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1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Bring your napkins, a real socialist weeper., 11 November 2001
Author:
zyx (zyx@hotmail.com) from Sweden
Lu Wenting is a mother and a hard working eye-doctor in early 60s socialist
China. She is an outstanding surgeon and a devoted socialist, but she feels
that she is not fulfilling all her duties as a mother and a wife. Both work
and family is demanding and after 18 years of hard work she falls ill and
ends up as a patient in her own hospital and is forced to reflect on her
life and work.
The film is the archetype of a socialist movie with an all good hero
protagonist, but the film also raises the question of if it is worth to
sacrifice everything for society and whether personal dreams and
aspirations
have a place in such a sacrificial life.
The film won the "Golden Rooster" and "Hundred Flowers" awards in China in
1983 for best film. I guess anyone who have experienced socialist China
during the 60s and 70s would be moved by this story, and this is the
audience the film was made for. Its not a bad film and the acting is very
good, as is the music. And I love the tinted colors of the film, light and
soft, probably due to bad quality.
Directed by Wang Qimin and Sun Yu
Cast: Pan Hong and
Da Shichang
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