and developed, making the series a rich and satisfying experience.
Would love to see more dramas like this.
So I chance upon Perfect Match on Netflix and instantly fell in love with characters from the first episode. It kind of reminds me of Pride and Prejudice.
The characters are stunning and talented. I love how it goes from outwitting each other to court to royalty and so on. I love the aesthetics of the set and the costumes- the headdresses and usage of pastel shades. All five couples are stunning but the third sister and master Chai were just perfect. From this series, I learned about ancient Chinese rules and i love how the writers incorporate gender issues with a contemporary take without being too loud about it.
The characters are stunning and talented. I love how it goes from outwitting each other to court to royalty and so on. I love the aesthetics of the set and the costumes- the headdresses and usage of pastel shades. All five couples are stunning but the third sister and master Chai were just perfect. From this series, I learned about ancient Chinese rules and i love how the writers incorporate gender issues with a contemporary take without being too loud about it.
Set during the early period of Imperial China, about a mother and her five daughters who move to a respectable noble town and open a fancy tea shop, going up against Master Chai and his elegant restaurant. In between all the squabbles, the Mother Li attempts to find suitable suitors for her daughters, but competition is tough with expensive dowries out of their reach. It is a decent Chinese soap drama with lavish production values, amazing traditional hairdos, and gorgeous slow motion shots of loving stares and admiration between the sexes. A bit amateurish in the set-up, but be patient as it kicks in midway of episode 2, and vastly improves by end of three as the Master and third daughter have something brewing. The five sisters have the Jane Austen's about them (as does the story - Pride and Prejudice), and are enjoyable feisty ladies with modern sensibilities in this enjoyable and campy Chinese TV soap drama...
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- El pretendiente perfecto
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 45m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content