China Daily Global Edition (USA)

MEMORIES OF VALOR

The emotions of Red Army soldiers during a pivotal battle of the Long March form the basis of a new film, Xu Fan reports.

- Contact the writer at xufan@chinadaily.com.cn

During the Long March, a pivotal battle was fought by the Red Army when 22 soldiers risked their lives to cross a 103-meter suspension bridge under fire from the Kuomintang forces.

Reckoned as a military miracle, the conflict on Luding Bridge over the raging Dadu River in Southwest China’s Sichuan province on May 29, 1935, has been recorded in the collective memory of Chinese people.

Generation­s have read about this heroic episode in their school textbooks.

Now, a 102-minute feature is bringing this alive on the big screen.

TheWarrior­s, with a cast led by Li Dongxue, Yu Xiaowei and Nie Yuan, opened in Chinese theaters on Friday.

The film is part of a nationwide homage to the Communist soldiers on the 80th anniversar­y of the end of the LongMarch this year.

Lasting from 1934 to 1936, the Long March was a military retreat undertaken by the Red Army to avoid being captured by the Kuomintang’s forces.

Less than 30 percent — or around 57,000 soldiers — survived the march to arrive in their destinatio­n in Northwest China’s Gansu province, reportedXi­nhuaNewsAg­ency.

For director Ning Haiqiang, a veteran known for revolution­ary films, the significan­ce of the battle attracted him to again step into the familiar zone.

“The Red Army would not survive if the soldiers hadn’t succeeded in crossing the river, as Chairman Mao told American journalist Edgar Snow in Yan’an,” Ning said at a Beijing event on Oct 12.

The two facts highlighte­d in the movie are: The Red Army troops wore sandals made of straw and covered some 120 kilometers on foot in two days to reach the bridge; and the 22 soldiers leading the charge climbed on the bridge from which many planks had been removed by the enemy and was held together only by 13 chains that were wildly swinging.

“It’s a film that willmake the audience hold its breath,” says Ning.

“To win time from the enemy, the Red Army troops challenged the limits of human beings.”

Speaking of the Red Army’s sacrifice and heroism that form the basis for today’s China, Ning says he hopes the film will make more youngsters know the country’s history and pass on the spirit of the LongMarch.

Chinese movies spawned from LongMarch stories have been frequently produced over the past few decades, he says. So to avoid stereotype­s, Ning sought to make the narration, performanc­e and production different.

Ning Haiqiang,

Warriors The

“Chinese are familiar with those household stories about the Long March. So we must give them a new experience while watching the movie,” explains the director, who has TheWarrior­s. a career spanning nearly three decades.

“Most revolution­ary films focus on a big picture and political leaders. But TheWarrior­s builds the story around characters and their emotions.

“They are not heroes, but human with struggles.”

To be faithful to history, the crew toured the mountainou­s areas the Red Army troops once traversed in southweste­rn China, where the altitude is up to 4,300 meters.

Mostly financed by August First Film Studio and China Film Group, the newfilm uses up to 1,000 special-effect takes for the big action scenarios.

Jiang Ping, general manager of China Film Group, likens The Warriors to the foreign war-themed classics such as Saving Private Ryan, Platoon and The Wild Geese. perfect beings

“We may never forget the warriors in those cinematic masterpiec­es, but I dare to say the heroes in TheWarrior­s are not inferior to any of them,” says Jiang.

The A-list cast is attraction of the film.

Li, starring as a regiment commander, is familiar to fans for his suave, loyal-in-love prince in the popular TV series The Legend of Zhen Huan.

Other lead stars such as Nie and Yu are familiar faces in Chinese cinema.

But Ning insists the story is the core of the movie.

“I hope the Chinese audience will accept a movie featuring our own history, which is narrated in a Chinese way,” says the director.

With English subtitles already made, Ning reveals The Warriors may have an overseas distributi­on later. another

They are not perfect heroes, but human beings with struggles.” director of

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The battle on Luding Bridge in 1935 played a significan­t role in the Red Army’s Long March, and now it is portrayed in a new film
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The battle on Luding Bridge in 1935 played a significan­t role in the Red Army’s Long March, and now it is portrayed in a new film
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 ??  ?? TheWarrior­s is part of a nationwide homage to the 80th anniversar­y of the end of the Long March.
TheWarrior­s is part of a nationwide homage to the 80th anniversar­y of the end of the Long March.

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