From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This is a Chinese name; the family name
is Fei.
Fei Mu (simplified Chinese:
费穆; traditional Chinese:
費穆; pinyin: Fèi Mù) (1906 -
1951) was a major Chinese film director from the pre-Communist
era.
Biography
Born in Shanghai, China, Fei Mu is considered by many
to be one of the major film directors prior to the Communist
takeover in 1949. Known for his artistic style and costume
dramas, Fei made his first film, 1933's Night in the City
(produced by the Lianhua Film Company), at the
young age of 27, and he was met with both critical and popular
acclaim (the film, unfortunately, is now lost). Continuing to make films with Lianhua,
Fei directed films throughout the 1930s and became a major talent
in the industry, with films like 1936's Blood
on Wolf Mountain (often seen as an allegory on the war
with Japan)[1] and
1935's Song of
China, a glorification of traditional values that was part
of the New
Life Movement. Later, Song of China became one of the
few films that had a limited release in the United States.[2]
Fei's legacy as one of China's greatest directors was sealed
with his 1948 influential masterpiece Spring in a Small Town
about a love triangle in post-war China (it was later remade by Tian
Zhuangzhuang in 2002 as Springtime in a Small
Town). In 2005, Spring in a Small Town was
declared the greatest Chinese films ever made by the Hong Kong Film
Critics Association.[3] Fei
remained active in this so-called "Second Golden Age" and also
directed China's first color film Remorse at Death (1948), which
incorporated Beijing Opera and starred Mei Lanfang.[4].
Following the Communist revolution in 1949,
Fei Mu, along with many other artists and intellectuals fled to
Hong Kong. There he founded Longma Film Company ("Dragon-Horse
Films") with Zhu
Shilin and Fei Luyi and produced (under the Longma name) Zhu
Shilin's The Flower Girl (1951).
Following his death in Hong Kong in 1951, Fei Mu and his work fell
into obscurity, as much of his filmography was forgotten or ignored
on the Mainland, rejected by leftist critics as indicative of
rightist ideologies.[5] It was
not until the 1980s, when the China Film Archive re-opened after
being closed down during the Cultural Revolution did Fei Mu's
work find a new audience. Most significant was a new print made by
the China Film Archive from the original negative of Spring in
a Small Town.[6]
Filmography
Director
Screenwriter
Producer
| Year |
English Title |
Chinese Title |
| 1951 |
Flower Girl |
花姑娘 |
Further
reading
- Pang, Laikwan (2002), Building a
New China in Cinema: The Chinese Left-Wing Cinema Movement,
1932-1937, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., ISBN
0-7425-0946-X
See also
Notes
- ^
"A Blue Apple in a City for
Sale". Time Magazine. 1977-03-27. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,946771-1,00.html. Retrieved
2007-04-15.
- ^
"Song of China, aka Filial
Piety (Tianlun)". UCSD Chinese Cinema Web-Based Learning
Center. 2003-01-10. http://chinesecinema.ucsd.edu/film/tiannun.html. Retrieved
2007-07-18.
- ^
"Welcome to the 24th Hong Kong
Film Awards". 24th Annual Hong Kong Film Awards. http://www.hkfaa.com/news/100films.html. Retrieved
2007-04-14.
- ^
Zhang Yingjin, Chinese National Cinema, (London: Routledge
Press, 2004), 101.
- ^
Li, Cheuk-to (2000), "Spring in a Small
Town: Mastery and Restraint", Cinemaya
49
- ^
Artificial-Eye.com staff. "Then and Now: Two Versions of
Springtime in a Small Town". Artificial-Eye.com. http://www.artificial-eye.com/video/ART260/more2.html. Retrieved
2007-04-14.
External
links