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Lady General Hua Mu-lan

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tatewaki (talk | contribs) at 17:18, 11 May 2019 (Synopsis: She did not defeat her father (even though it was her mother's fault by taking away her attention from the fight)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lady General Hua Mu-lan (Hua Mu Lan)
The 1964 Hong Kong theatrical poster.
Directed byYueh Feng
Produced byRun Run Shaw
StarringIvy Ling Po
Chin Han
Ching Miao
Music byEddie Wang
Zhou Lanping
Distributed byShaw Brothers
Release dates
  • 18 June 1964 (1964-06-18) (Hong Kong)
  • 11 February 1965 (1965-02-11) (U.S.)
Running time
106 min.
CountryHong Kong
LanguageMandarin

Lady General Hua Mu-lan (Chinese: 花木蘭) is a 1964 Hong Kong Huangmei opera musical film, directed by Yueh Feng, depicting the story of Hua Mulan.

Synopsis

Barbarian hordes had invaded and the border towns were overrun. The call went out for able-bodied men to join the army. Hua Mulan returned home from her hunting to find that her frail father had been summoned. Her brother was too young to enlist so she volunteered to take her father's place but her parents rejected the idea. Determined to convince her father, she conspired with her cousin and elder sister. Dressed as a man, she sparred with her father. Both astonished and impressed, he gave her his blessings to join the army.

A screenshot from the film.

With her cousin accompanying her, she joined the ranks of army recruits and managed to impress the General in the recruits martial trials. In the 12 years of fighting, she rose through the ranks and attained the status of general. Through this period, she became fast friends with the group of recruits she was with and General Li. The war eventually drew to a close with an ambush and capture of the barbarian king. The Commanding General of the army threw a celebratory feast, after which, he drew Mulan aside to discuss a matter with her. He was especially impressed with her abilities and character and wished to betroth his daughter to Mulan. Unable to reveal the truth about her identity and reluctant to refuse him outright for fear of offending him, Mulan dodged the issue by pretending to be feeling weak from her wound received in the last battle.

A few days later, having officially resigned her post, she took leave of her comrades and returned home with her cousin. The Commanding General, however, had not forgotten the proposal and was determined to have Mulan as a son-in-law and served in the government. He sent General Li with some of her comrades bearing wedding gifts to her home. When they arrived, they were shocked and astonished to find that their courageous and heroic comrade turned out to be a lady.

General Li agreed to explain to the Commanding General on Mulan's behalf. Before he left, he exchanged betrothal tokens with Mulan, exhorting her to wait for him.

Cast

Huangmei opera dubbing

Characters

Festivals and awards

The film was screened at the 11th Asian Film Festival in 1964, awarding Best Actress honors to Ivy Ling Po.

Other adaptations

The story of Hua Mulan is well known in Chinese literature. Another musical adaptation of her story is the 1998 Disney cartoon, Mulan.