The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif

The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif (also known as The Winter of Three Hairs, Wanderings of Three-Hairs the Orphan or An Orphan on the Streets) (三毛流浪记) is a 1949 Chinese film released by Kunlun Film Company, directed by Zhao Ming [1] and Yan Gong. The 1949 film is based on the Sanmao comic, created by Zhang Leping in 1935 and features the well-known Chinese cultural symbol of child poverty, Sanmao (meaning "three hairs"), a homeless orphan boy. The film, which stars Wang Longji, follows Sanmao through his adventures surviving and meeting new people on the streets of Shanghai. The film notably works to counterbalance the tragic story of Sanmao with humor and comedy. Sanmao's visual image of a small boy with a big head and three hairs is well-known amongst Chinese people both old and young.[2]

The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif
Poster of the French edition
Directed byYan Gong
Zhao Ming
Written byZhang Leping (story)
Yang Hansheng (screenplay)
Produced byKunlun Film Company
StarringWang Longji
Edited byFu Zhenyi
Music byWang Yunjie
Release date
  • December 1949 (1949-12)
Running time
70 minutes

Plot

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The film begins in Old Shanghai with a homeless orphan named Sanmao (Three Hairs). Constantly battling hunger and coldness, he sleeps in garbage carts and eats anything he can find. He tries to mimic the actions of other homeless children, earning money by selling newspapers and picking up cigarette butts. However, without any parents or a family, he has no one to teach him how to survive or succeed.

Sanmao comes across a group of street urchins who - after an initial fight - take him in and look out for him, while working together. The little earnings that he manages to make still have to be given to their “Little Boss.” Though Sanmao finds camaraderie and friendship with the group of homeless children, he still envies the children who can attend school and who have parents who will buy anything for them. However he stays optimistic and resilient, and works hard.

On Children's Day, Sanmao is intrigued by celebratory parades in the street. He hears announcers shouting that children are the future of the nation and claiming that all children should have rights to good health, education, warmth, comfort and should be loved, protected, and respected. But ironically Sanmao and his homeless friends are beaten and chased away from the celebration by policemen when they attempt to join the Boy Scouts marching in the parade.

One day Sanmao is blamed for stealing a wallet that he found and was trying to return, but he is saved by the “Big Boss.” Big Boss convinces Sanmao to work for him with Big Boss's other “apprentices” as a pickpocket. Sanmao feels guilty after stealing his first wallet and returns it to the owner, but he is thrown into a cell by the gang and left there for three days without food. Afterwards, the Big Boss and his wife dress Sanmao as if he were their son and take him to a department store to shoplift material. Upon being caught, they run away, leaving Sanmao behind. Sanmao escapes the pursuing shopkeepers and returns to the streets. Unable to continue living on the street, Sanmao tries to sell himself (at a far lower price than a doll pictured in a toy-shop window) and is bought by a selfish rich woman who wants to adopt a son. Sanmao is renamed "Tom" and he is given etiquette classes to prepare him for the upcoming celebration of his adoption (which takes place in November 1948). But Sanmao does not want to become a prim, proper, and obedient “son”. On the night of the celebration, Sanmao goes outside to have a moment alone, and he sees his homeless friends outside the gates. They are hungry and he lets them in to give them food. The homeless children overrun the party, which comes to a chaotic end, and Sanmao flees the lavish home along with the other boys.

Sanmao returns to his harsh life, but is at least free on the streets. His days continue as before, until the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) victory in the Chinese Civil War in October 1949. Sanmao and his homeless friends encounter the parade in the streets of Shanghai, with hordes of locals celebrating the liberation. The people march in the streets, carry banners of the CCP leaders’ faces, and shout, “Long live Chairman Mao!” Countless homeless orphans like Sanmao join the march on the street and dance and celebrate.

Cast

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  • Sanmao (Three Hairs): Wang Longji [3]
  • Little Boss: Ding Ran
  • Big Boss: Guan Hongda
  • Rich Wife: Lin Zhen
  • Rich Husband: Du Lei
  • Little Ox: Wang Gongxu
  • Auntie: Huang Chen
  • Lao San: Yang Shaoqiao

Release and Screen

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Location Year
China 1949 Release
China 1958 Reissue
China 1980 Reissue
France 1981 Cannas Film Festival
Hong Kong 1981
Germany 1982 Mannheim Film Festival
Portugal 1983 Figueira da Foz Film Festival
China 2019 Shanghai Film Festival (4k restored version)

Inspiration and Development

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The film is based on the 1947 cartoon series of the same title. The series was created and authored by Zhang Leping, one of the most-well-known cartoonists of modern China as well as vice president and active member of the Cartoon Propaganda Corps (a group of popular Chinese cartoonists who used their art to rally citizens during the outbreak of war with Japan).[4] Zhang began publicizing his comic series in the Shanghai daily newspaper, Shen Bao, in 1935 where it immediately garnered attention from the public. Zhang's serial comic ran in the paper during and after World War II for a total of 12 years.[2] The left-leaning cartoonist often used his drawings to portray inequality in China between the lower classes and the elites and brought attention to child poverty with his illustrations.[5] Director Zhao Ming also sourced Charlie Chaplin's films as inspiration for The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif, with the goal being to make the movie enjoyable for educated and uneducated people.[6]

The film was produced and developed by Kunlun Film Company, a Shanghai company founded in May 1947 and established as a replacement for Lianhua Film Company which previously shut down due to extensive interference of the National Party. Having released several left-leaning themed films before 1949 like "Crows and Sparrows" (乌鸦与麻雀, 1949), "The Spring River Flows East" (一江春水向东流, 1947) and "Eight Thousand Li of Cloud and Moon" (八千里路云和月, 1947), Kunlun Film Company's engagement in the production of The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif confirmed that the movie would implement politically-charged content. Left-wing screenwriter and movie director, Yang Hansheng, developed the initial script for the film but director Zhao Ming changed much of it, believing that Yang's script was too dramatic and divergent from Zhang Leping's original comic strips. Zhao Ming mentioned that he aimed to create a balance between light-hearted, humorous tones and the serious, tragic events that Sanmao experiences.[6]

The 1949 film extends and continues Sanmao's adventures after the end of Zhang Leping's comic-strip. With development beginning in October 1948, the film's release was originally planned for release in the same year,[7] however it was banned by Guomindang. In the initial stages of the film's production, Zhao Ming received, presumably from Guomindang, which read, “If Sanmao carries on, you will have to watch your head.” Zhang Leping, who actively participated in the film's production received the same message a few days later.[8] It was cleared for screening only after the People's Liberation Army took over Shanghai in October 1949. During this delay, a scene was added in which Sanmao experiences a turn of fortune concurrent with the political change.[9] The director explains in his memoirs that the new ending was produced in haste, in the fervor of Shanghai's liberation[10] and in the wake of shifting political circumstances in China. Premiering in December 1949, The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif became one of the first feature films to be screened after the creation of the People's Republic of China.[7]

The ending parade scene reconstructs the Shanghai's liberation parade and seamlessly blends in with footage from the actual liberation parade that took place before the film was released. The documentary shots are shown through Sanmao's point of view.

Theme

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Zhang Leping, the author of the original source comic which inspired the 1949 film, The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif, aimed to satirize and call out the apathetic actions and attitude towards child poverty that was held by many people during the 1930s and 1940s. Though the homeless character was not a new theme at this time, Zhang created a child character who retains his innocence and sense of moral justice despite his unfortunate circumstances. Sanmao's innocent optimism and sense of justice are large themes in The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif, seen in Sanmao's desire to go to school or when he returns the wallet after pickpocketing it.[2]

The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif shows the lives of orphans, the “wandering children”,[11] who struggle to survive on the streets in 1940s Shanghai. It highlights the inequality among children in the 1940s when Sanmao and his orphans friends are not able to enjoy the joy of celebrating Children's day with the richer children, despite the slogan "Children are the protagonists of the state's future! We must cherish the children and respect them!" In this scene, Sanmao wants to join the Boy Scout parade and prompts his homeless friends to join them, but unfortunately, they are chased away by the police. This scene alludes to the irony of China's supposed policies of protecting and supporting all children, as the reality is that homeless children of lower classes are shunned from public celebrations and discriminated against by police officers. The Children's Day parade scene is the essence of comedy as well as an important opportunity for the character development of Sanmao. Zhao Ming affirmed this scene as crucial to the plot of the film. Ultimately, the film and this scene especially critique the Nationalist government's inability to adequately support poorer children as well as bring attention to the tendency for impoverished children to be treated much more negatively than children of wealthier backgrounds.[6]

The last parade scene where a dancer invites Sanmao and other vagrant children to leave the sidelines and join in the celebration, contrasts with the earlier Children's Day parade scene where Sanmao and his friends are chased away and beaten by the police after attempting to join the marching Boy Scouts. This contrast implies that the Old Society rejects this group of homeless youths, while New China embraces them. This ending scene of the film diverges from Zhang Leping's original serial comic in that it introduces overt support for the CCP, turning the character of Sanmao into a symbol of political liberation and social justice.[6]

Background

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Zhang Leping

The creator of the original 1935 Sanmao comic, Zhang Leping, originated from a humble background, in which his education included only a few years of elementary school. He gained experience as an apprentice in Shanghai later in his life and also was able to take courses at a professional school.[6] Sources of Zhang's thought process when writing and creating the Sanmao series could be found in the prefaces of his comic strips. These introductions gave valuable insight into the political thought of Zhang as well as the goals he wished to achieve with the Sanmao comics. Unlike cartoonists such as Feng Zikai, Zhang did not keep diaries or essays about his artistic work, making the introductions of his comic strips vital to the understanding of his work.

Zhang Leping also displayed his skillful thought and artistic ideas through his contribution to published debates about comic art in specialized magazines. His son, Zhang Weijun, along with other of Leping's family members collected pictures, documents and the original Sanmao picture story books, which they made available to the public on the official Sanmao website. In recognition of his works, the Zhang Leping Memorial Hall was built in 1995 in the artist's hometown of Haiyan 海鹽, in which guests are able to visit the original physical pieces and art.[6]

Chinese Cinema 1949

Since 1949, because of the political and revolutionary backgrounds in contemporary China, almost all the films had been produced among six major motifs: 1) praise and loyalty to Mao and the CCP, 2) revolution and class struggle, 3) comparison between the new and old society, 4) heroes and models, 5) love and family ties, and 6) backwardness and progress. In fact, the latter five motifs were all serving the first one, praise and loyalty to Mao and the CCP. It was this idea that raised patriotism and nationalism to an unprecedented level of height, and formulated absolute standards in the political sense for the other five motifs. The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif, however, was one of the less than 10 films produced in 17 years since 1949 that did not praise Mao and the party and did not explicitly show loyalty.[12] The CCP perhaps interpreted the film, The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif, as implicitly opposing the party, which is suggested when Sanmao takes off his new clothing from his new family and leaves them behind.[citation needed]

The initial two versions of the film's ending did not feature the celebration of liberation. It was after May 1949 when Shanghai was liberated that Xia Yan, Director of the Art Department of Shanghai Military Management Committee, recommended adding the celebration parade that featured portraits of Mao Zedong and Zhu De. This new ending adds to the political meaning of "reunion" in addition to humor in this film[13]

Critical reception

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The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif is an exemplary film that combines time and arts. It was released in 1949 and received both domestic and international acclaim. The film portrays a lively character in an environment with sharp social contradictions. The film criticizes the injustice and cruelty towards the poor in the old society, and meanwhile extols the “Sanmao Spirit” of being strong, kind, optimistic, warm, and humorous even when facing a miserable fate and under a helpless and miserable circumstance. The film contains some distinctive characteristics of the time and represents the consciousness that is often found in left-wing writers.[14]

Though the film accuses the unjust reality of the old society, it is expressed through the form of comedy. Many scenes in the film are exaggerated, and the power of this film comes largely from this kind of over-exaggeration. For example, the famous sequence where the rich lady holds a party for Sanmao but Sanmao causes a farce with a group of homeless kids, is shadowing resistance against social norms in the old society. Unlike the film Myriad of Lights which uses strict realism and tragedy to reveal the miserable destiny of the lower class, The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif adopts the form of romantic exaggerated comedy to express this theme.[13]

The film not only appealed to its target audience of children but its commentary on social issues appealed to adults as well. The film was most popular as it drew crowds in from Hong Kong and Paris in as late as 1981. This phenomenon was termed by Voice of America as “a Sanmao Craze.”[15] Paired with a nostalgia for Shanghai, the craze inspired several remakes in mainland China, of which included Sanmao Runs a Business (Huang Zuolin, 1958), and Sanmao Joins the Army (Zhang Jianya, 1992).[15]

After the Cultural Revolution in China, there was great interest in Chinese cinema from the late 1970s to the early 1980s. In order to draw attention to these films, Europe began screening Chinese films. Jean Florenzano[16] bought the distribution rights to The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif and four other films including Street Angel (Yuan Muzhi, 1937), Crossroads (Shen Xiling, 1937), The Monkey King (Wan Laiming, 1961), and Troubled Laughter (Yang Yanjin, 1979) to help bring more exposure to Chinese cinema. The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif was screened at the Cannes Film Festival in 1981, as part of a special program, “Images Du Cinema Chinois”, that highlighted the shift of Chinese cultural politics towards an international market. The film was also screened at the International Film Festival Rotterdam in 1987.[16]

Legacy

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The 1949 film Wanderings of Three-Hairs the Orphan has left an indelible mark on Chinese culture and cinema, permeating various aspects of media, education, and cultural remembrance. It solidified the character of Sanmao as a Chinese cultural icon, resonating with audiences by portraying resilience amidst societal struggles.[17] Educators frequently employ the film to delve into social issues and historical contexts, offering valuable insights into poverty, inequality, and resilience in Chinese society.[18] Scholars continue to dissect the film's portrayal of societal issues, emphasizing its role in shaping cultural narratives and its enduring relevance.[19] Sanmao remains a beloved figure, with the film's presence in exhibitions and retrospectives ensuring its lasting significance.[20]

Further Adaptations

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Since its 1949 release, Wanderings of Three-Hairs the Orphan has sparked numerous adaptations across media, ensuring Sanmao's enduring popularity. Animated adaptations like The Adventures of San Mao (1949) and the San Mao Animation Series (1984) have brought his stories to younger audiences while staying true to the original comic strip's essence. In live-action cinema, films such as San Mao Joins the Army (1992) and San Mao: The Orphan's Journey (2006) offer comedic yet poignant portrayals of Sanmao's life. Stage plays and musicals, including San Mao: The Musical, have translated his journey into immersive theatrical experiences. Additionally, the Sanmao TV series (1998) faithfully captures various episodes of his life, earning acclaim for its fidelity to Zhang Leping's work.

Awards

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In 1983, the film won the Jury Award at the 12th Figueira Da Foz International Film Festival of Portugal.[21]

In 1984, the film won The Special Mention Award at the 14th Giffoni International Film Festival of Italy.[21]

References

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  1. ^ Handbook of Chinese Popular Culture p.205 ed. Dingbo Wu, Patrick D. Murphy
  2. ^ a b c Mo, Weimin; Shen, Wenju (2006-09-01). "Sanmao, the Vagrant: Homeless Children of Yesterday and Today". Children's Literature in Education. 37 (3): 267–285. doi:10.1007/s10583-006-9012-6. ISSN 1573-1693. S2CID 162262395.
  3. ^ Yan, Gong and Ming Zhao, directors. Wanderings of Three Hairs the Orphan. Wanderings of Three Hairs the Orphan 三毛流浪記 (1949) with English Subtitles, Modern Chinese Cultural Studies, 23 Mar. 2020, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZDgfAY3b8A.
  4. ^ Ponzzi, Laura (2014). ""Chinese Children Rise Up!": Representations of Children in the Work of the Cartoon Propaganda Corps during the Second Sino-Japanese War" (PDF). Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review. 13: 100–133.
  5. ^ Notar, Beth E. (2017-01-02). ""My dad is Li Gang!" or seeing the state: transgressive mobility, collective visibility, and playful corruption in contemporary urban China". Asian Anthropology. 16 (1): 35–53. doi:10.1080/1683478X.2016.1253239. ISSN 1683-478X. S2CID 151998986.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Pozzi, Laura (2014). The revolution of a little hero : the Sanmao comic strips and the politics of childhood in China, 1935-1962 (Thesis thesis).
  7. ^ a b Rea, Christopher (2021). Chinese Film Classics 1922-1949. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 258. ISBN 9780231188135.
  8. ^ Pozzi, Laura (2014). The revolution of a little hero : the Sanmao comic strips and the politics of childhood in China, 1935-1962 (Thesis thesis).
  9. ^ CHENG JIHUA [ed.] (1998) Zhongguo dianying fazhan shi (History of the development of Chinese cinema). 2 vols. Beijing: Zhongguo dianying chubanshe.
  10. ^ ZHAO MING (1991) Ju ying fuchen lu (Record of a drifting life in theater and cinema). Beijing: Wenjun chubanshe.
  11. ^ "Shanghai's Wandering Ones: Child Welfare in a Global City, 1900–1953." p.20
  12. ^ [1] QIZHI (2019). People's Film (1949-1966): Institutions and Ideas in Chinese Film (1). Texas: Remembering Publishing. p.47-52
  13. ^ a b [2] XU LANJUN (2015): Sanmao and the Post-war Uncanny Memories: Reinterpretation of the Sanmmao Cartoon
  14. ^ GUO PENGQUN, GAO ZHIMING (2008).试论20世纪儿童电影的三大经典及其影响 (The Three Classic Children Films in the 20th Century and Their Influences). DOI:10.16583/j.cnki.52-1014/j
  15. ^ a b Xiao, Zhiwei; Zhang, Yingjin (2002-06-01). Encyclopedia of Chinese Film. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-74554-8.
  16. ^ a b Kuo, Marie-Claire (2018-09-02). "Translation and distribution of Chinese films in France: A personal account*". Journal of Chinese Cinemas. 12 (3): 237–249. doi:10.1080/17508061.2018.1522804. ISSN 1750-8061. S2CID 192054759.
  17. ^ Zhang, Yingjin (2004). Chinese National Cinema. doi:10.4324/9780203645833. ISBN 9780203645833.
  18. ^ Z., You (2014). "Historical Memory and Chinese Modernity: Reading 'San Mao' in Wartime and Post-War China". Journal of Asian Studies.
  19. ^ Pozzi, Laura (2014). The revolution of a little hero : the Sanmao comic strips and the politics of childhood in China, 1935-1962. CADMUS EUI (Thesis). European University Institute. doi:10.2870/13919.
  20. ^ Chow, Rey (2007). Sentimental Fabulations, Contemporary Chinese Films: Attachment in the Age of Global. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-50819-3.
  21. ^ a b [3] "The Winter of Three Hairs三毛流浪记.” 沪江
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