Propaganda Films in China
Posted: Mon Jul 11, 2011 9:55 am
In this article, Fareed Zakaria mentions how only very few foreign films make it into the Chinese market, while government propaganda (their words, not mine) films are heavily marketed in addition to being mandatory in schools sometimes. I noticed this:
It's understandable that not many people would go out of their way to show their dirty laundry in a film they spent millions of dollars to make, but besides not talking much about things like Tianamen square, do they doggedly deny to this day that the bad things (of which I'm pretty sure I've seen at least some video) even happened? Denying reality like some Flat Earth Society member is pitiful and bound to last longer than any loss of face for having done something bad and said "look, I'm man enough to admit that I did it." and thereafter improved.The Beginning of the Great Revival released last month, is an extravagantly produced, state-sponsored propaganda movie, which cost $12 million to make, a fortune by Chinese standards. The film claims to have a cast of more than 100 top Chinese actors playing an array of historical figures.
Among them Mao Tse-Tung or Chairman Mao, who's portrayed not just a revolutionary, but also as a romantic. He's played by a young Chinese heartthrob. And while that might lure in female audiences, the real message isn't about love, but politics.
The film is a pean to the Communist Party, released to honor the 90th anniversary of its founding. It describes the party's influence as having led China down a glorious path of ethnic independence, liberation, national wealth and strength. No mention of the Great Leap Forward, the famine, the Cultural Revolution, or, of course, Tiananmen Square.