The Road Home poster
#24885 This Week

The Road Home

The Road Home  ·  2015, Taiwan
6.7
1,588 ratings
1
Episodes
0
Watchlisted
● Completed 🕑 2015

Sixteen-year-old Xiao Feng refuses to go to school, lock herself in her room all day, and don't talk to her father, Ming. One day, she suddenly disappears. Ah Min looks anxiously for her until he received a phone call…

Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Episodes
Reviews (5)

When 16-year-old Xiao Feng suddenly locks herself in her room and refuses to speak to her single father, Ming, he is baffled and worried. The silence shatters when she vanishes without a trace. In a frantic search across Taipei, Ming retraces his steps as a parent, confronting the emotional distance that has grown between them. But the deeper he digs, the more he uncovers about Xiao Feng's hidden pain—and the secret she has been carrying about his own life. As Ming pieces together clues and reconnects with old friends, he is forced to face his own identity and the love he has kept hidden from his daughter. This tender Taiwanese drama explores the meaning of family beyond blood ties, weaving themes of self-acceptance, regret, and atonement into a deeply moving 90-minute journey. With nuanced performances from Kaiser Chuang and Waser Chou, *The Road Home* is a quiet but powerful reflection on how honesty and compassion can heal even the deepest wounds.

Waser Chou photo
Waser Chou
Cast
Ada Pan photo
Ada Pan
Cast
PT
PTS
Cast
RO
Romance
Cast

Episode data is coming soon.

6.7
out of 10
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CB
cherry_blossom_love
February 2025
7/10
I went in expecting more focus on the romance, but the father-daughter bond really surprised me. The chemistry between Kaiser Chuang and Waser Chou is subtle but real—I just wish we had seen a little more of their love story to balance the sadness. Still, it made me cry twice, so it did its job.
LL
logical_lens
October 2024
6/10
The emotional core is there, but the plot relies too heavily on the daughter's unexplained behavior. I needed more context—was she bullied at school? Seeing her friend group? The m/m relationship is almost entirely told through flashbacks and dialogue, which left me feeling like I missed half the story. A decent film, but not as tight as it could be.
RA
rainbow_analyst
December 2024
8/10
This is a rare gem that portrays an LGBTQ+ parent navigating both his identity and his role as a father. The film handles the daughter's feelings with nuance—her anger isn't vilified, and the father's journey of self-acceptance is shown with dignity. I appreciate that it doesn't resort to sensationalism. A thoughtful, important watch.
FB
frame_by_frame_fan
March 2025
8/10
Visually, *The Road Home* is beautifully understated. The use of warm indoor lighting contrasts with cold outdoor scenes to mirror the father-daughter divide. The close-ups during the search sequences are intimate and gripping. It may not have flashy cinematography, but every frame serves the emotion. A director's eye for storytelling through imagery.
MM
music_mood_master
August 2024
7/10
The piano-led score is simple but incredibly effective—it pulls at your heartstrings exactly when needed. There's a recurring melody that plays during the most tender moments between Ming and Xiao Feng, and it stuck with me for days. The soundtrack isn't overused, which makes each cue hit harder. Would love a full release of the OST.