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The Life of Wu Xun

Wu Xun zhuan

China

1950

204 Min
Black and White
Mandarin
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Sun Yu

SCR Sun Yu

CAST Zhao Dan, Huang Zongying, Zhou Boxun

Synopsis

The Life of Wu Xun is based on the historical figure, Wu Xun (1838-1896), who promoted free education for peasant children. According to the film, Wu Xun, after enduring numerous personal tragedies from the death of his father to his girlfriend’s suicide, concludes that the only way poor people can empower themselves is through education. He attempts to raise funds for free schools by saving, begging, and appealing to wealthy landlords. Meanwhile, Zhou Da, a friend of Wu’s, has since become a rebel peasant leader. Zhou Da finds Wu’s faith in education to be naive and instead advocates open rebellion. The Emperor learns of Wu’s free schools and rewards him with official titles, uniforms, and other awards. But Wu refuses to accept these official honors by pretending to be insane and thus unable to go through with the ceremony. While Wu continues his work in establishing free education for the poor, the peasant rebels led by Zhou sweep across the prairies.

The Life of Wu Xun was widely criticized in the early 1950s. In a People’s Daily editorial, Mao Zedong wrote: “The question raised by The Life of Wu Hsun is fundamental in nature. A fellow like Wu Hsun, living as he did towards the end of the Ching Dynasty in an era of great struggle by the Chinese people against foreign aggressors and domestic reactionary feudal rulers, did not lift a finger against the feudal economic base or its superstructure; on the contrary, he strove fanatically to spread feudal culture and, in order to gain a position for this purpose previously beyond his reach, he fawned in every way on the reactionary feudal rulers — ought we to praise such disgusting behaviour? How can we tolerate praising it to the masses, especially when such praise flaunts the revolutionary banner of ‘serving the people’ and when the failure of revolutionary peasant struggles is used as a foil to accentuate the praise?” —Morning Sun

Director

Original

Sun Yu

Sun Yu was born on March 21, 1900 in Chongqing (Chungking), Sichuan province, to an intellectual family which valued education highly. Sun’s father, who had been a successful scholar at the provincial level during the Qing (Manchu) dynasty, was a historical researcher who traveled around China, and as a boy Sun Yu often went along, which added considerably to the future filmmaker’s experience and knowledge. The family later moved to Shanghai, where Sun Yu saw his first movie in a theater.

After graduating from middle school, Sun Yu passed the entrance exams for admission to Qinghua University, where movies and poetry became his twin passions. In his third year, he entered a film reviewing competition and won the grand prize. Among the judges in the competition were future Chinese film directors Zhu Shilin and Fei Mu, while the chair of the panel was Luo Mingyou, who as the head of the Lianhua (United Photoplay Service) Film Company would one day rewrite the history of Chinese… read more

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