The Burning of the Red Lotus Temple (simplified Chinese: 火烧红莲寺; traditional Chinese: 火燒紅蓮寺; pinyin: Huǒshāo Hóngliánsì) is a lost Chinese silent film serial directed by Zhang Shichuan, widely considered to be the founding father of Chinese cinema.[1][2] The film is adapted from the novel The Tale of the Extraordinary Swordsman.[3]

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The Burning of the Red Lotus Temple
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Directed byZhang Shichuan
Written byZheng Zhengqiu
Shang K'ai-jan
StarringHu Die
Production
company
Release date
1928–1931
Running time
1,620 minutes
CountryChina
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The Burning of the Red Lotus Temple, in 16 parts, is among the longest films ever produced and the longest major release,[specify] running 27 hours in total. The Mingxing Film Company production was released in 19 feature-length parts between 1928 and 1931. No copies have survived. The craze of the film series eventually led the Kuomintang to ban all wuxia films by the early 1930s because wuxia was thought to be inciting anarchy and rebellion.[4]

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