Download Chinese Music

Download Chinese traditional music, modern music, pop music (Mando pop, Cantopop) Chinese new age music, Peking opera music, Tibetan (Buddhist) music, Guqin, Guzheng, Pipa, Erhu, Dizi, Xiao...

Download e-books on China

Choose from over 1000 free e-books on China! Find travel books, books on contemporary Chinese culture, art, history, Chinese cooking, free e-books on business in China, Chinese novels...

China Travel Tips

YiLongWei.com is probably the best China budget travel (independent travel) web site; find reliable travel tips on train travel in China, finding budget accommodation in China, usage of bank machines in China... Get in touch with Chinese students in China which can help you during your travel...

The Soong Sisters

Movie Title: 
The Soong Sisters
Picture: 

The Soong Sisters

Year of Production: 
1997
Genre: 
History
Director: 
Mabel Cheung
Internet Movie Database: 
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120164/
Video Information: 
LANGUAGE: Chinese | SUBTITLE: English | DVDRiP | avi | 145 min | 2100 mb Director: Mabel Cheung | Cast: Maggie Cheung, Michelle Yeoh, Vivian Wu, Winston Chao, Wu Hsing-Guo | Original Title: Sung Ga Wong Chiu (Sung Ga Saam Che Mooi) Production Country: Hong Kong 1997
Movie Description: 
Clocking in at 144 minutes, this epic-length historical drama is compelling in that it features a vital part of Chinese history, but distant in that it doesn’t allow us to emotionally connect with any of the historical figures. Michelle Yeoh is Soong Ai-Ling, who married H. H. Kung (Jiang Wen), the richest man in China and later the Finance Minister to Chiang Kai-Shek (Wu Xing-Guo). Chaing married Soong sister May-Ling (Vivian Wu), shortly before embarking on his iron reign of China and Taiwan. The third sister is Ching-Ling, played by Maggie Cheung, who married Sun Yat-Sen (Winston Chao), the father of China’s nationalist party. Politics plays a huge part in the film’s story. The struggle for China to gain its identity is the backdrop for the squabbles among the Soong siblings and their respective husbands. The question is: who should we root for? Depending on what political affiliation you have, different figures may be more revered than others (if you’re a Communist then Ching-Ling’s your gal, but if you’re a Nationalist you’d have to go with May-Ling). The film’s point-of-view is drastically muted, and as a result it's difficult to find the film compelling. Sure, history matters, but if emotion is lost in the proceedings you might as well crack open a book. Part of this could be attributed to the film’s massive censorship, which featured five months for script approval and lots of cuts to placate the big guys in China. Considering The Return, the cuts are politically sensible, but the film suffers ultimately. The performances are fine, but without an emotional anchor, the whole exercise seems to drift endlessly. This is a good history lesson, but not a potent human drama.