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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Release  





4 Awards and nominations  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














The Chinese Widow






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The Chinese Widow
Theatrical release poster
Chinese烽火芳菲
Directed byBille August
Written byGreg Latter
Mabel Cheung
Produced byPeng Sun
StarringLiu Yifei
Emile Hirsch
CinematographyFilip Zumbrunn
Edited byGerd Tjur
Music byAnnette Focks

Production
companies

Zhejiang Roc Pictures

Release dates

  • 19 June 2017 (2017-06-19) (SIFF)
  • 10 November 2017 (2017-11-10)
  • Running time

    97 minutes
    CountryChina
    LanguageMandarin

    The Chinese Widow (Chinese: 烽火芳菲), also known as In Harm's Way and The Hidden Soldier, is a 2017 Chinese war drama film directed by Danish director Bille August, starring Liu Yifei and Emile Hirsch.[1][2] The film premiered at the 2017 Shanghai International Film Festival as the opening film and was released on 10 November 2017 in mainland China.[3][4]

    Plot[edit]

    Jack is a United States Army Air Forces pilot with a mission to carry out the first US bombing run on Tokyo. After the mission is successful, his plane gets detached from the rest of the squadron due to bad weather. With low fuel, he is forced to go to China's Zhejiang Province. Due to malfunctioning autopilot, he is forced to fly the plane manually while his crew parachutes out and he jumps out in the last moment before the plane crashes.

    The next day, his unconscious body is discovered by a local widow named Ying, who lives with her daughter Nunu weaving silk. She hides him in a nearby cave with the help of her childhood friend and village head Kai. Soon after, the Imperial Japanese Army (who already have captured and executed the rest of Jack's crew) come in search of Jack and capture the village, holding Kai at gunpoint to tell where the pilot is hiding. Kai refuses to do so and is executed. Nunu insists Ying to tell what she knows to her grandparents but Ying does not, remembering Kai's advice not to tell it to anyone. The next day, she goes to the cave with some food and seeing Jack conscious, leaves it there and returns promptly before he can confront her.

    The Japanese army sends search patrols in the jungle and Ying is forced to bring Jack into her house. Although distant at first, Jack quickly befriends Nunu by whistling Yankee Doodle to her. Jack is able to convey to Ying that he has to go to Chongqing where the US Army base is. She hides him in the basement, while she tries to find a way to contact the Chinese guerrillas to get him a safe passage. One day, while Nunu is in her school, the IJA Captain Shimamoto comes into Ying's house and attempts to rape her, only to be shot in the head by Jack. They hide the body in the basement and as Jack consoles Ying, they form an intimate bond.

    In school, Nunu accidentally whistles Yankee Doodle which is noticed by her teacher. The teacher then rushes to Ying's house with Nunu and on confronting Jack, reveals that he is with the Chinese guerrillas. When Jack shows him the Captain's body, he tells Ying and Nunu to escape along with Jack, as the IJA will execute them once they find out. While they make their escape, the IJA find the body and pursue the group after torching the village. The Japanese eventually catch up and fire on them, and the teacher stays behind with a few guerrillas to slow them down, and is killed. With the group only a few metres away from the escape boat, Ying is shot in the chest by a sniper. Devastated, Jack kills the sniper and barely escapes with Nunu and the remaining guerrillas.

    In Chongqing, he reports to General Jimmy Doolittle, also expressing his wish to adopt Nunu. The General rejects it by saying that Jack cannot be a soldier and her father at the same time. Instead, Nunu will be given to a Chinese family living in Los Angeles. Jack reluctantly accepts and bids Nunu a tearful goodbye. 50 years later, an elderly Jack writes a letter to a grown-up Nunu saying that he was truly in love with her mother and despite missing her everyday, he has come to peace with himself. The address on the envelope in which Jack inserts the letter indicates Nunu is at a San Diego, California address.

    Cast[edit]

    Release[edit]

    The film was released in China (10 November 2017), the United States (2 November 2018) and France (14 November 2018). In France, the film was released with an alternative English-language title: The Lost Soldier.[5]

    Awards and nominations[edit]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "Liu Yifei stars in The Chinese Widow for Zhejiang Roc Pictures". Blake Friedmann. 17 November 2015.
  • ^ "War epic 'The Chinese Widow' announced". Shanghai Daily. 19 June 2017.
  • ^ "'The Chinese Widow' to replace 'Our Time Will Come' as Shanghai Film Festival opener". Screen Daily.
  • ^ "Shanghai Festival: Danish Auteur Bille August's 'The Chinese Widow' to Premiere in Competition". The Hollywood Reporter. 8 June 2017.
  • ^ The Lost Soldier
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Chinese_Widow&oldid=1223899196"

    Categories: 
    2017 films
    2017 romantic drama films
    2017 war drama films
    Chinese war drama films
    Chinese romantic drama films
    Films set in Zhejiang
    Films directed by Bille August
    Romantic epic films
    Chinese World War II films
    Second Sino-Japanese War films
    Films about the Doolittle Raid
    Cultural depictions of Jimmy Doolittle
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Use dmy dates from August 2018
    Articles containing Chinese-language text
    Template film date with 2 release dates
    Articles containing traditional Chinese-language text
    Rotten Tomatoes ID same as Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 15 May 2024, at 01:20 (UTC).

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