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Entering Glory

Entering Glory

Drama, War

Yan Xueshu, Zhou Youchao

Wang Gang, Xu Chenglin, Ba Jingmin, Shi Xiaohong, He Yaozhi

1994

Mainland China

Film review analysis↗

Completed

Mandarin Chinese

101 minutes

2025-02-20 03:58:29

Detailed introduction

This film (drama)Also known as步入辉煌,is aMainland ChinaProducerwomen sex,At1994Released in year 。The dialogue language isMandarin Chinese,Current Douban rating7.9(For reference only)。
During the Anti-Japanese War, General Yang Jingyu, commander of the Northeast Anti-Japan United Army, found his forces heavily surrounded by Japanese troops. He ordered his main forces to break through, while he stayed on the mountain with only three soldiers—Chang Huaizhong, Tang Fulü, and Zhu Ershi—to attract enemy fire. The betrayal of the 29th Division commander, Cheng Bin, led to heavy losses for the breakthrough forces, causing General Yang immense grief. When Cheng Bin returned home for a visit, he was scolded by his mother, and his wife executed him in anger. Chang Huaizhong's lover, Zhou Fenglan, brought supplies to the general on the mountain, where she and Chang Huaizhong reunited. The Japanese offered high positions and wealth to persuade General Yang to surrender, but he rebuffed them fiercely. The Japanese launched an attack, resulting in the deaths of Chang Huaizhong and Tang Fulü, while Fenglan also fought to the death with the enemy. The heads of the martyrs were hung on the city walls, and many citizens were massacred for bowing to these heroes. The main forces of the Anti-Japan United Army sent people to rescue General Yang, but they failed to break through the Japanese blockade. A civilian bringing supplies to the general was also killed by the Japanese. General Yang and Zhu Ershi finally broke through the enemy's blockade, but Zhu Ershi, seriously injured and unwilling to drag down the general, committed suicide by gunshot, asking the general to use his flesh for sustenance and to keep the anti-Japanese flag flying. General Yang sorrowfully buried his comrade's body and crawled down the mountain in exhaustion. Hunger struck mercilessly; he pulled out cotton and swallowed it with snow. Once again, he was betrayed by national traitors and fell into the encirclement of the Japanese. Sanmu respectfully urged General Yang to surrender. In righteous indignation, General Yang angrily chastised the enemy chieftain, willing to dye the rivers and mountains of China with his blood, refusing to stand side by side with the Japanese. Bullets from the Japanese forces rained down on General Yang; he was hit thirteen times yet still glared at the enemy, standing tall. Sanmu was impressed; faced with such a resolute opponent, he took off his military hat and bowed deeply in respect... The cruel Japanese dissected General Yang's body to dispel their doubts. They discovered that his stomach was no different from an ordinary person's, except that it contained no food—only cotton and grass...

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