Journey To The West 1999 〈TRUSTED〉
Twenty-five years later, we realize the show wasn't just about fighting demons. It was about the journey of growing up. And for those 52 episodes, every Sunday at 6:00 PM, we were all walking the road to the Western Paradise.
Poof.
But that’s precisely why we love it.
For many of us born after the 80s, the live-action 1986 show was our parents' Journey to the West . It was classic, dramatic, and deeply human. But the 1999 animated version? That was ours .
If you grew up in China during the late 90s or early 2000s, your Saturday mornings had a soundtrack. It wasn't birds chirping or traffic humming. It was the clang of a golden cudgel, the shriek of a demon, and the iconic, synth-heavy opening theme of a show that needs no introduction: journey to the west 1999
Let’s rewind the tape. Produced by CCTV (China Central Television) and animated by the now-legendary Shanghai Animation Film Studio, this 52-episode epic wasn't just another kids' show. It was a meticulously crafted bridge between ancient literature and modern childhood. Let’s be honest: by 2024 standards, the animation is clunky. The frame rates are low. The backgrounds are often static watercolors. The character movements loop.
But it is the kindest . It looks at the vast, terrifying, 2,000-page odyssey of the Tang Monk and says, "Let's make this fun for a seven-year-old." Twenty-five years later, we realize the show wasn't
We didn't just watch it; we acted it out in the schoolyard. We fought over who got to be Wukong (and begrudgingly let the slow kid be Sha Wujing). We used sticks as the Ruyi Jingu Bang. We drew the "Fiery Eyes" on our foreheads with red markers. The 1999 Journey to the West is not the most faithful adaptation. It is not the most beautiful. It is not the most mature.