In this particular episode, the male protagonist, a bandit leader turned anti-Japanese hero, is detained by the Japanese occupation authorities. His wife, played by actress Ge Tian, Mr. Liu’s wife, visits him in the cell. She miraculously manages to hide an elongated stick-type grenade in her vagina and passes the guards. While being watched by the Japanese military interrogator and his Chinese collaborator, the two then perform a last act of erotic intimacy while the husband insults the Japanese emperor. When the Japanese interrogator is about to shoot the man for the royal insult, the husband pulls the grenade from his wife’s body, and the woman gleefully pulls the ignition pin, thus sacrificing their lives for the party and the motherland.The latest edition of anti-Japanese content is a viral video that says China is lifting its first strike nuclear policy for Japan and will relentless nuke Japan into submission if it interferes with Taiwan.Their last words: “Let’s have an ecstatic moment one more time.” Enemy defeated, game over.
The backlash to these socialist, surrealist dramas has been momentous in China, so much so that the party leadership moved to curb the enthusiasm of the country’s artistic propaganda community. The official Xinhua News Agency on Thursday published a rare hard-hitting article calling the shows “vulgar and deviant.” After a national outcry, the Communist Party’s propaganda department promptly banned the broadcast of “Let Us Fight the Japanese Devils Together.”
The video's narrator said Japan "has not learned its lesson from history" and advocated for "continuously using nuclear bombs until Japan announces its unconditional surrender for the second time."The video suggested China should "combine the new and old hatred" for Japan, asking Chinese viewers to channel their disdain from Japan's World War II invasion of China with their resentment over Minister Aso's recent Taiwan statements.
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