Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - I really don't know where it came from.

I really don't know where it came from.

From Lu Xun's Medicine.

Medicine is a novel written by Lu Xun, the founder of modern literature in China. Through the story of the teahouse owner Hua Laoshuan and his wife treating their son Xiao Shuan's bloody steamed bread, this novel exposes the numbness and ignorance caused by long-term feudal rule, secretly praises the indomitable spirit of the revolutionary Xia, and points out the limitations of the 1911 Revolution's failure to get close to the masses.

In the structural arrangement of the works, the bright line is that Hua Laoshuan and his wife treat their son, while the dark line is that revolutionary Yu Xia was killed by warlords. The two lines are intertwined, and the idea is exquisite. In characterization, he is good at using line drawing to express the psychology and character of characters, with vivid images and superb skills.

The influence of later generations

Lu Xun's novel "Medicine" was published in May 19 19, and it has been selected as various versions of middle school Chinese textbooks for a long time. 1979, changchun film studio filmmakers Xiao Yinxian and Shao Lianlu adapted the novel Medicine into a screenplay for film literature, which was first published in 198 1 May. The script is divided into three parts: preface, drama and conclusion, which enriches and processes the original work.

198 1 changchun film studio made a feature film about medicine. Director Lu Shaolian and photographer Han, played, played Hua Laoshuan, Grandma and Xia Yesan respectively.

The film "Medicine" was released in China from the end of September of 198 1, which received a good social response and caused some debates in the film industry. At the end of the same year, "Shaolian Road" was selected as one of the films shown in the Japanese "China Film Special Exhibition to Commemorate the Centenary of Lu Xun's Birth". Visiting Japan with the Japanese film delegation was warmly welcomed by Japanese film colleagues and Japanese people.