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The Last Three Classes
The Last Three Classes

Wang Xiaolie
Yu Jinwei, Juanzi, Song Yuncheng
Unknown
Mainland China
Completed
Mandarin/Standard Chinese
Detailed introduction
This film (drama)Also known as老三届,is aMainland ChinaProducerbeauty live,At0Released in year
。The dialogue language isMandarin/Standard Chinese,Current Douban rating0.0(For reference only)。
Many people may know the origin of the term "The Last Three Classes." Those born in the late 1940s have had a diverse, complex, challenging, and often painful, yet profoundly precious experience. This is a romantic drama that begins with entangled love, changing friendships, and marriage ethics, telling the stories of ordinary people in a special era, but it is far from over... The TV drama "The Last Three Classes" is currently airing. The original title was "Accompanying You Like a Dream," and it was temporarily named "Class 5, Grade 2 of 86" during production. As it neared its official release, it was renamed "The Last Three Classes" based on expert suggestions; this name more accurately reflects the true content of the story. Friends from the Last Three Classes, children of the Last Three Classes, and people from that era should pay close attention; here you will find your past, your classmates, your fellow townspeople, your happiness, your missed opportunities, your dreams, and the places where dreams were shattered... The Last Three Classes refer to the high school graduates of 1966, 1967, and 1968. They responded to the call of their leader, all going to the countryside to settle down and "receive re-education from the poor and lower-middle peasants," known as "a sea of red" or "educated youth." Later classes saw various types of assignments, including labor, rural settlement, suburban farms, vocational schools, collective and individual training, and by 1976, the 76th graduating class was the last. By 1978, the educated youth began to return to the cities, and factory workers' children could also replace them in large numbers. The Last Three Classes emerged from that special era of fiery life, political fervor, inner turmoil, and social upheaval. Those once young people, who endured the trials of time, have now become the backbone of their families, society, and era; they are now respected elderly citizens, grandfathers, and grandmothers. The synonym of the Last Three Classes is not what people have always imagined as "fervor." The Last Three Classes had enthusiasm and impulse, resonating with the pulse of the time; they had public spirit, free from selfish motives; they only cared about moving forward, unafraid of setbacks; they faced unimaginable difficulties with fearless courage. As history moved into the 1980s, rushed into the 90s, and surged into the 21st century, people found that the "Last Three Classes," having weathered the storms of time, still bloom like flowers in every corner of the motherland. The synonym of the Last Three Classes also differs from the past understanding of "complaints." Their tears fell in the white mountains and black waters of Northeast China, their sweat soaked the land of Qi and Lu, and their blood dripped on the rolling Southern Ling Mountains. They were surrounded by excitement, motivation, and even temptation; they simply wanted to see the world progress rapidly and leave behind backwardness and poverty. When everything passed, they faced obstacles, blame, ridicule, and difficulties. They held no grudges, they worked hard without complaints, enduring all misunderstandings on their battered shoulders. They only sighed softly at the passing of their youth...