Zürcher Nachrichten - Nanjing massacre film set becomes China school holiday hotspot

EUR -
AED 4.345335
AFN 75.138665
ALL 96.378883
AMD 446.131935
ANG 2.117625
AOA 1085.002313
ARS 1655.611645
AUD 1.675104
AWG 2.129776
AZN 2.016627
BAM 1.95375
BBD 2.386496
BDT 144.927947
BGN 1.949509
BHD 0.446083
BIF 3502.976782
BMD 1.183209
BND 1.495368
BOB 8.217379
BRL 6.206401
BSD 1.184857
BTN 107.386334
BWP 15.57466
BYN 3.377685
BYR 23190.889008
BZD 2.3831
CAD 1.614547
CDF 2668.135836
CHF 0.911304
CLF 0.025882
CLP 1021.935526
CNY 8.174374
CNH 8.148172
COP 4330.437071
CRC 571.3788
CUC 1.183209
CUP 31.355029
CVE 110.149435
CZK 24.267905
DJF 210.998628
DKK 7.470903
DOP 73.759809
DZD 153.55559
EGP 55.660735
ERN 17.748129
ETB 184.311817
FJD 2.618973
FKP 0.868147
GBP 0.872054
GEL 3.165051
GGP 0.868147
GHS 13.028331
GIP 0.868147
GMD 86.956685
GNF 10399.649618
GTQ 9.088465
GYD 247.899913
HKD 9.24719
HNL 31.312957
HRK 7.533845
HTG 155.090731
HUF 377.716875
IDR 19907.485079
ILS 3.668349
IMP 0.868147
INR 107.332463
IQD 1552.271416
IRR 49842.663423
ISK 145.002529
JEP 0.868147
JMD 185.317741
JOD 0.838888
JPY 181.212543
KES 152.633916
KGS 103.47184
KHR 4761.802875
KMF 491.031532
KPW 1064.823369
KRW 1706.662556
KWD 0.362547
KYD 0.987464
KZT 582.199179
LAK 25381.08093
LBP 106089.362618
LKR 366.433613
LRD 220.388777
LSL 18.917155
LTL 3.493707
LVL 0.715711
LYD 7.471162
MAD 10.832935
MDL 20.098516
MGA 5170.575231
MKD 61.574562
MMK 2484.769459
MNT 4223.298784
MOP 9.54069
MRU 47.287589
MUR 54.34434
MVR 18.22732
MWK 2054.548943
MXN 20.321138
MYR 4.615492
MZN 75.619391
NAD 18.920349
NGN 1599.118686
NIO 43.602411
NOK 11.255668
NPR 171.811208
NZD 1.958808
OMR 0.454936
PAB 1.184957
PEN 3.974031
PGK 5.089445
PHP 68.442113
PKR 331.266848
PLN 4.215121
PYG 7744.874374
QAR 4.318569
RON 5.096792
RSD 117.418063
RUB 90.928478
RWF 1730.503981
SAR 4.437245
SBD 9.519129
SCR 16.080097
SDG 711.706291
SEK 10.63249
SGD 1.494511
SHP 0.887713
SLE 28.929589
SLL 24811.292448
SOS 675.962242
SRD 44.715851
STD 24490.029604
STN 24.473289
SVC 10.368122
SYP 13085.78438
SZL 18.912158
THB 37.011989
TJS 11.179471
TMT 4.14123
TND 3.417415
TOP 2.848883
TRY 51.724796
TTD 8.03457
TWD 37.126486
TZS 3075.549967
UAH 51.209791
UGX 4194.599187
USD 1.183209
UYU 45.911831
UZS 14480.807292
VES 464.681605
VND 30727.927935
VUV 140.906632
WST 3.20046
XAF 655.23909
XAG 0.015846
XAU 0.00024
XCD 3.197681
XCG 2.13546
XDR 0.814945
XOF 655.269516
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.017563
ZAR 18.977903
ZMK 10650.295983
ZMW 21.775154
ZWL 380.992694
  • BP

    -0.6000

    37.06

    -1.62%

  • BTI

    -0.8250

    58.675

    -1.41%

  • GSK

    1.1700

    60.1

    +1.95%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    2.6950

    208.245

    +1.29%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.66

    -0.38%

  • NGG

    0.3600

    92.76

    +0.39%

  • RIO

    -3.3100

    94.76

    -3.49%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    23.67

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    -0.1450

    25.565

    -0.57%

  • VOD

    -0.0790

    15.491

    -0.51%

  • BCC

    -1.8650

    84.635

    -2.2%

  • JRI

    -0.0540

    13.186

    -0.41%

  • RELX

    -0.7000

    30.36

    -2.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    17.35

    +1.44%

Nanjing massacre film set becomes China school holiday hotspot
Nanjing massacre film set becomes China school holiday hotspot / Photo: Hector RETAMAL - AFP

Nanjing massacre film set becomes China school holiday hotspot

The sound of machine gun fire rattled around collapsed buildings as schoolchildren eagerly explored the ravaged streets of 1930s Nanjing, delighted to be visiting the set of a Chinese blockbuster about a historic massacre.

Text size:

Slickly produced and star-studded, "Dead to Rights" is set in Nanjing, then China's capital, during six weeks of mass murder, rape and looting by the Japanese army in 1937 that killed tens if not hundreds of thousands.

In keeping with other films about the slaughter, "Dead to Rights" does not shy away from portraying the atrocities, but that hasn't deterred viewers. It has topped the Chinese box office since late July.

Its set at a suburban Shanghai film park is now open to the public, and was thronged with enthusiastic fans -- many of them young children -- when AFP visited this week.

An enormous, bullet-ridden mural of China's former leader, Chiang Kai-shek, stared down from a bombed-out building as visitors poured in, taking selfies and livestreaming excitedly.

Beneath the levity, the film had provoked strong emotions.

"It's a deep pain that comes from within, a feeling of profound hatred," said a woman surnamed He, describing her feelings towards Japan.

"History is something that can't be erased in the heart, no matter what happens in the future."

One man told AFP he had travelled almost 2,000 kilometres from northern Ningxia with his five-year-old son, who had watched the film.

Another young boy holding a Chinese flag struck a triumphant pose on a charred mound of rubble and broken glass, as his parents snapped pictures of him against the blue summer sky.

- 'Stoking fires'? -

The film's plot revolves around a group of Nanjing residents hiding in a photo studio, who are forced to develop Japanese photograph "souvenirs" of war crimes.

A South China Morning Post review called the movie "thunderously powerful" but said some violent scenes were "as though engineered to stoke the fires of anti-Japanese sentiment".

"Dead to Rights" is one of several summer releases about the war with Japan, which killed millions of Chinese, and which many feel Tokyo has never properly atoned for.

The country is gearing up for a major military parade next week to mark 80 years since Japan's defeat and World War II's end.

The "Dead to Rights" poster reads: "No Chinese person will ever forget."

"I don't think (films like this) represent hatred. It's because we need to restore history," said 37-year-old visitor Jiang Xiang.

The death toll of the massacre -- the Chinese put it at 300,000 -- remains a source of debate, and some Japanese arch-conservatives have denied it took place at all, despite overwhelming international evidence.

Jiang said awareness of China's suffering should be passed down the generations -- to teach that "we need to rely on ourselves, keep growing stronger".

- 'Understand history' -

In the on-set photo studio, a visitor's book was completely full of comments both patriotic and profane.

"Japan is the stupidest country in the world," read one in a childish scrawl.

Almost all of the parents AFP met said their children had watched the movie, with one mother from Nanjing saying their school had encouraged it.

China has no film rating system, and it is not uncommon for children to watch content that might be considered overly violent elsewhere.

"Look, that's where the head was hanging (in the film)!" a child giggled to a friend as they passed a wooden post.

Tourist He said war films "teach children how our ancestors fought for us".

The aim was to help "the children understand history -- not to make them hate or anything".

Middleschooler Li Xinyi said she found the Japanese "dislikeable" but cautioned against bitterness.

"Even though they did many cruel things to us, we still need to respect them, because now we must focus on peace."

A.P.Huber--NZN