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The second generation of Chinese directors
The second generation of Chinese directors was mainly active during
the 1930s and 1940s, though some were still making movies as late as 1980. Those
with the biggest achievements in this generation included Cai Chusheng, Zheng
Junli, Fei Mu, Wu Yonggang, Sang Hu and Tang Xiaodan.
While these directors accomplished the transition of Chinese films from
silent to talking pictures, there was an achievement even greater in
significance: Chinese movies was liberated from solely entertainment purposes,
and began to reflect society in a more profound way. The most prominent artistic
feature of these directors' movies is their realism.
Meanwhile, the directors began their efforts to integrate reality with
filming, thus gradually learning the basic rules of the film art. It is fair to
say that Chinese movie began to demonstrate its independent value starting only
from this generation of directors.
The Left-wing Film Movement, also known as the New Film Movement, permeated
the whole period when the second generation of directors was active. The
representative works of the movement are Goddess by Wu Yonggang,
Spring Silkworm by Xia
Yan , Urban Night by Fei Mu, Broad Road by Sun Yu,
Melody of the Loving Mother by Zhu Shilin, Women by Shi
Dongshan, Song of the Fishermen by Cai Chusheng and Disaster of the
Peach and Blossom by Shen Xiling and Yuan Muzhi.
Besides the progressive movies, the cartoon works by the Wan Brothers like
Dog Detective and Counteract, whose content criticized the
social abuses of the time, influenced the Japanese cartoons in the 1930s with
its form.
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