Known for Acting
Bai Ge (Hong Xuemin) is a female worker at an electrical substation. In an accident, her proud braid nearly causes a production accident, so Bai Ge decides to cut off her long, black, oily hair, and she walks into the barbershop of a young man, Xu Li (Zhang Tianxi). Xu Li designed a very good-looking look for Bai Ge, which makes Bai Ge very satisfied, she also became a regular customer of Xu‘s barber store, one after another, the two young people have sparks of love. Once by chance, Bai witnessed Xu with a young woman talking and laughing, jealousy arose, when she found the barber store wants to talk to Xu, and saw Xu was two police officers away, did Xu commit a crime? In the midst of confusion and disbelief, Bai Ge and Xu Li cut off contact.
Feature film produced by Beijing Film Studio in 1980, directed by Qian Jiang and Zhao Yuan. During the period of the "Gang of Four," Chen Hao -- a veteran cadre of a certain unit of the People's Liberation Army -- is brutally persecuted. Chen's three biological sons are also tortured physically and mentally. Defending the honor of a soldier, Chen is beaten into disability. After the collapse of the "Gang of Four," Chen returns to his post. Two of his children see their love lives fall apart, due to their father's precarious status, while the third child pursues a decadent lifestyle to dangerous ends.
Drama written by Su Shuyangin in 1978. The feature film adaptation was produced by Beijing Film Studio in 1980. Fang Lingxuan, a veteran Chinese medicine doctor, devotes himself to the research of new drugs for coronary heart disease and receives the enthusiastic support of Premier Zhou Enlai. But the Ministry of Health, controlled by the "Gang of Four," uses Fang's son-in-law to obstruct the research. Just as Fang and his colleagues finally succeed in producing a new drug, Premier Zhou dies. Grief turns into strength, and despite persecution, Fang works hard.
During the Cultural Revolution, the distinguished Marshal He Long is denounced and persecuted.
The Public Security Bureau intercept a telegram notifying foreign agents to retrieve the "110 secret". Shi Yan, head of the Reconnaissance Section, starts a campaign of counter-espionage, but one of his agents is soon killed on board a train.
A taut wartime thriller, Red Crag: Life in Eternal Flame anticipates the paranoia and violence of the imminent Cultural Revolution while harking back to the aesthetic splendour of the Golden Age Shanghai cinema of the late 1940s. (This opulence is largely due to the work of cinematographer Zhu Jinming, the master visual stylist of Shangrao Concentration Camp and other key "Seventeen Years" films.) The film concerns a hard-boiled woman working in the Chongqing Communist underground during World War II, whose commitment to the guerrilla cause is only intensified after she witnesses her husband's head mounted on the city walls by the Nationalist forces.