This is an archive of the former website of the Maoist Internationalist Movement, which was run by the now defunct Maoist Internationalist Party - Amerika. The MIM now consists of many independent cells, many of which have their own indendendent organs both online and off. MIM(Prisons) serves these documents as a service to and reference for the anti-imperialist movement worldwide.
"To Live" Obscures Chinese Revolution
"To Live"
1994
Directed by Zhang Yimou
Zhang Yimou's latest film portrays the daily life and
struggles of one family from the Chinese civil war to the
end of the Cultural Revolution. The film is an accurate
portrayal in the sense that there are certainly many people
who could tell stories similar to the film's. But in the
end, by choosing "apolitical" protagonists, the film
obscures the most important political question of the
times: revolution *for whom*. And by concentrating on the
sacrifices of one family the film downplays the tremendous
gains the Chinese people made under Maoist leadership.
The film is split into three parts, corresponding to the
Civil War (the '40s), the Great Leap Forward (the '50s),
and the Cultural Revolution (the '60s). All three parts
begin optimistically and capture the Chinese people's
sympathy for the Communist Party and their enthusiasm for
the Communist ideal. At the end of the second part, the
family's son is killed in an accident while helping to
smelt steel, and at the end of the third, the family's
daughter dies of hemorrhaging after giving birth in a rural
clinic.
Many of the local party cadre are criticized as capitalist
roaders in the last section of the film - although we are
never presented with enough information to know whether or
not the attacks were justified. Ironically, the
protagonists' apolitical perspective (and their tendency to
try to win favors by "keeping up with the revolutionary
Joneses") may be due to the fact that their village leader
actually was a capitalist roader and did not put an
emphasis on explaining the party's politics to the
villagers and instead used capitalist methods (like
material incentives) to organize people.
The issues involved in the Great Leap Forward and the
Cultural Revolution were not esoteric. Mao emphasized that
the people should understand the party's politics and help
develop and carry out policies. And we can also see the
importance of the criticism of capitalist roaders today, as
the return to capitalist methods of planning and
organization under Deng Xiaoping has eroded many of the
gains made before 1976.
Western bourgeois critics of communism are calling this
film a passionate indictment of Maoism (even though they
cannot tell the difference between Deng and Mao). They
point to the children's deaths as examples of the Maoist
state's willingness to "selfishly sacrifice its people" and
claim that the state could not just allow the Chinese
people "to simply live." But this criticism misses the
point: China was an extremely poor nation (thanks to
centuries of imperialist and feudal domination), so
disease, poverty, and exhausting work were commonplace
before and after the revolution. The revolution aimed to
change the relationships which kept the Chinese people in
poverty - and in this the Chinese Communist Party largely
succeeded. For example, life expectancy doubled from 35 in
the '40s to 69 in the '70s.
For more information, MIM recommends the essay, "Myths
about Maoism," in the pamphlet, "What is MIM?" ($2) and
William Hinton's book on the Cultural Revolution *Turning
Point in China* ($6) postpaid from MIM.