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Cinema was introduced to China in
1896. In 1905 Dingjun Mountain, the filming of a Peking
opera routine, was shot in China. The Tested Couple, written
and directed by Zheng Zhengqic in 1913, is usually regarded
as China's first feature film. Between the l930s and l940s,
a number of films of ideological value and psychological
import were produced, such as Crossroads, Angels of the
Street, The Spring River Flows East, and Eight Thousand Li
of Cloud and Moon. Bridge. a feature film produced in 1949
by the Northeast Film Studio (later changed to the Changchun
Film Studio), laid the foundations for the cinema in New
China. The White-Haired Girl, The Lin Family 's Shop, On the
Threshold of Spring, Sisters on Stage, and A Bed Detachment
of Women, all produced in the l950s and the l960s, unroll
like a painted scroll illuminating the broad passage of the
recent past realistically and in a distinctly Chinese way,
while still allowing expression of the artist's
individuality. This technique and flavour have been very
well received by popular audiences in China. Excellent films
produced after 1977 include Happiness Knocks on the Door, A
Tale of Tianyun Mountain, The Birth of New China, Everything
is Clear at Forty, The Great Decisive Campaign, and Grandpa
Shangang the Accused. Winners of various international
awards include such feature films as My Memories of Old
Beijing, Red Sorghum, The Year of Bad Luck, Celebrating the
Spring Festival, Yellow Earth, Qiuju Goes to Court and
Phoenix Guitar-The Story of Some Rural
Teachers.
Documentaries,
science and education films and animated cartoons made in
China are all distinctive in their own way. Chinese animated
films thematically and stylistically displayed an energetic
vivacity, and are made in a variety of distinctively Chinese
styles. The puppet film The Magic Paintbrush, the papercut
film Ginseng Girl, he animated ink-wash film The Tadpole
Looks for His Mother, and the cartoons Uproar in Heaven and
When the Snipe and the Clam grapple have won many awards at
international film
festivals.
In 1995, China had
30 feature film studios approved by the State :council which
produced 146 feature films and distributed 204 new,
full-length films.
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