War epic pays homage to martyrs

China Daily

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Co-directed by Guan Hu, Guo Fan and Lu Yang, the film teams up veteran actors Zhang Yi, Wu Jing, Li Jiuxiao and Wei Chen as well as Deng Chao.

The film is set on July 12, 1953, the second day after the outbreak of the Battle of Kumsong – the last fight before Chinese People's Volunteers Army and the US-led so-called UN forces signed the Korean Armistice Agreement in 1953.

Unlike most previous domestic war-themed films that chronicle milestone incidents or highlight historic figures, the feature turns the lens to ordinary soldiers, who sacrificed their lives in order to restore a bridge amid American fighters' intense bombings.

Stretching across a torrent river with its widest part reaching around 60 meters and as deep as four meters, the bridge was the only portal to transport thousands of Chinese soldiers and military vehicles to the battlefield of Kumsong.

With the major shooting in Dandong, Northeast China's Liaoning province, the producers recalled that coping with changing climates in an intense schedule was one of the biggest challenges as nearly all scenes took place in the wild.

Zhang Yi, alongside actor Wu Jing as the two protagonists, revealed that the actors slept a few hours every day but some insisted on keeping training schedule in order to best portray Chinese soldiers.

The film is projected by most industry insiders as the biggest blockbuster to accelerate Chinese film industry's recover between late October and November, a period which is usually lackluster in drawing big-budget movies in past years.

As of 3 pm on Oct 23, the movie – which is released in multiple formats including giant IMAX screens – had grossed 50 million yuan ($7.48 million), according to the box office live tracker Beacon.