The Men Who Lost China | |
Director: | Mitch Anderson |
Producer: | Mitch Anderson |
Starring: | Dave Hickman, Wang Gungwu, Minxin Pei, Richard Baum and Yang Rui. |
Music: | Audio Network |
Cinematography: | Mitch Anderson, Rick Curnutt |
Editing: | Mitch Anderson |
Distributor: | Deep Waters Films[1] |
Runtime: | 52 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
The Men Who Lost China is a documentary film created by Mitch Anderson. Released in 2013, the documentary explores the United States' attitude towards China following the 1911 Chinese Revolution and the First World War and how the attitude of other Western nations then helped shape China's national identity, particularly its foreign policy and alignment with the former Soviet Union.[2]
As today's China is gaining its undisputed superpower status, the world press still speculates over its intentions. The documentary suggests that any worthy prediction must be rooted in the diligent study of past events and the comprehension of the Western and Chinese perception of these events. The US involvement in the Chinese Revolution of 1911 and the perceived Western betrayal in the aftermath of the First World War are the two most pivotal points in Chinese modern history that the documentary examines, subtitled into English, Chinese, and Spanish.