Sun, Moon and Star: Part 1 (1961) Poster

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7/10
SUN, MOON AND STAR - Effective wartime drama from Hong Kong, in 2 parts
BrianDanaCamp4 November 2006
SUN, MOON AND STAR is a compelling romantic drama filmed in color, in two parts, in 1961 by Cathay, a Hong Kong studio that thrived in the late 1950s and early '60s before losing market share to its well-financed rival, Shaw Bros. Cathay tended to focus on intimate dramas and comedies focusing on the ordinary workaday people of Hong Kong and China as opposed to Shaw's more lavish Hollywood-style productions.

SUN, MOON AND STAR tells the story of a young man, Jianbai (Yang Zhang), from a well-off family in southern China and the three women he falls in love with in a period spanning the years of Japanese invasion, occupation and aftermath in the 1930s and '40s. The title refers to the symbols Jianbai applies to each of the three women. "Star" is his childhood sweetheart, A-Lan (Lucilla You Min), a country girl and orphan who lives with an abusive aunt and uncle who try to marry her off to an army officer. "Moon" is Qiuming (Grace Chang), a cousin of Jianbai's from a good family. She's a virtuoso piano player and singer and is the more cosmopolitan one, always well dressed, the perfect hostess, somewhat impetuous, but always nurturing and gracious. "Sun" is Su Yanan (Julie Yeh Feng), a student activist who later becomes a soldier in the Nationalist army and fights the Japanese in combat. She's a woman of action and devotes herself to larger causes than personal happiness. Jianbai's indecisiveness regarding the women (each of whom gets a marriage proposal from him at different points in the story) causes problems for everybody in the course of the decade-plus span of the film.

Based on a popular, serialized novel by Xu Su, the film was released in two parts, totaling three-and-a-half hours. Part 1 ends rather abruptly as Jianbai and Su Yanan flee with the other university students to the countryside as the Japanese invade. Part 2 (reviewed separately on this site) should be seen right after Part 1 since it really is all one movie.

One of the chief selling points of this movie is the rich and beautiful film color, as captured on the Panorama DVD. This approximates what we might have seen on a movie screen back in 1961, as opposed to the digitally enhanced restored color we see in the Shaw Bros. DVDs coming out from Celestial, which are clean and bright and, admittedly, a welcome relief from the degraded pan-and-scan VHS tapes we've had to make do with for years, but look nothing like the way the films did when they ran in theaters decades ago. (I'm not complaining--believe me, I'd rather have the Celestial DVDs than unrestored copies--I'm just pointing out the contrast in the color.) The other big selling point is the cast. The three lead actresses are nothing short of magnificent. They are beautiful, but in a down-to-earth, believable way, in contrast to the glamorous, more idealized Shaw Bros. stars of the era (e.g. Linda Lin Dai, Betty Loh Ti and Lily Ho). Two of the actresses here play extended scenes without makeup and are just as magnetic. They have great faces and the filmmakers give them lots of closeups.
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3/10
Chinese shaggy dog "epic"
freeds20 October 2007
Brian Camp's review (which see) supplies an adequate summary of the film's plot and correctly lauds its excellent cast, whose performances, however, often verge on the overcooked. The leading male character is a complete schmuck — as far as his approach to his three "lady loves" is concerned. Somehow, each time he meets a new one, his "love" for the previous one seems to fade away. That such clueless behavior cannot lead to romantic success should not surprise anyone. The enduring, close friendship of lady-loves #1 and #2 that follows their desertion by this cad is quite touching, probably the best thing about this overlong, soapy, shaggy, Chinese dog.

Camp's review, however, says nothing about the film's most glaring omissions. The invasion of China by Imperial Japan was legendarily brutal, especially in its treatment of civilians. The film shows no instances of destruction of houses, villages, towns etc. and no scenes of torture, rape or execution of captives. Indeed, we never even see the invaders themselves! (Why? So as not to offend the regime of leftover war criminals that, by 1961, had become a firm U.S. ally?) Any hint of Chinese suffering comes to us second hand, at best. But the real falsity of this epic can be grasped by its principal omission. Imagine a war story of China in the 1930s and 1940s which never mentions the Communists! The flags that are shown being held aloft during the war's-end celebrations (1945) are those of "Nationalist" China, i.e., the flag of Chiang Kai-Shek's Kuomintang. How, then, did the Communist Party of China take power only four years later, precipitating the wholesale flight of Chiang & Co. to Taiwan? Anyone who knows the history of that era knows that the Kuomintang's defeat was due largely to their persistent unwillingness to fight the Japanese invaders, expending most of their energy instead on attacking the Communists, which allowed the latter to don the mantle of "the true Chinese patriots." To give the impression that the Nationalists defeated the Japanese invasion by their own efforts is to perpetrate a colossal, historical fraud, one that even a rabidly anti-Mao Hong Kong audience must have found hard to swallow.

Barry Freed
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