The Red Detachment of
Women, a feature film directed by Xie Jin, topped
the list of fine screen works on women. It won the Best Feature Film Prize at
the First Hundred Flowers Awards in 1962. It is one of the representative films
directed by Xie Jin in his early period. Qiong Hua is a slave girl of Nan
Batian, a big landlord in Yelinzhai Village on Hainan Island. She has tried many
times but cannot escape from the landlord's cruel oppression. Later, Nan Batian
jails her in a water dungeon. Hong Changqing is the Party representative of a
red detachment of women. He disguises himself as a wealthy businessman residing
abroad and comes to her rescue. He pretends to buy Qiong Hua to be his slave,
saves her from the abyss of sufferings, and instructs her to join the red
detachment of women. At the outset, Qiong Hua joins the revolutionary rank to
settle her personal grudge. Educated by Hong Changqing, she becomes a
conscientious revolutionary fighter.
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| A scene from The Red Detachment
of Women
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The film features a complicated, moving plot and
a simple, straightforward style of expression. It reveals the inner world of the
characters with close-ups of their eye expressions and by using a zoom lens and
the characters' words and body movements. It gives a vivid description of the
disposition of the leading character Qiong Hua. The landscape of southern China
and the music tinged with a strong local flavor add considerably to the artistic
charm. The film won the third place of the Bandung Prize at the Third
Asia-African Film Festival in 1964 in Indonesia.
What's noteworthy is that Chen
Qiang, who acted the landlord in the film, elevated the techniques of acting
makes the villains in films to a new level. He reached the depth of the inner
world of dramatis personae, and employs several methods to expose the character
in a lifelike way. Chen Qiang won the Best Male Supporting Role of the One
Hundred Flower Award. He also won the Best Male Actor Award at the Third Asian
and African Film Festival in 1964. The film displays the distinct flavor of
Hainan Island, and the theme song The Army Song of The Red Detachment of
Women is not only a march but also an aria, which is melodious and
sweet-sounding, and is still circulated and sung today.