1976 film
How Yukong Moved the Mountains |
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Directed by | Joris Ivens Marceline Loridan |
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Release date |
- 10 March 1976 (1976-03-10) (Paris)
[1] |
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Running time | 763 minutes |
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Country | France |
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Language | French |
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How Yukong Moved the Mountains (French: Comment Yukong déplaça les montagnes) is a series of 12 documentary films directed by Marceline Loridan-Ivens and Joris Ivens about the Cultural Revolution. Ivens and his partner Loridan worked on the film between 1972 and 1974, and it was finally released in France in 1976. The film's title refers to Yugong Yishan, an ancient fable about the virtues of perseverance and willpower. At 763 minutes, it is one of the longest theatrical films by running time.
Contents
For English-language distribution, the film was shown in five feature-length parts:[2]
- A Woman, A Family; Rehearsal at the Peking Opera[nb 1]
- The Fishing Village; The Football Incident;[nb 2] Training at the Peking Circus
- The Pharmacy; Traditional Handicrafts;[nb 3] An Army Camp[nb 4]
- The Generator Factory; Professor Tsien
- The Oilfields;[nb 5] Impressions of a City - Shanghai
Reception
The segment The Football Incident was awarded Best Documentary Short at the 1977 César Awards.
See also
Notes
- ^ Alternate translation: A Performance at the Peking Opera
- ^ Alternate translation: The Ball
- ^ Alternate translation: Craftsmen
- ^ Alternate translation: A Barracks
- ^ Alternate translation: Petroleum
References
External links