Film Screening: “Anti-Japanese War Veteran” (Jiang Nengjie, 2015)
Jiang Nengjie, director
Jiang Nengjie, 2015, 58 min, China, in Chinese with English subtitles
Introduction by Professor Kang Liu (AMES).
Following the screening, stay for a conversation with director Jiang Nengjie, moderated by Professor Liu.
Synopsis
A veteran, Mr. Long’s life was full of stories. Yet, he lived his life in silence and never told others about his experience on the battlefield. There were many scars on his body and he got shot three times alone during the Battle of Mount Song. One bullet went between bones and the scar can be clearly seen.
Mr. Long went to war in the year he got married, where he received a letter from his wife. It read, “I’m going to remarry, may I get your approval?” Later on, Chiang Kai-shek was defeated and asked him to go to Taiwan together with the Nationalists. Mr. Long refused, saying, “No, I haven’t seen my parents for years.” However, when he got back to his hometown, his parents soon passed away and his wife had been remarried for two years. After that, he never married again and lived his whole life lonely.
Mr. Long was called a bad guy and “soldier riffraff” during the Cultural Revolution. Afterwards, when people asked him about his experiences on the battlefield, he got scared, as political investigations immediately came to his mind. “I explained everything back then, why are you asking me to again? I’ve explained so many times”. In order to get rehabilitated, he kept visiting the leaders of relevant institutions. All his family tried to persuade him not to do so, because “You’re a Kuomintang soldier.”
His health was getting worse and worse, with severe stomach problems, no care from his children, and high medical fees. He said, “I can’t be cured. If I don’t die this year, I’ll die next year. There’s no point living for a few more years. I’d better die today and I don’t want to be a human being in the next life. It’s too tough.”
Only in 2013 did the Ministry of Civil Affairs officially announce the rehabilitation of these soldiers. The ministry promised that there were funds to deal with difficulties faced in their old age. When Mr. Long heard this, he could not conceal his excitement, trembling all over. He kept asking, “Is this for real?” However, he passed away before he received this pension. At Mr. Long’s funeral, a villager loudly proclaimed his memorial speech, which drew us into deep thought…
synopsis taken from the Chinese Independent Film Archive
About the director:
Jiang Nengjie is a renowned independent filmmaker, documentarian, and director. He is the founder of “Cotton Sand” Video Studio and “Cotton Sand” Village Library, a winner of the Phoenix Television Top Ten Public Welfare Figures Award, and a German Blue Study House Foundation 2024 visiting scholar. He was born in Hunan province in 1985 and was member of the first generation left behind by parents looking for work in cities. In 2009, he established the Mianhuasha Film Studio which produced numerous documentary films featuring the countryside in China. In 2010, he made the documentary film, The Road, which was nominated for the 7th China Documentary Film Festival. His 2014 film, Children at a Village School, about village children left behind by their parents who go to the cities to work as migrant workers, won Best Documentary Film in the 3rd Phoenix Documentary Awards.
His works focus on topics such as left-behind children, war veterans, pneumoconiosis, intellectual disabilities, and sexual minorities. Representative films include Children at a Village School; Grade Nine; Shorty; Miners, the Horsekeeper, and Pneumoconiosis; Anti-Japanese War Veteran; We Will Have Everything; General's Attendant Guard; Rainbow Cruise; and Fen. His films have been shortlisted at the Shanghai International Film Festival, the Warsaw International Film Festival, the Beijing International Film Festival, the Phoenix Documentary Awards, and other domestic and international film festivals.
Film trailer:
This screening is co-sponsored by APSI, the Duke Program of Research on China, and Professor Jian Liu (John & Deborah McNeill, Jr. Distinguished Professor, Division of Chemical Biology and Medicinal Chemistry)