Heroine Li Feifei | |||||||||
Native Name: |
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Director: | Runje Shaw | ||||||||
Screenplay: | Runde Shaw and Gao Lihen | ||||||||
Starring: |
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Cinematography: | Xu Shaoyu | ||||||||
Studio: | Tianyi Film Company | ||||||||
Runtime: | 10 reels | ||||||||
Country: | China | ||||||||
Language: | Silent |
Heroine Li Feifei is a 1925 film directed by Runje Shaw for the Tianyi Film Company. Starring Fen Juhua, Lin Yongrong, and Wu Suxin, it follows a young couple who fall in love after being arranged to marry. When a spurned suitor sullies the reputation of the bride and endangers the engagement, they are assisted by a knight-errant. The film, now lost, was reported to have been a success on release. It has been described as the first wuxia picture.
The patriarch of the Hong family desires his son Yulin (Lin Yongrong) to marry a respectable woman, and thus hires a matchmaker named Chen Shu'an (Gao Lihen) to find a suitable bride. To benefit his family's public image, this woman must be virtuous and innocent, as well as beautiful. Hong Yulin is matched with Guo Huizhu (Wu Suxin), the daughter of the wealthy businessman Guo Houzhai (Tan Zhiyuan).
Seeking to win Huizhu for himself, her classmate Jiang Yimin (Zhang Dagong) decides to sabotage the relationship. He takes a picture of Huizhu during a chance meeting with Yulin, at an angle where the latter's face is not visible, and at a time when he is not wearing his usual attire. Jiang then sends it to the elder Hong with a letter besmirching Huizhu's character. Hong's father, furious, breaks off the engagement and forbids Yulin from seeing Huizhu; he does so without revealing his reasons.
Heartbroken, Huizhu attempts to kill herself, but is stopped by Li Feifei (Fen Juhua) after she flies into the courtyard. Li convinces Huizhu to maintain her spirits, then travels to the Hong home and insists that father and son speak plainly. When Yulin sees the photograph, he explains the circumstances to his embarassed father. The engagement is restored.[1]
Heroine Li Feifei was directed for the Tianyi Film Company by Runje Shaw, based on a screenplay by Runde Shaw and Gao Lihen. Cinematography was handled by Xu Shaoyu. At the time, Chinese filmmakers drawing on the success of such imported films as The Mark of Zorro (1920), The Three Musketeers (1921), and Robin Hood (1922) had begun producing a series of "ancient costume" films such as Heroine Li Feifei. Through films such as Heroine Li Feifei, their second, the Shaws sought to promote traditional Chinese values, as opposed to European ones.
In the title role of Li Feifei, the opera singer Fen Juhua was cast. She was known for her acrobatic work on the stage, and had gained a reputation for portraying women warriors (wudan). Further cast members included Wu Suxin, Wei Pengfei, Gao Lihen, Tan Zhiyuan, Zhang Dagong, Fu Shusheng, Zhang Lingli, Ding Huashi, and Zhou Kongkong.
Sources differ as to the date on which Heroine Li Feifei was released, with some listing 26 December 1925 and others providing 1 January 1926. Initially, the film was advertised using a pamphlet with cast information and illustrations of its main actors. When it found popular success, a new brochure was produced, which featured photographs of the stars with Fen Juhua in the centre as well as a more detailed summary. This silent film was ten reels in length. Advertisements emphasised the acrobatics involved, with the character Li Feifei "zooming across rooftops and jumping up walls". Critics have noted that the film's plot draws heavily from the Mandarin Ducks and Butterflies school of literature. The film is now lost.
In his history of wuxia films, Stephen Teo describes Heroine Li Feifei as "the first wuxia picture so acknowledged by film historians". It thus provided a formula for the genre: "fast action, gaudy costumes, and the thrilling acrobatics of Beijing opera." Through 1931, more than 250 films in the genre were produced in Shanghai; this included The Burning of the Red Lotus Temple in eighteen episodes. Many, including Five Vengeful Girls (1928) and The Great Woman (1929), had female leads. For her contributions to the genre, Fen Juhua has been identified variously as "the first warrior woman of Shanghai cinema" and the "first of the lady knights in the Chinese cinema."