As events unfold, it becomes clear that the two talented actresses are going places with their talent and therefore their friendship appears to be taking them places. It however becomes clear sooner than anticipated that Yuehong and Chunhua are headed in different directions as regards their personal social lives and even their career. Chunhua soon after the short-lived merry and stardom gets immensely interested in a revolutionary cadre which she finds solace in and therefore devotes her life more to it.
In the process, the revolutionary cadre points out how women are oppressed and exploited and this exploitation is surmised to be due to the fault of not only bosses but also Americans (Sheldon & Lu, 1997). Chunhua’s continued interest in politics and matters of revolution compel her to attend substantial political meetings thereby becoming involved in the Revolution while Yuehong has little interest in political matters and straightway marries Master Tang after a short relationship. After the marriage, Yuehong and Tang live a stylish lifestyle that is heavily characterized by western mannerism and culture such as Western clothes, elaborate headdresses, high heels and makeup.
At some point Chunhua refuses to stop a play that is objected to by the bosses and owing to this she gets assaulted thereby coming face to face in court with Yuehong who due to her social status and status quo, is forced to testify against her. This sets in a stage for a great dramatic climax. At the end of 1949, they both return to the countryside albeit in different light: Yuehong, to edge a living after being abandoned by her husband that she once cherished while Chunhua, with a traveling Communist theatrical troupe where she had devoted her life completely (Sheldon & Lu, 1997).
At the end of the film, the sisters reunite albeit Yuehong’s fate remains somehow uncertain in spite of the film’s general optimistic resolution. Indeed in Marchetti Gina’s words (1989, p.45), “powerful and involving, Two Stage Sisters is an important film and a rare treat for the senses”. Short History of Jin Xie as regards Two Stage Sisters and his filmography The inception of the film into the Chinese film industry in 1964, came with some level of aesthetic thrust within the Chinese cinema in the post 1949 era.
At this time the film’s director, Xie Jin had already made a name for himself as of a formidable reputation for making and directing films that had strong female protagonists and revolutionary themes. The movies that contributed most towards Xie’s reputation included two of his most successful works: Woman Basketball Player #5 (1957) and The Women's Red Army Detachment (1961). He came into focus at a time soon after the Revolution and when the new People’s Republic of China had just come into effect and leadership of the country (Xia, Semsel & Hou, 1990).
To edge a name for himself in the Chinese cinematic world, Xie blended elements of Soviet socialist realism, Hollywood melodrama, folk opera traditions pre-war with Chinese critical realism in the Two Stage Sisters which he designed in such a way that it could be looked at as an answer “to what a peculiarly Chinese socialist film should look like especially as regards events in China after the Sino-Soviet split in the late 1950s” (Xia, Semsel & Hou, 1990, p.71). Xie Jin a native of Shangyu, in the Zhejiang Province and born in 1923 received the much coveted education in classical literature and Chinese opera which spurred him into his career in 1938 in Shanghai.
He opted to further his education under the pedagogy of the dramatists Hong Shen and Cao Yu in the State Theater Institute where he was exposed to Western cinematographic and dramatic forms. After this he studied in 1950 the theory of Marxism at the Political Research Institute in the Northeastern Revolutionary University. Having acquired these skills, Xie began his career humbly as an assistant director to the well-to-do film personality Junxiang Zhang in 1948 and ever since then he has been directing his own films in Shanghai (Pang, 2002).
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