72 Heroes
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72 Heroes | |
---|---|
Traditional | 英雄喋血 |
Simplified | 英雄喋血 |
Mandarin | Yīng Xióng Dié Xuè |
Cantonese | Jing1 Hung4 Dip4 Hyut3 |
Directed by | |
Screenplay by | Wang Mei |
Produced by | Wang Jiancheng Jiang Baoshan Choi Jae Hong |
Starring | Liu Kai-chi Tse Kwan Ho Irene Wan Elanne Kong Wang Jiancheng Zhao Bingrui Eric Tsang Alan Tam Oh U Jeong Li Zhi Zhang Yang |
Cinematography | Edmond Fung |
Edited by | Wang Chao |
Music by | Su Junjie |
Production company | Pearl River Film |
Distributed by | Pearl River Film China Film Promotion International |
Release dates |
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Running time | 112 minutes |
Country | China |
Language | Mandarin |
72 Heroes is a 2011 Chinese historical drama film directed by Hong Kong film director Derek Chiu, better known as Sung Kee Chiu, based on the story of the 72 Martyrs who sacrificed their lives in the Second Guangzhou Uprising.
Plot[]
The film takes place in Huizhou, Guangdong, China, October 1900. After failing to assassinate the governor-general by blowing up his mansion as part of the anti-Manchu Huizhou Uprising, revolutionary Shi Jianru is captured and executed. Guangzhou, Guangdong province, 1911: following other unsuccessful uprisings, Pan Dawei, deputy head of the Guangzhou department of the Tongmenghui, arrives by boat and smuggles weapons past customs officers. During a dinner party at the house of wealthy local trader Fang Hongzhi, head of the Guangxing business association, there is an assassination attempt on the Manchu Qing government's Marine Minister Li Zhun, which fails. Among the guests is Luo Zhonghuo, just arrived from Penang, Malaysia, who gets to know Fang's daughter, Huiru, also a revolutionary. Afterwards she takes him to the house of painter Gao Jianfu, head of the Tongmenghui's Guangzhou department. Zhonghuo is carrying a letter from Tongmenghui leader Sun Yat-sen, but neither Jianfu nor Dawei are sure whether he is a spy. To convince them he is genuine, Huiru suggests he tries raising some money for the movement from her father, by first becoming friendly with his cultured longtime mistress Jiang Meixi. Zhonghuo becomes Meixi's English tutor and helps Fang in getting a local gang off of the Guangxing's turf. As Chinese New Year arrives, Gao and Pan plan a mass suicide attack on the governor-general's residence - in what will become known as the Second Guangzhou Uprising of 27 April 1911.
Cast[]
- Liu Kai-chi as Gao Jianfu
- Tse Kwan-ho as Pan Dawei
- Irene Wan as Jiang Meixi
- Elanne Kong as Fang Huiru
- Wang Jiancheng as Fang Hongzhi
- Zhao Bingrui as Luo Zhonghan
- Eric Tsang as Li Zhi
- Alan Tam as Hunag Ying
- Oh U Jeong as Fang's female bodyguard
- Li Zhi
- Zhang Yang
- Wu Jian as A Hui
- Bosco Wong
- Raymond Lam
See also[]
External links[]
- 2011 films
- Chinese films
- 2010s historical drama films
- Works about the 1911 Revolution
- Mandarin-language films
- Films set in 1900
- Films set in 1911
- Films set in Guangdong
- Films shot in China
- Chinese historical drama films
- Films set in 20th-century Qing dynasty
- 2011 drama films