Vanguard of the Revolutionary Army

Yi Ming
Zhang Yunian, Gu Yelu, Feng Qi, Wu Wenlun, Qi Jianqiu, Zhang Yan, Ge Sha, Tan Zengwei
1981
Mainland China
Completed
Mandarin Chinese
94 minutes
Detailed introduction
This film (drama)Also known as革命军中马前卒,is aMainland ChinaProducerwomen sex,At1981Released in year
。The dialogue language isMandarin Chinese,Current Douban rating6.4(For reference only)。
At the end of 1901, the third young master of the wealthy Zou family from Ba County (Chongqing), 17-year-old Zou Rong, left home with revolutionary ambitions to seek the truth of saving the nation and its people. He traveled east along the river and crossed the sea to study in Japan. In Tokyo, Zou Rong met revolutionary Chen Tianhua and a female student named Cen Fang, and together they participated in patriotic activities. After the "National Ruin Commemoration Conference" was obstructed by the Qing government and the police in Japan, Zou Rong was filled with righteous indignation. With fervent revolutionary passion, he wrote the book "Revolutionary Army," calling for the overthrow of the corrupt rule of the Qing government and the establishment of an independent and free republic in China. Upon learning this, the Qing supervisor forced Zou Rong to surrender his manuscript, but he firmly refused. Following Chen Tianhua's suggestion, Zou Rong submitted the manuscript of "Revolutionary Army" to the renowned politician Zhang Taiyan for review and correction. Soon after, Zhang Taiyan was expelled by the Japanese authorities and returned to China, leaving encouraging messages for Zou Rong, which greatly inspired him. At that time, the Tsarist Russia was encroaching on China's northeastern territories. Japanese students in Tokyo held a conference to reject Russia, but supervisor Yao Wenfu received orders to prohibit it. Zou Rong stood up at the conference, exposing Yao Wenfu's despicable actions, and cut off Yao's queue. As a result, Zou Rong was also expelled by the Japanese authorities. After arriving in Shanghai, Zou Rong built a brotherly revolutionary friendship with Zhang Taiyan. With Zhang Taiyan's assistance, Chen Mengpo and his daughter, who ran the "Su Newspaper," raised funds to publish "Revolutionary Army" to promote its ideas vigorously. The Qing government colluded with the British concession authorities to arrest Zou Rong and Zhang Taiyan, leading to the shocking "Su Newspaper Incident." Zou Rong's close friend Cen Fang, bringing Mr. Sun Yat-sen's concern, rushed back from Japan to support the "Su Newspaper Incident." Zou Rong fought resolutely in court, but after returning to prison, he was brutally beaten and tortured by the British prison guards, leading to illness and ultimately his death. At just 21 years old, Zou Rong sacrificed his precious life for the ideals of "Revolutionary Army," serving as a vanguard for the outbreak of the Xinhai Revolution.