The Sino-Japanese War at Sea 1894

The Sino-Japanese War at Sea 1894

Poster
Traditional 一八九四·甲午大海戰
Simplified 一八九四·甲午大海战
Mandarin Yībājiǔsì Jiǎwǔ Dàhaǐzhàn
Directed by Feng Xiaoning
Produced by Han Sanping
Wang Yafei
Yan Xiaoming
Written by Feng Xiaoning
Starring Lu Yi
Xia Yu
Gong Jie
Ebusi Yonglin
Yang Lixin
Sun Haiying
Lü Liping
Ma Guangze
Guo Jiaming
Zhaxi Dunzhu
Hua Xin
Gao Jun
Feng Feng
Hirata Yasuyuki
Miura Kenichi
Ye Feng
Music by Laozai
Cinematography Feng Xiaoning
Edited by Feng Xiaoning
Production
company
China Film Group Corporation
CCTV-6
Time Publication Medium Group Corporation
Release dates
  • 6 July 2012
Running time
120 minutes
Country China
Language Mandarin

The Sino-Japanese War at Sea 1894 is a 2012 Chinese historical war film directed and written by Feng Xiaoning, starring Lu Yi, Xia Yu and others. It is based on the events in the First Sino-Japanese War of 1894–1895,[1] with emphasis on the naval battles and the career of the Chinese naval officer Deng Shichang. The film premiered in China at the International Convention Centre in Weihai, Shandong, on 26 June 2012.[2]

Plot

The Sino-Japanese War at Sea 1894 is set in the late 19th century and revolves around the events of the First Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895), which was fought between the Qing Empire of China and the Empire of Japan.

A young Deng Shichang enrols in the Fujian Naval Academy, where he meets his future colleagues such as Liu Buchan and Fang Boqian. In 1877, Liu, Fang and others travel to Britain to further their studies at the Royal Naval College in London while Deng remains in China. Some years later, Deng visits his classmates in London and meets Itō Sukeyuki, who is also studying there.

The young Guangxu Emperor wants to modernise and strengthen China, but his efforts are hindered by Empress Dowager Cixi, who effectively controls the emperor and the Qing government. The Qing Empire's Beiyang Fleet is formed in the 1880s and is one of the largest naval fleets in Asia at the time. In 1886, after the Nagasaki Incident breaks out, the Meiji Emperor feels threatened by the Beiyang Fleet's prowess, so he initiates a plan to develop and enhance the capabilities of the Imperial Japanese Navy. Meanwhile, in China, the state funds originally designated for upgrading the Beiyang Fleet are used to renovate the Summer Palace to celebrate Cixi's 60th birthday.

The First Sino-Japanese War breaks out in 1894. The navies of the two empires clash at the battles of Pungdo and the Yellow Sea. At the Yellow Sea, after an exchange of gunfire between warships from both sides over a few hours, most of the Beiyang Fleet is destroyed while not a single Japanese ship is sunk. Deng Shichang's ship, the Zhiyuan, has been badly damaged. Deng gives orders for the Zhiyuan to ram the Japanese flagship Yoshino, but the Zhiyuan is sunk before it makes contact with the Yoshino. Deng stubbornly refuses to escape with the survivors and eventually drowns at sea.

After their victory at the Yellow Sea, the Japanese follow-up by launching a land invasion and win the Battle of Lüshun, after which they massacre the city's population. In the following year, the Japanese score another victory at the Battle of Weihaiwei; the Qing admiral Ding Ruchang commits suicide after his defeat. Itō Sukeyuki writes to Liu Buchan, his old classmate from the Royal Naval College, and asks him to surrender. Liu refuses and kills himself after blowing up his own warship. On 14 January 1895, the Japanese annex the Diaoyu Islands and rename them "Senkaku Islands".

The Qing Empire agrees to hold peace talks with Japan and appoints Li Hongzhang as its representative to negotiate with Itō Hirobumi and Mutsu Munemitsu in Shimonoseki. Japan demands that the Qing Empire cedes to it Taiwan, Penghu and the Liaodong Peninsula, and pay war reparations amounting to 250 million taels, among other things. Li rejects the terms and leaves. He is shot in the cheek by a Japanese fanatic on the way back. While recovering in hospital, he receives a telegraph from the Qing government instructing him to accept Japan's terms. He signs the Treaty of Shimonoseki on 17 April 1895.

Before the film ends, the narrator of the film drops an old photograph of Deng Shichang and his classmates at the Fujian Naval Academy into the sea. The photograph sinks to the bottom of the sea and comes to rest in the wreckage of a warship.

Cast

Production

Feng Xiaoning revealed that the screenplay for The Sino-Japanese War at Sea 1894 was created over a period of 22 years. Qi Qizhang, the history consultant for the film, is the president of the China First Sino-Japanese War Research Association and was 90 years old when the film was released in 2012. Feng said, "When Mr Qi Qizhang first read my screenplay, he remarked, 'This is the best script about the First Sino-Japanese War I've seen in my life.'" Feng also consulted other history experts such as Xu Hua from the Military Museum of the Chinese People's Revolution and Chen Yue from the Naval History Research Association. They worked closely together to finalise the script and the lines spoken by the characters. The parts in the film about the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands is based on research done by Qi over many years.[3]

The shooting locations included Liugong Island in Shandong[4] and Changshou Lake in Chongqing.[5] The naval battle scenes were shot at Hulun Lake in Inner Mongolia.[3]

Feng said that his intended target audience for the film is actually youths in China. He felt that they are lacking in moral values and self-awareness, so he wanted to portray Deng Shichang as an incorruptible and righteous hero in the late Qing dynasty – a period when Chinese society was in decline due to opium addiction and political corruption – and make him a role model for Chinese youths to emulate.[3]

Reception

The Sino-Japanese War at Sea 1894 was criticised for historical inaccuracies and for making references to the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands dispute – a topic which is somewhat irrelevant to the film.

Awards

Year Award Result Notes
2012 China Movie Channel Media Awards - Best Film Won [6]
China Movie Channel Media Awards - Best Supporting Actor (Sun Haiying) Won [7]
8th Beijing Youth Welfare Film Festival - Special Award Won
8th Chinese American Film Festival - Special Award Won

References

External links