[China] - Ten groundbreaking 'firsts' in Chinese movie history

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
2025 marks the 120th anniversary of Chinese cinema
From Chinas first film Dingjun Mountain produced in 1905 to Ne Zha 2 topping the international ticket office for animated movies this
year, Chinese movie theater has passed through a century, leaving behind countless treasures
Today, lets revisit 10 groundbreaking firsts in Chinese film history
Film made in China: Dingjun MountainIn autumn 1905, Ren Qingtai, the owner of the Fengtai Photo Studio, collaborated with Peking Opera
master Tan Xinpei to shoot several scenes of the opera film Dingjun Mountain (Ding Jun Shan), which premiered at the Daguanlou Theater in
the Dashilar historic location of Beijings Qianmen District on December 28, 1905
Its creation represented the birth of Chinese cinema.A still from the opera movie Dingjun Mountain
/ CGTNA still from the opera motion picture Dingjun Mountain
/ CGTNA still from the opera film Dingjun Mountain
/ CGTNLocation of the earliest movie screening in China: Youyicun Tea HouseOn August 11, 1896, a projector was used to evaluate some
scattered shots that recorded peoples work and life at the Youyicun Tea House at the Xuyuan Garden in Shanghai, which drew in lots of locals
to view and marked the first movie screening in China
Xuyuan Garden hence ended up being the first private garden in the history of Chinese movie theater to screen films to the public.First
location for screening Chinese movies: Daguanlou TheaterLocated in the Dashilar historic location of Beijings Qianmen location, the
Daguanlou Theater was built 120 years back throughout the late Qing Dynasty
In 1905, the Dahengxuan Tea House was relabelled the Daguanlou Theater and evaluated Chinas very first film –-- Dingjun Mountain
Daguanlou later became a movie theater, supplying culture and entertainment to visitors from home and abroad
First professional movie theater in China: Shanghai Hongkew CinemaIn 1908, Spanish business owner Antonio Ramos established the first
specialized cinema in Shanghai –-- the Hongkew Cinema
Consequently, a number of movie theaters emerged in major cities such as Shanghai and Beijing, laying the structure for a nationwide cinema
market
A file image of the Hongkew Cinema in Shanghai./ CGTNA file photo of the Hongkew Cinema in Shanghai./ CGTNChinas first long function film:
Yan Ruisheng Yan Ruisheng is a 100-minute quiet black-and-white movie that was produced and screened in 1921
Its release put an end to the Western monopoly on sound movies in the function film market at that time, marking a new era in the
advancement of Chinese cinema.First sound movie in China: Sing-song Girl Red PeonyThe three-hour movie Sing-song Girl Red Peony was shot
in 1930 and released in March 1931 and depicts the life and love story of a Peking Opera vocalist
It is a crucial turning point in the history of Chinese film, as it introduced a wave of sound movie production in the country.Chinas first
color film: A Wedding in the DreamThe Peking Opera film A Wedding in the Dream, also called Happiness Neither in Life nor in Death,
Remorse at Death, or Sheng Si Hen in Chinese, was launched in the late 1940s
The movie was directed by the distinguished Chinese filmmaker Fei Mu and starred the Peking Opera master Mei Lanfang.First feature-length
film after the founding of the PRC: The BridgeThe 90-minute movie The Bridge was produced by the Northeast Film Studio and screened in
1949
It tells the story of a group of factory employees who overcame many troubles to fix the Songhua River train bridge, ultimately contributing
to the triumph of the Liberation War.First color function movie after the starting of the PRC: The New Years SacrificeProduced by the
Beijing Film Studio in 1956, the 100-minute movie The New Years Sacrifice (Zhu Fu) was adapted from the book of the exact same name by
Chinese literary master Lu Xun
Through the terrible life experiences of Xianglins other half, it reflects the social contradictions in the wake of the 1911 Revolution
The story is considered a driver for social change.First wide-screen color movie in China: The Adventure of a MagicianProduced by the
Shanghai Tianma Film Studio in 1962, the 47-minute film The Adventure of a Magician was generally shot in Shanghai
The movie provided Shanghai as it appeared at that time from the perspective of a magician returning from overseas, and taped information of
the city through a wealth of real-life scenes