Gun Metal Grey — Season 1, Episode 24: Episode 24
Drama • 45 min • 1 season, 30 episodes • ★ 6.0/10
Episode synopsis
LEUNG is safeguarding the offender at the hospital and SING visits him with food during his holidays. After chatting with LEUNG on the phone, DING finds something strange and he rushes to the hospital but the offender has died… DING is suffering from serious headache for his brain tumor is getting more and more serious. The doctor asks him to keep calm or his tumor may kill him. SING suddenly requests to transfer to another unit for he says that DING is acting against him all the time… SING invites KWAN for dinner and it suddenly rains after the meal. Coincidentally, JIT passes by in his car and SING deliberately takes good care of KWAN in front of JIT… The tycoon CHIN WING CHOI is committing adultery and a reporter has taken pictures of it. HIM and her reporter stay outside CHOI’s house to take pictures of him. On the next day, they are shocked to find that CHOI has died in the Jacuzzi.
About Gun Metal Grey
Gun Metal Grey is a 2010 Hong Kong police procedural television drama produced by Television Broadcasts Limited. It originally aired on Jade from 1 November to 10 December 2010, consisting of 30 episodes. Gun Metal Grey is a dramatisation and fictional telling of Hong Kong's top ten criminal cases, which tells about the complexities of human nature and the strangeness of truth. Gun Metal Grey is written by Lau Choi-wan and Leung Yan-tung, with Terry Tong serving as the executive producer. The drama is one of two grand TVB productions to celebrate the channel's 43rd anniversary, the other being No Regrets, both were the first to be broadcast live in English subtitles. The Chinese title of Gun Metal Grey literally means "criminal police", which can also be used to a describe a cop who commits a crime. During early promotions for the drama, the year "2010" was attached to the Chinese title to prevent confusion with previous dramas of a similar title. The English title is a wordplay on the colour of guns, a representation of criminal justice, and Felix Wong's character Stone Sir, a cop who finds himself trapped in a grey area of morality.