Directors: Fei Zhenxiang, Guan Hu
Notable Cast: Zhu Yilong, Leo Wu, Ni Ni, Yang Haoyu,
Chen Minghao, Ni Dahong, William Franklyn-Miller, Li Jiuxiao, Wang Yiquan,
Kevin Lee
Living in the shadow of Hollywood, the big war story
blockbuster is essentially its own genre. Although Chinese cinema handily
receives the “jingoistic” label more often than not, let’s be up front and
honest here - they learned how to do it from Hollywood. And judging from Rescue
at Dongji, they’ve taken the classic war-film elements, given them a
Chinese cinematic twist, and let them rip. Rescue at Dongji is a
bombastic flick, layered with incredible performances, white-knuckle action,
and a heartfelt narrative that speaks universally. While it certainly feels
like it owes much of its success to lessons learned from previous films, it
does so in a way that makes it feel fresh, and that’s ultimately what
matters.
Part of what makes Rescue at Dongji (sometimes noted
as Dongji Rescue) so fresh is that it strikes a balance between the
rousing heroics and the war's innate brutality, which these films so often
miss. Its narrative is certainly centered on the village's heroics. The focus remains on two brothers, played by Zhu Yilong and Leo Wu - outcasts even on the island they were raised on, adopted by a local fishing family, and their relationship with each other and the life they live in the village. By focusing on them and then
building the settings around them, the film moves from being just a historical
action drama to a film about humanity. It’s an incredibly smart choice.









