Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What is the movie The Wind about?

What is the movie The Wind about?

The film tells the story of 1942 during the period of Wang puppet government. After the assassination of a series of senior officials, the Japanese army attached great importance to it. In order to find out party member, the Japanese Puppet Army interrogated Gu, Li, Bai Xiaonian and Jin Volcano. During the interrogation, they experienced psychological warfare and torture.

The Message is Chinese mainland's first spy war blockbuster adapted from Mai Jia's novel of the same name. Produced by Huayi Brothers, supervised by Chen and Gao, starring Zhou Xun, Li Bingbing, Huang Xiaoming, Zhang Hanyu and Wang.

Extended data:

The film Wind is adapted from the novel of the same name by the author Mai Jia. It is revealed that the ancient prototype played by Zhou Xun in the film is Guan Lu, a poetess of the Leftist League in 1930s, and a red spy who later accepted the organization task to infiltrate the enemy spy.

Guan Lu (1July, 90714-19821February 5) was originally named Hu Shoumei, whose ancestral home was Yanqing, Hebei, and was also called "the four talented women of the Republic of China" with Pan, Zhang Ailing and Su Qing. After the September 18th Incident, she joined the Shanghai Women's Anti-Japanese and Anti-imperialist League. /kloc-joined the China * * * production party in 0/932, and joined the "Left League" at the same time. 1Winter Solstice of 939 1945, she was dispatched by the organization and worked as an editor of Female Voice, a monthly magazine jointly organized by Wang Puppet Regime, Japanese Embassy and Navy Reporting Department.

"The Wind" has the innate advantages of a typical spy film, such as a good script, luxurious and elegant scenery, elegant characters, gorgeous and nostalgic colors, beautiful and dazzling photography, actors who are good at grasping psychological details, and neat editing-every detail has been done with enough effort, plus the tension of the story itself-dangers, intellectual contests, and waves of suspense.