To Live
Director: Zhang Yimou
To Live is a great movie to show in a classroom where students are learning about the history of china from the 1940’s to 1980’s. The film starts off in the 1940’s, during the Chinese Civil war, with a rich young man who loves to gamble. After losing everything at gambling he becomes a peasant and has to do a puppet show to make ends meet. While traveling, he and his friend are captured by the revolutionaries and later returned home to find out that he is lucky to be a peasant otherwise he would have been killed for being a rich man. The film leaps a decade into the 50’s where the “Great Leap Forward” begins and how the people are affected by it. It is sort of comical/tragic the things the happen to the main character. The story moves once again decade more and it shows the improvements of the country, however at a great cost. It shows doctors being arrested for being “too educated” and how Mao has become the center of all attention. The movie ends by saying that things are just getting better and better. While having to reflect at what cost.
edited by cgonzalez on 1/9/2016
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To Live Film Review
01/08/2016 04:51 PM
#1
To Live Film Review
To Live was recommended to me as a good movie to understand the building of "modern" China. For 7th grade, I think it would be helpful to show students several scenes in the movies and a note catcher to help them record their observations over the course of the movie. I would select scenes such as Fugui’s wife visiting the gambling hall, the first battle, and Long’er’s execution (just to name a few). Highlighting scenes like these would allow students to observe gender dynamics, China’s physical geography, class, and war culture on the front and at home- a topic that is usually reserved for western cultures in World War I and World War II- over three decades. These are some of the things that I would hope students would record on their graphic organizer:
That classes changed after the Communist revolution
Landowners were executed
Peasants were elevated to laborers
Name changed but quality of life hadn’t improved that much
Children worked to contribute to community work and war efforts as well
Food was given to families from communal halls
Food was rationed
Belongings were taken away from families to support war efforts
That gender dynamics changed after the Communist Revolution
Before the revolution women were in more “subservient” roles such as servers or home makers
Afterwards, they worked everyday laborer jobs such as delivering water.
War front
At war, Communist Army was considered more human than the revolutionaries
At home, families were told that their sacrifices were worth it although there little improvement for them
At home, those who had served in the Red Army were made community leaders