
Red Guards after The Cultural Revolution
Red Guards were a student movement supported by Mao Zedong in 1966-67 during the Cultural Revolution. A group of students at Qinghua University who issued 2 big-character posters in May-June 1966 called themselves Red Guards. The students criticised the university administration of elitism and bourgeois tendencies. In August 1966 Mao Zedong expressed support for the Red Guards. This gave the student movement political legitimacy and it spread outside Beijing. The Red Guards started to attack the Four Olds and marched across China to eradicate old ideas, old cultures, old customs and old habits. Ultimately the struggle between different Red Guard factions led to a chaotic civil-war-like situation. During 1967-68 the Peoples Liberation Army got the movement under control and restored social order. Beginning late 1968 members of the Red Guard movement were sent to the countryside to undergo re-education. We met and filmed them in August 1971.
You may like

Please Vote for Me

The Shaolin Kid: A Boy In China

Visions Cinema: Film as a Way of Life: Hong Kong Cinema - A Report by Tony Rayns

Mao Tse Tung: China's Peasant Emperor

Railroad of Hope

Mao: Seize the Day, Seize the Hour

Redefining China's Family: Women

Wisdom of Changes - Richard Wilhelm and the I Ching

100 Years

Breakdown: 1975

Mr. Deng Goes to Washington

Rebellion

China's Lost Pyramids

The Matrix: Generation

Fruit Farm

Last Train Home

Jackie Chan Edition: Seine spektakulärsten Kämpfe

The China Hustle

Cathedrals

Night Will Fall

Room 237

Adele One Night Only

180° South

Harmontown