Hiver1950, l'armée populaire de Chine entre en Corée du Nord Les troupes postées sur le front oriental vont combattre au lac Changjin, dans des conditions de froid extrême, n’ayant que Filmasiatique : The Battle at Lake Changjin, Année : 2021. En 1950, la bataille du réservoir de Chosin opposant les forces de l'ONU à celles de la République populaire de Chine est déclarée. Dans Inscription Connexion. Petites annonces. Mangathèque. Vous devez être connecté au site pour gérer votre collection de mangas. Animethèque. Vous devez être Heroes: The Battle at Lake Changjin, un film de | Synopsis : En hiver 1950, au cours de la guerre de Corée, l'armée populaire de Chine entre en Corée du Nord. Dans des conditions de froid FromZero to Hero: Write Your Short in 30 days Ina climate of ascendant nationalism tinged with anti-American sentiment, it’s easy to see why “The Battle at Lake Changjin” is a hit with Chinese audiences. Vay Tiền Online Chuyển Khoản Ngay. China’s most expensive film to date and its second highest ever box-office grosser, The Battle at Lake Changjin possesses worryingly belligerent overtones. An account of a pivotal battle in November 1950 during the Korean war in which Chinese forces, who had infiltrated the country, pushed US marines back over the 38th parallel, this government-ordained project wastes no opportunity – current geopolitical tensions notwithstanding – to assert the moral superiority of the Chinese soldier. Not only is he unfazed by superior opposition numbers and equipment or impossibly harsh climate conditions, even the enemy catering doesn’t get him down. We see Uncle Sam chowing down on a bounty of turkey legs and bacon while the People’s Volunteer Army break their teeth on stony film also applies its collectivist we-all-suffer-together message, standard for recent Chinese blockbusters, to its own making; it shares directorial credit between “fifth generation” leading light Chen Kaige of Farewell My Concubine renown, and Hong Kong veterans Tsui Hark and Dante Lam. At least the involvement of the latter two means The Battle at Lake Changjin is an update on stodgy recent communist party cinema epics and presumably the reason for its box-office success. There is accomplished action film-making on show here, from a turkey shoot by US scout planes across a scree field in which the camera careens between the stricken Chinese troops Lam’s, if I had to guess; to a rowdy hand-to-hand battle inside an American encampment that, with everybody trying to shoot and stab each other, comes over like a homicidal game of Twister probably Tsui’s.It’s a shame there is virtually no story to sew this ungainly patchwork of styles together, apart from some threadbare twaddle about 7th Company commander Quanli Wolf Warrior’s Wu Jing and his wannabe soldier brother Wanli Jackson Yee, as a stowaway who mostly exists for his comrades to impart self-sacrificing film is historically highly debatable, but any comparisons to equally blinkered and jingoistic American rabble-rousers such as Rambo are not accurate; The Battle at Lake Changjin is essentially a government project. It is possible to make interesting cinema within the Chinese censorship system that still bears a communist message, such as 2015’s Wolf Totem. But here, there’s nothing to censor; it’s straight-up propaganda – almost comedically so at times. Early on, an irate Wanli sweeps open a train carriage door to escape, only to be stopped in his tracks ... by a rolling vista of the Great Wall! Chinese commercial cinema is learning Hollywood’s tricks for cloaking ideology with entertainment, but in many ways it is still trapped in the past. The Battle at Lake Changjin Reviews Movie Reviews By Reviewer Type All Critics Top Critics All Audience Verified Audience Movie Reviews By Reviewer Type Jul 9, 2022 A 175-minute war orgy that combines violence, epic absurdity and stale nationalism in the form of a solid propaganda film that does not try to hide its nature. [Full review in Spanish] Jul 5, 2022 The main value of the film, or the only one, it is in making us reflect on the thousand and one times that we have swallowed equally nauseating rhetoric... courtesy of Hollywood. [Full review in Spanish] Apr 24, 2022 The Battle at Lake Changjin is a very bloated war movie filled with simplistic dialogue, poorly written characters, and tedious fight scenes. This repetitive depiction of a crucial battle in the Korean War does not earn its nearly three-hour running time. Jan 6, 2022 Its perverse take on the American soldier as being a sadist is not only ridiculous but insulting. Dec 27, 2021 For all the money spent and pyrotechnics unleashed, this collectively directed and filmed movie about the glory of collective effort and suffering in attaining military success never attains the grandeur it strives for. Nov 25, 2021 It's like Michael Bay's "Pearl Harbor" but for the Chinese - same jingoistic celebration of militarist carnage but, instead of white gaze, we get communist homilies. Nov 19, 2021 It's straight-up propaganda - almost comedically so at times. Nov 13, 2021 No one in the high-profile cast, which... includes Zhang Hanyu, Oho Ou and Huang Xuan, gets much more than a sketch to work with, sapping the story of any real emotional connectivity. Nov 12, 2021 The patriotic sloganeering will likely leave many viewers cold, but this Chinese movie can be enjoyed as a work of bonkers battle action. Nov 11, 2021 The Battle at Lake Changjin's visual bombast rings hollow without a significant human story to connect its audience on an emotional level. Oct 19, 2021 Anyone into big-time action cinema on the largest possible screen will more than get their money's worth, even if the film is simplistic and entirely predictable in its goals, both as action and politics. Do you think we mischaracterized a critic's review? This Week in China’s History November-December 1950 This year’s highest grossing movie is not the latest installment from the James Bond or Marvel franchises, nor is it a Bollywood extravaganza. It is a war film, sponsored by the Chinese government, that tells the story of one of the most important battles of the Korean War. The Battle at Lake Changjin 长津湖 Chángjīn hú is also the most expensive Chinese film ever made and the highest-grossing Chinese-language film ever surpassing Wolf Warrior 2. Though historical accuracy in a movie like this is never quite the objective, the incident that is the foundation of the movie — the real Battle of Changjin Lake — and its implications, which echoed through the second half of the 20th century and beyond, is worth exploring. American sources refer to the battle as the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, using the Japanese transliteration that was written on maps. Whichever orthography we use, this artificial lake in North Korea, some 50 miles from the Chinese border and nestled among 6,000-foot mountains, was the setting for a fight that reshaped the histories of not only both Koreas, China, and the United States, but really the entire 20th century. When he sent his armies to invade the South in June 1950, North Korean leader Kim Il-sung did not anticipate that the United States would intervene. The reason for that expectation stemmed from declarations by American officials early in 1950 that the United States was done with the Chinese Civil War — and with the legacy of World War II in Asia more generally — drawing a defense perimeter that included Japan then occupied by forces but explicitly excluding Taiwan, Vietnam, and Korea. Kim was able to use these statements to persuade both Máo Zédōng 毛泽东 and Joseph Stalin to support, at least tacitly, the North Korean invasion, and he expected to unify the peninsula within weeks, maybe even days. Though not quite that fast, the plan seemed to work. By early August — just six weeks after the war began — South Korean forces, supported by hastily assembled United Nations troops, had been pushed south into a small perimeter around the city of Pusan. The invasion, however, prompted the United States to reconsider its defensive posture in East Asia. Korea and Vietnam and Taiwan were redefined as vital strategic interests, and American troops were rushed to Korea via Japan. An amphibious assault at the city of Inchon turned the tide. In just two weeks, the United Nations almost entirely the armies had fought back to the 38th parallel, where the war had begun. Dismissing Chinese warnings not to push farther north, the UN/ armies did just that. North Korean troops were in disarray. By mid-October, the war seemed nearly over, with just the opposite result of what looked imminent in August. The war, commanders boasted, could end by Christmas. Late in November — with temperatures approaching 40 degrees below zero at night, presaging what would be one of the harshest winters recorded — United Nations forces took up positions around the Chosin Reservoir as they approached the Chinese border. That was one side of the story pushing north to eradicate what was left of the North Korean army. Another side of the story was in motion, too, with very different motives and objectives. Chinese warnings about crossing the 38th parallel had not been idle, but they were complicated. As historian Sheila Miyoshi Jager describes in her book Brothers at War The Unending Conflict in Korea, when confronted with the American advance, Mao had reneged on an earlier pledge to assist Kim Il-sung in the event of an American attack. Stalin urged Mao to reconsider. For two weeks, many fates teetered on an edge as Mao considered his options. On October 8, the day after UN forces crossed the 38th parallel, Mao cabled Kim that Chinese support would be coming; on October 19, soldiers of the Chinese People’s Volunteers began crossing the Yalu River into North Korea. They first engaged UN forces about a week later, but encounters were brief. American intelligence estimated that no more than 35,000 Chinese troops were in Korea. The actual number, by the end of October, was a quarter of a million. The Chinese soldiers advanced only at night, camping camouflaged during daylight hours, and were either overlooked or ignored by United Nations intelligence units as they covered the 100 marching miles from the border to Chosin Reservoir. On November 27, they attacked. Under cover of night, blowing bugles and armed with machine guns and grenades, the Chinese forces inflicted heavy casualties on the surprised Americans. The sub-zero temperatures made the surprise even more brutal, as many weapons and munitions were frozen. Withdrawing during the day, the attacks resumed each night, and it soon became clear that the Chinese numbers were far greater than expected. For two weeks, both sides fought one another and the elements. Outnumbered and surrounded by an often unseen adversary, American soldiers struggled with frostbite, dead batteries, frozen supplies, and the unceasing stress of temperatures that stayed below zero for days on end. Some 8,000 American, South Korean, and British marines and soldiers froze to death, nearly half of their total casualties for the battle. The Chinese forces suffered even more. Most of the winter uniforms intended for the People’s Volunteers never arrived, leaving the soldiers with canvas shoes and little more than thin cotton scarves to wrap themselves in; bombing by UN planes had disrupted food supplies. Estimates vary, but as many as 50,000 Chinese died in the battle, half of them from exposure. The Battle at Lake Changjin depicts the battle as a great Chinese victory, a patriotic story of aiding an aggrieved ally and defending China’s borders. But assessing victory in the real battle is thorny. Without question, what happened at Chosin Reservoir turned the tide of the war, and though the Chinese did not achieve their goal of destroying the United Nations forces, they did drive them out of North Korea. Some American units were eliminated, victories celebrated as the greatest Chinese triumphs of the entire war. From the American side, the escape and evacuation is celebrated as heroism. The battle produced more medals of honor than any engagement other than the 1944-45 Battle of the Bulge. Facing long odds and outnumbered four to one, the marines managed to break out of their containment and fight their way to the eastern coast at Hungnam, where an air and sea evacuation took some 100,000 American and South Korean military personnel and nearly that many civilian refugees to the south. Survival was no small victory, but prospects for a quick end to the war were lost, along with 23,000 square miles of territory. The evacuation at Hungnam was the last time American or South Korean troops would fight in North Korea. The war would last for another two years, but the front would remain around the 38th parallel, right where it had started. The conflict rent the Korean peninsula, dividing many families and destroying many lives in a war that lingers until today. For China, the United States, and the world, the ramifications were also immense. For the People’s Republic, the ability to mobilize hundreds of thousands of soldiers and push American forces out of North Korea was confirmation of their ability to project power abroad, as Chinese soldiers defended their borders against the world’s most powerful army. Politically, what happened in Korea intensified Mao’s leadership. As historian Sargent writes, “Domestically, Mao’s far-sighted’ and brilliant’ decision to confront the American imperialists’ in Korea would lead to his complete monopoly on power and the radicalization of China’s political and social affairs.” It seems unlikely that Mao could have accrued the political capital needed for totalitarian policies like the Great Leap Forward without his success in Korea, and success in Korea depended on Chosin Reservoir. The greatest legacy of all was nothing less than the recasting of international relations in the 20th century. The Cold War was an abstract idea until Chosin Reservoir, but the battle — as brutal as any ever fought — showed that it was very real, and convinced Americans that fears of dominos or red hordes were not exaggerated, and any amount of money spent opposing them was justified. The arms race and the global cold war can be said to have started in the frozen hills around Chosin Reservoir. For the mostly Chinese audiences flocking to see Lake Changjin, the appeal is not the geo-strategic implications of a battle, but an action movie of soldiers fighting far from home against a powerful enemy to defend their national interests. And ironically, it is just in this way that the film itself is being deployed a powerful piece of propaganda that can show viewers the effectiveness of the Party in defeating even its most powerful enemies, an emphatic end to the “Century of Humiliation” that had begun with the Opium War. As rumors of lab leaks, Olympic boycotts, and economic tremors confront them, the Party expects Changjin Lake to tell a story of the People’s Republic fighting an international system determined to hold it down in Chinese textbooks, South Korea is deemed to have started the war as a pretext for an American assault against China. And the story is not to be challenged when journalist Luō Chāngpíng 罗昌平 used his private Weibo account to question the movie’s version of events, he found himself detained by Chinese police and his account shut down. Luo was charged under a recently enacted law that makes it a crime to defame political martyrs. As the movie’s tagline explains, 祖国不会忘义 zǔguó bù huì wàng yì — The motherland will never forget. This Week in China’s History is a weekly column. "The Battle at Lake Changjin" — commissioned by the Chinese government — has grossed an estimated billion yuan $287 million since its release on Thursday, according to ticketing app Maoyan. It beat the previous record for the same Chinese holiday set by "My People, My Country," which grossed more than billion yuan $233 million over five days in 2019."The Battle at Lake Changjin" was released at the start of the week-long holiday in China and was also timed to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the founding of the ruling Communist tells the story of the brutal 1950 Battle of Chosin Reservoir in the Korean War. The Chinese side claims it as the most critical victory of the conflict, known in China as the "War to Resist American Aggression and Aid Korea."Co-directed by top Chinese and Hong Kong filmmakers Chen Kaige, Tsui Hark and Dante Lam, the film casts Wu Jing in a lead role. One of China's most popular actors, Wu is best known for starring in and directing action flick "Wolf Warrior" in 2015 and its even more popular sequel in 2017."The Battle at Lake Changjin" was commissioned by the Chinese government's powerful central propaganda department and the country's top movie regulator. It received huge support from the government from script development, production and publicity, to using serving soldiers among the movie's 70,000 was produced by a group of major studios, led by Bona Film Group and the Chinese military-owned August First Film Studio. It is the "most expensive film" made in China, Bona Film's chairman Yu Dong told media at its premiere last month. The Hollywood Reporter previously reported the movie had a budget of billion yuan $200 million.Yu said that he was inspired by patriotic Korean war films when he grew up, and wanted to make a new one "for the young people today," according to the state-owned National Business has ordered China's cinemas to use the box office this year to spread propaganda celebrating the anniversary of the Communist Party. Movies will have to focus on themes of "loving the Party, the country, and socialism" and "singing the praises of the Chinese Communist Party, the motherland, the people, and its heroes," the China Film Administration said earlier this year, explaining its of the movies screened so far are old propaganda that were popular during the time of Mao Zedong, who led Communist China from its founding in 1949 until his death in 1976. They highlight themes of patriotism and were specifically created to educate viewers about the history of the movie regulator emphasized a desire for "young people" to "grow their affections" of the Party and socialism by watching the the "The Battle at Lake Changjin," Yu said he wants "young audience today to like it, as well as the young audience 50 years from now,"Dengta, a box office data app owned by Alibaba BABA, forecast the film will pull in as much as billion yuan $700 million. That could make it the second biggest movie globally this year, behind the $822 million earned by Chinese comedy "Hi, Mom," according to data compiled by Box Office 2020, China overtook the United States to become the top movie market in the world — a milestone achieved in large part because the United States struggled to contain the coronavirus pandemic. 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