Beginnings film
Lady Meng Jiang, starring
Hu Die Motion pictures were introduced to China in 1896. They were introduced through foreign film exhibitors in
treaty ports like Shanghai and Hong Kong. China was one of the earliest countries to be exposed to the medium of film, due to
Louis Lumière sending his cameraman to Shanghai a year after inventing
cinematography. The first recorded screening of a motion picture in China took place in
Shanghai on 11 August 1896 as an "act" on a variety bill. The first Chinese film, a recording of the
Peking opera,
Dingjun Mountain, was made in November 1905 in
Beijing. For the next decade the production companies were mainly foreign-owned, and the domestic film industry was centered on Shanghai, a thriving
entrepot and the largest city in the
Far East.
Pre-revolutionary period The first domestically produced Chinese films to achieve financial success came out in 1921, most notably
Yan Ruisheng, leading to increased investment in the film industry. In the early 1920s, China saw the establishment of several new film studios, such as
Zhang Shichuan's
Mingxing Film Company, with most popular films being at least partially based around established western genres. Following the
May Thirtieth Movement, Chinese films began moving towards depictions of Chinese culture. This trend was manifested through the rise of "traditional costume films," including
Romance of the Western Chamber, which dramatized classical stories, especially romances, and of the
Wuxia genre. This tendency towards a more "Chinese" Cinema, as opposed to the earlier focus on westernization, was described as the campaign to "revive national cinema" (复兴国片) by figures like
Lo Ming-yau. From the start of the 1930s to the outbreak in earnest of the
Second Sino-Japanese War, Chinese cinema grew divided along political lines, primarily due to the ongoing
Chinese Civil War and internal debates surrounding the
invasion of Manchuria. After the
Nationalist government declared a ban on films related to the war with Japan, which were deemed "provocative," the "Left-Wing Film Movement," which had been founded by
Communist-aligned literary circles, began to grow. While
opposition to Japanese imperialism, as opposed to
communist ideology, acted as the catalyst for the Left-Wing movement, most films of the movement emphasized
class struggle over anti-imperialism. Supporters of leftist films included many established figures in the industry, such as
Zheng Zhengqiu. Left-Wing film criticism promoted
realism and
didacticism, with the value of film seen as tied to its ability to reflect reality and spur political action. Consequentially, most Left-Wing movement films were heavily
narrative-focused, and edited in the
continuity style. Films associated with the Left-Wing movement include
The Goddess,
Song of the Fishermen,
Crossroads, and
Spring Silkworms. Acting in opposition to the leftist movement was the "soft film" movement propagated by
Liu Na-ou. Soft film was influenced by
modernism, promoting an emphasis on camerawork and editing over the more narrative-focused films of the left, with the
Kino-Eye technique of
Dziga Vertov frequently referenced. Critics of soft film argued that prioritizing aesthetics over ideology was wrong in a moment of political crisis.
Main melody dramas During the late 20th century, a period when socialist dramas were beginning to lose viewership, the Chinese government began to involve itself deeper into the world of popular culture and cinema by creating the official genre of the "main melody" (主旋律
zhǔxuánlǜ), inspired by Hollywood's strides in musical dramas. In 1987, the Ministry of Radio, Film and Television issued a statement encouraging the making of movies which emphasizes the main melody to "invigorate national spirit and national pride". The expression
main melody refers to the musical term
leitmotif, which translates to the 'theme of our times', which scholars suggest is representative of China's socio-political climate and cultural context of popular cinema. These main melody films, still produced regularly in modern times, try to emulate the commercial mainstream by the use of Hollywood-style music and special effects. A significant feature of these films is the incorporation of a "
red song", which is a song written as propaganda to support the People's Republic of China. By revolving the film around the motif of a red song, the film is able to gain traction at the box office as songs are generally thought to be more accessible than a film. Theoretically, once the red song dominates the charts, it will stir interest in the film that which it accompanies. Main melody dramas are often subsidized by the state and have free access to government and military personnel. The Chinese government spends between "one and two million RMBs" annually to support the production of films in the main melody genre.
August First Film Studio, the film and TV production arm of the
People's Liberation Army, is a studio that produces main melody cinema. Main melody films, which often depict past military engagements or are biopics of first-generation CCP leaders, have won several Best Picture prizes at the Golden Rooster Awards. Some of the more famous main melody dramas include the ten-hour epic
Decisive Engagement (大决战, 1991), directed by Cai Jiawei, Yang Guangyuan and Wei Lian;
The Opium War (1997), directed by
Xie Jin; and
The Founding of a Republic (2009), directed by
Han Sanping and Fifth Generation director Huang Jianxin.
The Founding of an Army (2017) was commissioned by the government to celebrate the 90th anniversary of the People's Liberation Army, and is the third instalment in The Founding of a Republic series. The film featured many young Chinese pop singers that are already well-established in the industry, including
Li Yifeng,
Liu Haoran, and
Lay Zhang, so as to further the film's reputation as a main melody drama.
The sixth generation The post-1990 era has been labeled the "return of the amateur filmmaker" as state
censorship policies after the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests produced an edgy underground film movement loosely referred to as the Sixth Generation. Owing to the lack of state funding and backing, these films were shot quickly and cheaply, using materials like
16 mm film and
digital video and mostly non-professional actors and actresses, producing a documentary feel, often with long takes, hand-held cameras, and ambient sound; more akin to
Italian neorealism and
cinéma vérité than the often lush, far more considered productions of the Fifth Generation. Unlike the Fifth Generation, the Sixth Generation brings a more individualistic, anti-romantic life-view and pays far closer attention to contemporary urban life, especially as affected by disorientation, rebellion and dissatisfaction with China's contemporary social marketing economic tensions and comprehensive cultural background. Many were made with an extremely low budget (an example is
Jia Zhangke, who shoots on digital video, and formerly on 16 mm;
Wang Xiaoshuai's
The Days (1993) was made for US$10,000 while his
Still Life was shot on
HD video.
Still Life was a surprise addition and Golden Lion winner of the 2006
Venice International Film Festival.
Still Life, which concerns provincial workers around the
Three Gorges region, sharply contrasts with the works of Fifth Generation Chinese directors like Zhang Yimou and Chen Kaige who were at the time producing
House of Flying Daggers (2004) and
The Promise (2005). It featured no star of international renown and was acted mostly by non-professionals. Many Sixth Generation films have highlighted the negative attributes of China's entry into the modern
capitalist market.
Li Yang's
Blind Shaft (2003) for example, is an account of two murderous con-men in the unregulated and notoriously dangerous mining industry of northern China. (Li refused the tag of Sixth Generation, although admitted he was not Fifth Generation). Some of the more prolific Sixth Generation directors to have emerged are Wang Xiaoshuai (
The Days,
Beijing Bicycle,
So Long, My Son),
Zhang Yuan (
Beijing Bastards,
East Palace West Palace), Jia Zhangke (
Xiao Wu,
Unknown Pleasures,
Platform,
The World,
A Touch of Sin,
Mountains May Depart,
Ash Is Purest White),
He Jianjun (
Postman) and
Lou Ye (
Suzhou River,
Summer Palace). One director of their generation who does not share most of the concerns of the Sixth Generation is
Lu Chuan (
Kekexili: Mountain Patrol, 2004;
City of Life and Death, 2010).
Notable Sixth Generation directors In the 2018 Cannes Film Festival, two of China's Sixth generation filmmakers, Jia Zhangke and Zhang Ming – whose grim works transformed Chinese cinema in the 1990s – showed on the French Riviera. While both directors represent Chinese cinema, their profiles are quite different. The 49-year-old Jia set up the
Pingyao International Film Festival in 2017 and on the other hand is Zhang, a 56-year-old film school professor who spent years working on government commissions and domestic TV shows after struggling with his own projects. Despite their different profiles, they mark an important cornerstone in Chinese cinema and are both credited with bringing Chinese movies to the international big screen. Chinese director Jia Zhangke's latest film
Ash Is Purest White has been selected to compete in the official competition for the Palme d'Or of the 71st Cannes Film Festival, the highest prize awarded at the film festival. It is Jia's fifth movie, a gangster revenge drama that is his most expensive and mainstream film to date. Back in 2013, Jia won Best Screenplay Award for
A Touch of Sin, following nominations for
Unknown Pleasures in 2002 and
24 City in 2008. In 2014, he was a member of the official jury and the following year his film
Mountains May Depart was nominated. According to entertainment website Variety, a record number of Chinese films were submitted this year but only Jia's romantic drama was selected to compete for the Palme d'Or. Meanwhile, Zhang will make his debut at Cannes with
The Pluto Moment, a slow-moving relationship drama about a team of filmmakers scouting for locations and musical talent in China's rural hinterland. The film is Zhang's highest profile production so far, as it stars actor Wang Xuebing in the leading role. The film was partly financed by iQiyi, the company behind one of China's most popular online video browsing sharing sites.
Diao Yinan is also a notable member of the sixth generation whose works include
Black Coal Thin Ice,
Wild Goose Lake,
Night Train and
Uniform which have premiered at festivals such as Cannes and received acclaim abroad. ==Other directors==