Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Who is the prototype of saving my husband?

Who is the prototype of saving my husband?

The film "Save My Husband" is adapted from the 2004 "Wu Ruofu Kidnapping Case", which tells the story of a policeman and a gangster fighting to save my husband.

In July 2003, when Wang Lihua and others tried to kidnap Wu Ruofu in Pinggu District of Beijing, Wang Lihua and others failed to stop the vehicle driven by Wu Ruofu, and the kidnapping failed. In order to achieve the purpose of kidnapping, Wang Lihua gathered Pan Xin, Yang Xianchun and others to kidnap Wu Ruofu again in August 2003, and Wang Lihua prepared guns, chains, vehicles and other tools for committing crimes.

At two o'clock in the morning on February 3, 2004, the famous actor Wu Ruofu just finished chatting with some friends and walked out of a bar in Chaoyang District. Suddenly, several strange men appeared in front of him. They claimed to be policemen and handcuffed Wu Ruofu. Blink of an eye, Wu Ruofu was pulled into the car by those people, and roared off. When his friend reacted and dialed 1 10, the other party had already disappeared.

Extended data:

Wu Ruofu, a prototype car, was hijacked by two men near a bar in Sanlitun, Beijing in the early morning of February 3, 2004, and then his car was found in Yanqing, a suburb of Beijing. After being held hostage for 23 hours, Wu Ruofu was rescued by the public security organs.

Before filming, Sheng Ding lived in the police station for three months, experienced life, consulted a large number of case files and collected all the materials related to Wu Ruofu's kidnapping case. In the process of data collection, he followed seven kidnapping cases, and the directors followed them all with small DV.

Save My Husband is a documentary shooting technique. The director's camera kept shooting, without putting it on a tripod, and it revolved around the actor freely, and the actor also performed freely. The way of real shooting in the street was adopted, and no roadblocks were set up. Drivers staged fierce collisions and chases in real traffic, allowing actors to seize the most real accidental shooting method.