The opening segment by director Guan Hu, "The Eve" (前夜), is about an engineer, Lin Zhiyuan (played by Huang Bo), racing against time to perfect an automatic flag-raising mechanism before the founding ceremony of the People's Republic of China. Due to a faulty part, they scrounge the neighborhood for resources to build another one. They get many enthusiastic donations, and successfully install the mechanism at dawn.
Passing By
The second story "Passing By" (相遇), directed by Zhang Yibai, sees Gao Yuan (played by Zhang Yi), a scientist working on China's first atom bomb, who had to disappear from his lover in the 1960s. After receiving furlough due to a workplace radiation accident, he encounters her on a bus. She pleads for him to talk to her and reminisces before the bus is stopped by a parade celebrating the successful atomic test. Yuan dies some time later.
The fourth story "Going Home" (回归), directed by Xue Xiaolu, is about a Chinese executive delegation and local policemen preparing for the return of Hong Kong from British rule to China in 1997. The 12-second silence between the British and Chinese anthems during the Hong Kong handover ceremony is also reflected in this part.
Hello Beijing
The fifth story "Hello Beijing" (北京你好), directed by Ning Hao, is about a taxi driver who gives a ticket to the opening ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Olympics to a boy from the Sichuan earthquake zone, who attempted to steal it, though it was intended to be a birthday gift for his son.
The Guiding Star
The sixth story "The Guiding Star" (白昼流星), directed by Chen Kaige, is about a pair of homeless brothers who witness the landing of the capsule of the Shenzhou 11 crewed spacecraft on November 18, 2016, a moment of national pride that touched them.
One for All
"One for All" (护航), directed by Wen Muye, follows the story of a top female fighter jet pilot Lü Xiaoran who helps her fellow pilots accomplish a smooth aerial performance at the Military Parade of the 70th Anniversary of the Victory in the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1945.[5]
On March 20, 2019, the producers announced that the film was slated for release on October 1, 2019, during the National Day.[6] On September 6, 2019, it was announced that the film has been advanced to September 30, 2019.[7]
With a total gross of over $474 million, My People, My Country currently sits as the 15th highest-grossing non-English film of all time. The film grossed about 369 million yuan (51.62 million U.S. dollars) on its second day of screening.[8] It grossed one billion yuan in three days.[9]
The film earned more than 2 billion yuan on its opening weekend.[10][11][12]
Critical response
Douban, a major Chinese media rating site, gave the drama 8.1 out of 10.[citation needed]