TV Series "Yimeng" Complete Collection
Main actors: Chi Peng, Ma Shaohua, Meng Xia, Xu Nannan, Wang Yizhan, Feng Haiyu, Zheng Qi, Wang Jing, Zhao Jintao
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TV Series "Yimeng" Complete Collection Movie Introduction:
The 2009 CCTV-8 anti-Japanese war-themed emotional TV series "Yimeng" (42 episodes) is a tribute to the Yimeng spirit.
Plot Introduction:
In the autumn of 1938, in a small mountain village called Mama Pool deep in the Yimeng Mountains, Mother Yu and her husband Li Zhonghou were preparing for their second son Ji Cheng's wedding. Seeing the happy newlyweds, Mother Yu's eldest daughter-in-law "Big Sister" couldn't help but remember the night she got married when her husband Li Jichang fled the marriage. The troublemaker Ernao came running to tell everyone that soldiers had arrived. The villagers panicked and ran to hide in the ravines. After the soldiers left, everyone returned to the village only to find that not only was the village not plundered, but the streets were swept clean, and some families even had silver coins left as compensation. It turned out that the Eighth Route Army had entered the Yimeng Mountains to fight against the Japanese invaders.
The Japanese really came, and the villagers hid on the back mountain. Mother Yu's third daughter San Ni was brutally raped and killed by the Japanese, and Li Jicai's wife jumped off a cliff after being violated by the Japanese. Enraged, the villagers killed a straggling Japanese soldier.
Village head Li Datou gathered everyone to discuss how to resist the Japanese retaliation. The landlord Li Zhongfeng's eldest son returned from the Nationalist army for a family visit, and Li Datou earnestly asked him to seek help from the Nationalist army, but he was rejected. While the Li Datous prepared to resist to the death, they sent Li Jicheng and Ji Shan separately to seek reinforcements from the Eighth Route Army and the Nationalist army.
To prevent the extinction of the village, all the young people were driven up the mountain, and others armed themselves with homemade guns and cannons, rushing to their posts at the edge of the village. Several hundred Japanese soldiers and puppet troops began their attack. Under the leadership of Village Head Li Datou, the villagers bravely resisted the well-equipped Japanese soldiers, suffering heavy casualties. Li Jicai, who went out to seek reinforcements, was forcibly conscripted by the Nationalist army, while Li Jicheng not only found the Eighth Route Army but also met his long-lost elder brother Li Jichang. The fortress fell, and the villagers desperately resisted the Japanese massacre, forcing the Japanese to pay a heavy price. The Eighth Route Army dispatched a platoon of troops, luring the Japanese away, leaving over a hundred bodies behind before hastily retreating. The villagers buried their loved ones and cremated the Japanese corpses. Li Zhongfeng delivered the Japanese ashes to the Japanese-occupied county town. Li Zhongqi, Li Zhongfeng's elder brother, lied that it was the main force of the Eighth Route Army that heavily injured the Japanese army, preventing further retaliation against the village. After the Eighth Route Army left, Mother Yu's eldest son Li Jichang and his wife Luo Ning were sent back to the village to carry out mass work. Faced with a husband she barely saw before he fled and his new wife, Big Sister felt an indescribable bitterness.
Luo Ning was moved by Big Sister's generosity and became good sisters. Li Jichang encouraged everyone to join the revolution; both Ji Shan and Ji Cheng joined the Party, greatly impressing Mother Yu. Chen Tong gave Mother Yu, who had no name until then, the name Yu Baozhen.
Chen Tong persuaded Li Zhongfeng to become the village head to deal with the Japanese. Ji Shan and Ji Cheng organized the militia, while Yu Baozhen mobilized her daughters-in-law and daughters to organize the women in the village into the Women's Rescue Association. Li Jizhou came back to the village to search for Li Jichang, but Li Zhongfeng rushed to stop him. After investigation, introduced by Chen Tong, Yu Baozhen finally joined the Party. When the Japanese came to seize grain, the people cooperated with the Eighth Route Army to retrieve the grain, and Ji Cheng's wife also wanted to join the Party, discovering that her introducer was her own husband.
Yu Baozhen adopted Big Sister as her daughter and named her Xin'ai, naming her second daughter-in-law Xintian. Ji Cheng led the militia to cooperate with Li Jichang's command of the Eighth Route Army to destroy the Japanese artillery tower. Li Zhonghou carried a door panel to follow the Women's Rescue Association organized by Yu Baozhen to assist the wounded. Victory came, and Ji Cheng was sent to study. Luo Ronghuan stayed at Yu Baozhen's house to recuperate, carefully taken care of by Yu Baozhen. The Eighth Route Army, with strict discipline, was deeply loved by the people.
In 1941, Li Jichang organized the villagers to hold a parliamentary election, electing Yu Baozhen and Li Zhongfeng to attend the Shandong Provincial War-time Committee Election Conference at Qingtuosi Temple. Due to her busy work with the Women's Rescue Association, Xintian suffered a miscarriage. A matchmaker arranged a marriage for Second Daughter to a carpenter named Shuanzhu from the neighboring village. Refusing to comply, she was locked up. At this time, students from the Anti-Japanese Military and Political University branch arrived, including many female soldiers. The appearance of these female soldiers completely changed the lives of the women in the village. Second Daughter met Xia Yang, whose steadfast pursuit of love and freedom strengthened Second Daughter's determination to resist an arranged marriage. She renamed herself Li Yang, attended the literacy class, and went to the district for study under Xia Yang's support. There, Li Yang not only accepted new ideas but also met Meng Kui, who would change her destiny. Meng Kui came to teach the literacy class, and Yu Baozhen secretly let Meng Kui teach her to recognize words. At Xia Yang and Chen Tong's wedding, Yu Baozhen presented them with the two characters "Xia Yang" as a wedding gift, which were the first characters she ever wrote.
Li Yang's feelings for Meng Kui grew deeper, making her refuse to marry. Her in-laws brought gifts, including many Japanese candies, leading Yu Baozhen to discover that Shuanzhu worked for the Japanese, and she firmly refused the marriage.
Daughter-in-law Danni endured daily beatings at her mother-in-law's home. Encouraged by her younger sister Li Yang, she joined the literacy class and renamed herself Li Yue. Although life improved somewhat in the literacy class, her husband Sun Wang continued to beat her under the instigation of his mother. Despite her concern for her daughter, Yu Baozhen, still bound by old customs, forced her daughter to return to her mother-in-law's home, causing Li Yue to flee.
Li Jichang and Luo Ning's child was brought back by Li Yue, who worked at the district Women's Rescue Association. Xin'ai cherished the child as if it were her own.
An Eighth Route Army hospital arrived in Mama Pool Village with a batch of wounded soldiers, some of whom were taken to villagers' homes to recuperate. Chen Tong and Xia Yang returned to the village, but they brought bad news: Li Jichang and Luo Ning were captured by Li Jizhou and later fell into the hands of the Japanese. The army sought Li Zhongfeng's help to rescue them through his brother Li Zhongqi, who worked as a translator for the Japanese. After negotiations by patriotic scholars like Mr. Chen, the Japanese agreed to release Li Jichang and Luo Ning, but on the condition that they publicly declare their surrender. Li Jichang and Luo Ning firmly refused, ultimately sacrificing their lives heroically. Yu Baozhen kept their coffins in the backyard, vowing not to bury her son and daughter-in-law until the Japanese were driven away.
Dozens of children of Eighth Route Army cadres were sent to the village. Yu Baozhen distributed the children among various households for the women to raise, keeping two in her own home: a three-year-old boy given to Xin'ai, and a newborn baby named Liming given to Xintian. Xintian painfully weaned her own newborn son Niuniu so that the three-year-old Yi Sheng could be cared for by Xin'ai.
When Yi Sheng fell ill, Xin'ai took him to the army hospital for treatment. Yi Sheng's biological parents, Minister Xu and his wife, believed their son wouldn't survive and told the hospital not to waste the army's medicine on him. As the army prepared to depart, Minister Xu and his wife reluctantly left. The doctor also abandoned hope, but Xin'ai refused to give up. She held the medicine in her mouth and fed it to the child mouth-to-mouth, staying by his side night after night. Miraculously, Yi Sheng survived.
In 1941, the Japanese launched a large-scale sweep operation in the Yimeng base area, making the situation tense.
The army was finally going to relocate, leaving behind a large amount of military grain and supplies that needed to be hidden in the village. Some wounded soldiers also needed to be concealed, along with a Dutch dairy cow used to nourish the wounded.
As the Japanese entered the village, they demanded not only grain and Eighth Route Army wounded soldiers but also the children of the Eighth Route Army. To protect the Eighth Route Army child Yi Sheng, Xin'ai stared at Ning'er, who had been raised from infancy and treated as her own flesh and blood, but instead led Yi Sheng back. Immediately afterward, she fainted. The Japanese tried to take Ning'er, but were ambushed by Liu Heqi's bandits, and Ningning ended up in the hands of the bandits. Liu Heqi demanded a ransom of one thousand silver dollars, but upon learning the truth, personally returned Ningning.
Teacher Liu from the Anti-Japanese Military and Political University branch recuperated at Yu Baozhen's home, promising to visit her once the revolution succeeded.
Li Yue brought a senior official to a cave dug by her husband Sun Wang for recuperation. In order to treat the senior official, Li Yue urgently sought help from her mother-in-law. Reconnecting with her mother-in-law, Li Yue recognized the simplicity and kindness of her mother-in-law and Sun Wang, and the mother-in-law sacrificed herself to protect the senior official.
Sun Wang used a wheelbarrow to deliver the recuperated senior official to the army and joined the Eighth Route Army himself.
To deliver a message to the captured Zhong Hui, Li Jicun was captured by the Japanese.
Xia Yang was captured, and Li Yang visited her in prison. Xia Yang sacrificed heroically, and Li Yang handled her funeral arrangements before finding the Eighth Route Army, only to discover that Xia Yang's husband, Chen Tong, had also fallen. In the army, Li Yang encountered Meng Kui, successfully leading the troops out of danger.
The Japanese launched another sweep operation, and Ernao committed suicide by crashing into a tree to avoid humiliation. Li Zhongfeng poisoned the porridge served to the Japanese, killing them and sacrificing his entire family.
Zhonghou and Ji Shan led the villagers to deliver grain to the Eighth Route Army, refusing to touch even a single grain even if it meant starving.
Li Jizhou's Nationalist forces were surrounded by the Japanese and were out of ammunition and food when they were rescued by the Eighth Route Army. Li Jizhou was injured, but Yu Baozhen and Zhonghou repaid the kindness by hiding him in their home after the army hospital cured his wounds.
Li Yang led more than twenty soldiers to cover the retreat of the main force. Meng Kui jumped off a cliff, and Li Yang was captured. She was rescued by Shuanzhu, who was building cells at the Japanese garrison. Feeling guilty, Li Yang discovered after recovering that Shuanzhu and his mother had been murdered.
The Japanese searched the mountains, and the awakened Ji Zhou killed more than a dozen Japanese soldiers alone before sacrificing his life heroically. The Eighth Route cow was discovered, and to divert the Japanese, Old Four stabbed his own beloved ox, which dragged him to his death. The Eighth Route cow was saved, and Old Four was given a grand burial by the entire village.
The Eighth Route Army returned, and the children fostered in local families were taken away. Xin'ai and the other women in the village were very saddened. Many young men who had joined the army returned, except for Ji Cheng.
In 1945, the Shandong Provincial Government was established. Mama Pool Village elected its village head, and Yu Baozhen lost, blaming Zhonghou for voting for Ji Shan.
With the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, there were crowds celebrating everywhere. Yu Baozhen and Zhonghou prepared to bury the deceased Ji Chang, Luo Ning, and San Ni when the Nationalist army attacked the liberated area of Yimeng Mountain, and Ji Cheng received orders to return to his unit before even entering his home.
In 1946, the full-scale civil war broke out. Yu Baozhen led the men, women, and children of the village to actively support the army. The women worked tirelessly making pancakes, sewing military shoes, and spinning hemp threads, preparing food and fodder. A unit of the army needed to cross the river to execute an urgent combat mission, and Xintian, Xin'ai, and dozens of girls from the literacy class jumped into the icy river, using their shoulders to support door panels to build a bridge under fire.
Victory in the Menglianggu Campaign brought a major southern advance for the People's Liberation Army, requiring a large number of civilian workers for support. The Yimeng Mountain base area provided the last grain for the army, the last cloth for military uniforms, and the last sons for the battlefield. Zhonghou pushed his wheelbarrow to the front lines. Witnessing tens of thousands of small boats crossing the Yangtze River, tears streamed down his face as he finally understood why his sons had followed one after another. Zhonghou died at the moment the crossing campaign ended.
Finally, the New China was established, and Li Yang returned to the village. Yu Baozhen decided to bury the deceased members of her family.
As battle heroes, Sun Wang and Li Yue refused the jobs arranged for them by the township and both went to the martyrs' cemetery, wanting to spend their ordinary lives guarding these fallen comrades.
Li Yang finally found the disabled Meng Kui in the honorably discharged soldiers' hospital and pulled him home with a cart.
Ji Cheng sent a divorce agreement. Yi Sheng and Ningning were taken away by Minister Xu.
Time reached the Cultural Revolution period. Cadres from outside came to Yu Baozhen's home to investigate Teacher Liu, who had recuperated there previously. Although angry at his ingratitude, Yu Baozhen still provided him with proof. Already terminally ill, Ji Cheng returned home, and Xintian accepted him, dying in Xintian's arms.
Time reached the present. A white-haired old general came to look for and visit his savior from those days. Yu Baozhen had already passed her hundredth birthday and was somewhat confused mentally. But upon hearing someone had come, she instructed Xintian to kill a chicken. The old general carefully identified for a long time, but Yu Baozhen was not the person he was looking for.
The old general searched for several days in the Yimeng Mountains but never found the person he was looking for. Before leaving, he donated his lifetime savings to the Yimeng Mountains to build a Hope Primary School. Although he didn't find the person he was looking for, he met many people just like his benefactor. They were ordinary Yimeng Mountain people, the most common and humble citizens of China. Yu Baozhen passed away, and the entire village gave her a grand burial. The general watched the funeral procession and saluted the group solemnly.