Juedai Shuangjiao


Juedai Shuangjiao is a wuxia novel by Gu Long. In the story, two brothers are separated at birth because of a feud between two powerful martial artists, and raised by opposing sides. It has been consistently popular since its publication in 1966, and as of 2020 has been the subject of eight TV series and four films.

Plot

Eighteen years ago, a handsome young martial artist called Jiang Feng was injured by chance and saved by two sisters: Yaoyue and Lianxing, masters of Yihua Palace and the deadliest warriors in jianghu. Yaoyue falls in love with Jiang Feng, but her arrogance disgusts him and, despite her beauty and power, he rejects her and instead falls in love with her servant girl Hua Yuenu.
Jiang Feng and Hua Yuenu are forced to flee from Yihua Palace after Yuenu becomes pregnant with Jiang's child, but are betrayed by Feng's servant Jiang Qin. Jiang Qin alerts a group of bandits to the couple's route, and the bandits attack just as Yuenu is giving birth to a pair of twin boys. The couple are slain by the bandits, but their children are not hurt; Yaoyue and Lianxing soon catch up and find the couple dead and the newborn babies crying by the roadside. Yaoyue refuses to forgive Jiang Feng for rejecting her love and vows to take her revenge by making his two sons destroy each other.
The sisters adopt one of the boys as their own and abandon the other, who is rescued by Yan Nantian, Jiang Feng's sworn brother and generally regarded as the most powerful martial artist of the time. Unaware of the first boy's fate, Yan Nantian takes the second with him as he pursues Jiang Qin into the Villainous Valley, a remote settlement populated entirely by criminals. There he encounters five of the notorious Ten Great Villains, ten martial artists who have been outlawed for atrocities including murder and cannibalism, and defeats them easily in open battle. Before he can find Jiang Qin, however, he is tricked into lowering his guard, poisoned and captured. The villains torture him until he loses consciousness, but refrain from harming the second boy and instead decide to raise the child as their apprentice and groom him to become the greatest villain in history. Yan Nantian, meanwhile, is kept alive by the ministrations of Wan Chunliu, a skillful and kind-hearted physician who has concealed himself in the valley, under the pretendence of using the unconscious Yan Nantian as a test subject for medical experiments.
Years pass, and the twins grow up into a pair of handsome youths. Yaoyue and Lianxing name the boy they raised "Hua Wuque", and teach him manners, refinement and the elegantly lethal martial arts style of Yihua Palace, raising him to be the perfect embodiment of a Confucian gentleman. The other boy, Xiaoyu'er, is trained by the Ten Great Villains in a wide range of martial arts and, perhaps more usefully, in a number of practical if not "villainous" skills such as theft, deception, the use of poison and the art of disguise, growing up to be a moderately powerful martial artist and an exceptionally streetwise young man. Xiaoyu'er heads out into the world alone, and relying on his combination of wits and some martial arts training, gets himself into and out of a series of adventures, in the course of which he becomes embroiled in complicated romantic relationships with a number of female martial artists such as Tie Xinlan, Murong Jiu, Su Ying and Zhang Jing.
While Xiaoyu'er is busy raising mischief, Yaoyue sends Hua Wuque to kill Xiaoyu'er, under the pretence that Xiaoyu'er is a dangerous threat. Against the backdrop of various escapades, they come to blows several times. Each encounter follows the same pattern: though Hua Wuque's martial arts powers are far greater than Xiaoyu'er's, the latter always manages to survive by using his wits to escape.
The twins are initially hostile towards one another and have wildly different personalities; Hua Wuque is righteous and intelligent but naive, while Xiaoyu'er is expedient, streetwise and cunning. However, the two of them develop a mutual friendship and respect after braving danger together. At the same time, they become entangled in a love triangle with the young martial artist Tie Xinlan.
Yaoyue is determined to make the twins fight to the death, and ultimately forces Hua Wuque to challenge Xiaoyu'er to mortal combat. Xiaoyu'er is seemingly killed by Wuque during the duel, after which Yaoyue exposes her true intentions to Wuque and tells him about her plan to make their father pay the ultimate price for scorning her. Wuque is horrified when he hears this, and shocked to learn that Xiaoyu'er is actually his twin brother. However, Xiaoyu'er reveals that he had one last trick to play - he had feigned his death earlier by consuming a special drug. The twins finally recognise and acknowledge each other as brothers, defeating the plan of the Palace of Passing Flowers and ending the story happily.

Characters

Protagonists

Films

Television

Comics

In 1997, Hong Kong cartoonist Ho Chi-man drew a manhua series for the novel.
Wong Yuk-long's comic, Force of Buddha's Palm has a long story arc which reproduces much of Gu Long's novels. This story arc was included in an English translation published in the United States by Jademan Comics from 1989 to 1993.
Artist Ho Che Wen makes 3 series of comics based on this story. The first series follow the novels' plot but the second and the third series have mostly same characters but tell new continuity after the novels end. Some fans don't like the new series because they gave many characters, who already get their happy ends in original, grisly deaths or other bad fates. Topped when third series, characters switch their moral allegiances at monthly interval and ends abruptly.

Video games