Sha Jia Dian Grain Station

Gan Xuewei
Zhang Ping, Du Defu, Pu Ke, Li Qing, Zhang Ying, Guan Zongxiang, Li Jian, Zhou Diao, Xiong Saisheng, Ma Ming, An Zhenjiang, Guo Yiwen, Shi Hong, Meng Shun, Han Juqing, Wang Lifu, Liu Yansheng, Zheng Baomin, Liu Shilong, Xia Peijie, Wu Zicun, Li Baolan
1954
Mainland China
Completed
Mandarin Chinese
87 minutes
Detailed introduction
This film (drama)Also known as沙家店粮站,is aMainland ChinaProducerwomen sex,At1954Released in year
。The dialogue language isMandarin Chinese,Current Douban rating6.9(For reference only)。
Adapted from the novel "The Copper Wall and Iron Wall" by Liu Qing. In the spring of 1947, Chiang Kai-shek's bandit forces mobilized hundreds of thousands of troops to crazily invade the Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia Border Region. At that time, the military and civilians in the border region, under the leadership of Chairman Mao and the Party Central Committee, actively withdrew from Yan'an and repeatedly dealt heavy blows to the frenzied enemy. In July, our army, in order to lure the enemy to advance north, fiercely attacked Yulin City. At this point, ensuring the food supply for tens of thousands of field troops became the primary task for the people of northern Shaanxi in their fight for victory. Sha Jia Dian is a district in Mizhi County, where a grain station was established. Many troops came there to collect grain, and the food supply at the grain station was clearly running short. District Chief Cao and District Committee Secretary Jin decided to send militia captain Shi Defu to neighboring districts to urge for grain supplies. On the way, the grain transport team encountered enemy aircraft air raids, but fortunately, Shi Defu calmly directed the air defense, preventing major losses. This event was praised by Officer Ge, who was traveling with them. Officer Ge passed through Sha Jia Dian to inspect the war preparations and specifically reminded them not only to manage the grain station well but also to take care of everything and organize the masses to prepare for battle, ensuring that the masses did not suffer losses. Secretary Jin followed Officer Ge's instructions, deciding to assign the responsibility of the grain station to Shi Defu, and found local villagers Shi Yonggong, Ba Hu, and Er Carpenter to assist him. After arranging the grain station work adequately, the district cadres went to the countryside to inspect the war preparations. The war situation was rapidly evolving, with the advancing enemy approaching the neighboring county of Suide. At that time, anxiety was widespread among the people, and Shi Yonggong began to waver, while landlords took advantage of the situation to commit arson and destruction, with over 180 stones of grain still stored at the grain station. How to properly handle this grain? Shi Defu went to the Zhenchuan Fort Support Committee, located over 30 miles from the grain station, to ask Officer Ge for instructions. Zhenchuan Fort was then in a tense retreat, with the enemy approaching from Yulin already on the opposite bank of the river. Shi Defu met Officer Ge, who instructed him to distribute 100 stones of grain to the field army that night, and the remainder must be evacuated to north of the main road before dawn. Finally, he told Shi Defu, "Although the enemy has almost occupied all the county towns, Chairman Mao is still in northern Shaanxi... Victory will come soon." This news greatly encouraged Shi Defu, who immediately rushed back to Sha Jia Dian. That night, heavy rain poured down, and flash floods occurred. Shi Defu and others in the grain station stayed up all night waiting for the troops to transport the grain. Before dawn, they received an urgent notification from Officer Ge, realizing that the transport team could not come due to the road being cut off by floodwaters, prompting them to mobilize the masses on-site to evacuate the grain. That night, the enemy occupied Zhenchuan Fort and decided to invade Wulongpu through Sha Jia Dian the next day. The starving enemy scoured for grain everywhere and prepared to loot the Sha Jia Dian grain station. At dawn, the enemy's vanguard troops had approached the village entrance, but there were still over 80 stones of grain in the grain station that could not be evacuated in time. Shi Defu led everyone to plant landmines, then went up the mountain to prepare to disrupt the enemy. In the most critical moment, District Chief Cao led a guerrilla team to come to the rescue, finally repelling the enemy's attempt to seize the grain. Shi Defu and others went down the mountain overnight to evacuate the grain, and what could not be evacuated was buried locally. After another tense night, just as the grain was finished being evacuated, the enemy entered the village, and Ba Hu was heroically sacrificed while covering the grain transport team’s retreat. Shi Defu was busy protecting Shi Yonggong’s retreat and hurried back to the grain station to find the grain accounts that Shi Yonggong did not have time to take. Just as he hid the grain accounts at the cliff outside the village, he was unfortunately injured and captured by the enemy. Panic about food among the enemy troops reached an extreme, and an enemy officer believed that capturing Shi Defu would lead them to the food, so they brutally tortured and interrogated him about the grain's whereabouts. However, apart from being scolded by Shi Defu, they gained nothing. Although severely wounded, Shi Defu persisted in fighting. That night, he and other captured civilians killed the sentry and escaped from the jaws of death. When he arrived below the cliff and found the grain accounts still buried underground, he felt as if a heavy stone had been lifted from his heart. At this time, our army had begun a fierce counterattack. On the battlefield at the top of the mountain in Sha Jia Dian, Shi Defu met Secretary Jin and Shi Yonggong and carefully handed over the grain accounts he had fought to preserve to Secretary Jin. The Northwest Campaign finally achieved a glorious victory, creating favorable conditions for the nationwide counteroffensive. The revolutionary people of northern Shaanxi, with their revolutionary traditions, once again wrote a glorious chapter in the history of revolutionary warfare.