"TIL LOVE DO US LIE" LIFTS THE LID ON A CHAOTIC, UNCONVENTIONAL FAMILY MELTING POT! Hong Kong career dynamo KAN YIK-PO (played by Sheung Tin Ngor) faces a domestic earthquake when her household’s backbone — the longtime domestic helper — quits without warning. Overnight, this sharp-suited professional is thrust into the messy trenches of full-time homemaking. Stacks of dirty dishes, endless laundry, and a fridge that refuses to stock itself become her unwanted new reality. It’s a role that chafes against her ambition, leaving her simmering with quiet frustration as she watches her corporate identity gather dust. Meanwhile, her husband SUEN KA-ON (Cheung Siu Fai) buckles under the weight of being the family’s sole breadwinner. His job dangles by a thread amid company restructuring, pushing him toward a slow-burn midlife crisis. The pressure cooker of work deadlines and financial responsibility strains his marriage, turning home — once a sanctuary — into a battleground of unsaid grievances and mounting insecurities. Enter KAN YIK-TAN (Joyce Tang), Po’s whirlwind of a younger sister. Fresh off another messy breakup, she refuses to wallow. Instead, she dives headfirst into a romantic rebound with NG LOK-YAN (Hanjin Tan), a free-spirited Malaysian-Chinese musician she barely knows. Within weeks, what starts as a spontaneous fling spirals into impulsive matrimony. Lok-Yan, unfamiliar with Hong Kong’s breakneck pace and unspoken social codes, trades Malaysia’s beaches for the cramped chaos of his new in-laws’ apartment. And that’s when the real madness begins. Under one roof, this makeshift family collides with volcanic clashes of culture, tradition, and stubborn pride. Yik-Tan’s devil-may-care attitude locks horns with Po’s rigid perfectionism. Lok-Yan’s laid-back charm dissolves into bewilderment over Hong Kongers’ obsession with efficiency, from the shrill ding of MTR gates to the aggressive scramble for a taxi. But it’s not all fiery disagreements. Picture Lok-Yan attempting Cantonese roast goose for the first time — and accidentally igniting the oven. Or Ka-On bonding with his baffling new brother-in-law over late-night beers, grumbling about their partners’ quirks. Through each awkward dinner and accidental insult, unexpected alliances form. Can love untangle the web of white lies, half-truths, and pride holding this dysfunctional clan together? Will Po ever reconcile the career woman she was with the wife and homemaker she must become? And will Lok-Yan survive his mother-in-law’s interrogation about when he’ll “get a real job”? TIL LOVE DO US LIE serves up a riotous feast of culture shocks, gritted-teeth compromises, and the messy, glorious truth about what it means to be family. No filters. No apologies. Just pure, relatable chaos.