Dongjiang Special Task Force

Huang Qi
Xie Fang, Li Qiang, Ma Su, Qin Yi, Luo Jiaying, Zhao Longhao, Huang Qi
2006
Mainland China
Completed
Mandarin Chinese
89 minutes
Detailed introduction
This film (drama)Also known as东江特遣队,is aMainland ChinaProducerwomen sex,At2006Released in year
。The dialogue language isMandarin Chinese,Current Douban rating5.1(For reference only)。
In the winter of 1941, Japan declared war on the UK, the US, and France, launching the Pacific War. During a bombing of Malaysia by Japanese planes, Lin Yazhen's family of eleven was killed, with only she and her older brother Lin Yalong surviving. Their mother urged Lin Yazhen and Lin Yalong to return to their hometown of Huizhou by the Dongjiang River in Guangdong before she passed away. They joined the overseas Chinese anti-Japanese organization and the Chinese Overseas Service Association. Fueled by national hatred, they seized an opportunity to join the Dongjiang anti-Japanese guerrilla team and followed a Dongjiang special task force to Hong Kong to carry out a secret mission assigned by the Southern Bureau. In 2005, while the world celebrated the 60th anniversary of the victory over fascism, Guangdong Dongjiang Television's program "The Past" invited Lin Yazhen, the last surviving female warrior of the special task force, now in her eighties, from Malaysia to share her experiences in Hong Kong during a secret mission to rescue cultural figures. As the host asked questions, Lin Yazhen gradually unveiled the tragic and painful memories she had kept deep within her heart.
In the spring of 1942, Lin Yazhen and her brother Lin Yalong were assigned to Liu Ziliang's special task force, which immediately infiltrated Japanese-occupied Hong Kong. Lin Yazhen was a naturally kind nurse, but through her interactions with Liu Ziliang, she perceived him as a person hardened and made ruthless by the war machinery.
During an operation, Lin Yazhen and Liu Ziliang unexpectedly encountered a group of abandoned war orphans being bullied by the traitor Lei Laohu's subordinates. Although Lin Yazhen pleaded with Liu Ziliang with desperate eyes several times, his impassive face led her to disregard the discipline of the task force and sell her family heirloom bracelet to rescue the orphans.
At the same time, Liu Ziliang secretly rescued the orphans. This changed Lin Yazhen's view of him. As she continued to interact with Liu Ziliang, she discovered he cared for every comrade in the task force in his unique way and never turned his back on the suffering around him.
Later, Lin Yazhen learned that Liu Ziliang, like her, had lost his entire family to the Japanese. During a mission, her brother Lin Yalong heroically sacrificed himself while trying to burn down the Japanese granary, entrusting Lin Yazhen to Liu Ziliang before his death. Liu Ziliang returned to the meeting point, carrying both physical and emotional pain. When he faced Lin Yazhen, two warriors with deeply buried feelings for each other held back their desire for love in the midst of war. Their brief encounter could have blossomed into a beautiful relationship but was about to be shattered by the flames of war.
Before their separation, Liu Ziliang returned to Lin Yazhen the bracelet she had sold to help the war orphans. This heartfelt gesture revealed their deep emotions, which had emerged amid the harsh realities of war, as he left his cherished pocket watch to her. Lin Yazhen held the six-year-old orphan Amei, whom she had rescued from the flames of war, and watched Liu Ziliang and his comrades set off on their final mission. This was their last meeting. The only memento they shared was the pocket watch Liu Ziliang had given her—a solitary reminder amid the inferno of war.
In the final operation, Liu Ziliang and other comrades fought bravely, holding back the Japanese troops and ensuring the successful protection and transfer of cultural figures. Ultimately, they all sacrificed themselves tragically; after Liu Ziliang's death, the Japanese discovered four characters inscribed on his back: "Sworn to Resist Japan." This represented the most powerful vow of a resistance fighter from our Chinese nation.
On the 60th anniversary of the victory in the war, Lin Yazhen, as the sole survivor of the special task force, recounted this little-known history, telling the story of the Dongjiang children fighting valiantly against the Japanese army. She narrated the heroic tales of the Dongjiang children amidst the flames of war. In the program "The Past," Lin Yazhen reunited with Amei, the six-year-old girl who had been saved by the task force 60 years ago and who was now over sixty herself. The two women, both shaped by war, embraced in a long, tearful reunion that deeply moved the audience.
In front of the Hero Memorial, the old warrior Lin Yazhen expressed her heartfelt wishes, saying that after her death, she wanted her ashes scattered in the Dongjiang River, hoping to reunite with the comrades she fought alongside. She believed that Captain Liu and the comrades would come to meet her.
Source: http://yule.sohu.com/20060420/n242912433.shtml