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New gig for China’s pretty boys in propaganda films

BEIJING — Commissioned by the government to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army, China’s latest propaganda film was meant to be a patriotic tale about the young soldiers who served their country in its earliest days.

A scene from the propaganda film "The Founding of an Army". Photo: The Founding of an Army handout

A scene from the propaganda film "The Founding of an Army". Photo: The Founding of an Army handout

BEIJING — Commissioned by the government to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army, China’s latest propaganda film was meant to be a patriotic tale about the young soldiers who served their country in its earliest days.

But when it came time to find actors to play some of the Communist Party’s most venerated military commanders, the filmmakers behind “The Founding of an Army” made an unusual – some say disrespectful – casting decision: they piled on the “little fresh meat”.

Known in Chinese as “xiao xian rou”, “little fresh meat” refers to Chinese teen idols and boy band members, famous mostly for their manicured good looks and sculpted physiques.

Since the movie opened in the last week of July, at least one descendant of a figure portrayed in the film has taken to social media to criticise the filmmakers for what he called their “shameful” casting decisions.

“Someone is trying to make a fortune off these important historical events,” Mr Ye Daying, a grandson of Ye Ting, a Communist military commander, wrote on the microblogging site Weibo.

“Who is this effeminate boy who can hardly stand up straight playing my grandfather?” Mr Ye added, referring to Mr Oho Ou, the 24-year-old actor and singer who plays the army officer. “Who are you trying to humiliate?”

Ye Ting was a Nationalist-turned-Communist general who helped lead the Northern Expedition, the battles that unified China in the 1920s.

Chinese producers have taken to regularly casting xiao xian rou as a strategy for attracting young movie-goers.

Mr Lu Han, formerly of the boy band Exo, exemplifies this phenomenon. In addition to “The Founding of an Army”, he was cast in last year’s “The Great Wall”.

Other teen idols in “The Founding of an Army” include Mr Zhang Yixing, also of Exo, and Mr Ma Tianyu, a pop singer who portrays Lin Biao, an army marshal who later became minister of defence under Mao Zedong.

Directed by Mr Andrew Lau, a Hong Kong filmmaker best known for the hit “Infernal Affairs”, “The Founding of an Army” opens with the Nanchang Uprising of 1927, the first major battle between the Nationalists and the Communists during the Chinese Civil War.

Since its premiere less than two weeks ago, the film has taken in just US$51.8 million (S$70.6 million), according to data from Cbooo.cn, a website that tracks Chinese box-office revenues.

On Monday (Aug 7) night, “Wolf Warrior 2”, another patriotic action film that debuted on the same day as “Founding of an Army”, became China’s highest-grossing movie.

The promoters of “Founding of an Army” have rebutted reports that officials ordered cinemas to screen the movie, and its relative success at the box office was most likely helped by China’s annual summer ban on Hollywood movies.

Reviews of the movie, the third in a trilogy of government-backed films about Chinese history, were better than expected, given the film’s propagandism. In a review for The Hollywood Reporter, Mr Clarence Tsui described it as “a genre-fueled spectacle with scintillating action scenes and self-sacrificing heroes aplenty”.

Despite the outrage over casting, many critics have come to the defence of the xiao xian rou, arguing that their participation helped make young people interested in their history.

“Even though the little fresh meat in the movie still have delicate skin, their military stances are tall and straight,” a commentator named Yu Xiaodong wrote in The Beijing Morning Post.

“They may not know what it was like for our forefathers to use their own flesh to carry the destiny of our country and our people,” the commentator wrote, “but at least they are making an effort to draw closer to our elders.” THE NEW YORK TIMES

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