On December 28, 1895, Dr. Louis Lumiere
showed two movies in the Grand Cafe on Boulevard des Capucines in Paris. The
movies were Workers Leaving the Lumiere Factory and The Train Pulls
into the Station. That event is considered the official birth of the movies.
On August 11, 1896, a foreign film was shown at Youyicun of Xuyuan in Shanghai,
marking the introduction of movies into China.
In 1897, an American came to Shanghai to
show films made by the famous inventor Edison. In 1898, Edison sent his
photographers to China and made a documentation film China Honor Guard.
In January 1902, movies were introduced in to Beijing with the display of the
first film Black People Eat Water Melon and other comic short
movies. In 1903, a Chinese student named Lin Zhusan came back from overseas with
films and players and opened the history to show movies by the Chinese. In
December 1907, Beijing Grand Theater completed its rebuilding and began to show
movies. In the same year, the first real cinema, Ping'an Movie, was established
by foreign investors at the Chang'an Avenue in Beijing.
It was not until the autumn of 1905 that the
Chinese shot their first film The Battle of Mount Dingjun. It was adapted
from a Beijing opera of the same name by the Beijing Fengtai Photo Studio and
Tan Xinpei, a renowned performer of Peking Opera. The shooting of the film
marked the official birth of Chinese cinema.
During the 43 years from 1905 to 1948, China
progressed from showing only foreign-made films to shooting its own and from
using foreign funds to filming independently. Eventually, China became strong
enough to develop its own national cinema.
Family ethics and social issues were in
vogue mainly in the 1920s and 1930s. Most of the works on family ethics drew
material from the life of urban residents in the lower social strata or the
petty bourgeoisie and showed love affairs, marriages, affairs concerning ethics,
or household affairs. Films on social issues courageously exposed the most grim
and pressing problems confronting Chinese
society.