Canadian Audiences Moved by Chinese Wartime Film ‘Dead To Rights’
Chinese wartime film ‘Dead To Rights’, depicting the tragic Nanjing Massacre, debuted in Ottawa, Toronto & Vancouver, leaving Canadian viewers deeply moved.
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Chinese wartime film ‘Dead To Rights’, depicting the tragic Nanjing Massacre, debuted in Ottawa, Toronto & Vancouver, leaving Canadian viewers deeply moved.
Ex-footballer Keisuke Honda says sorry for doubting the Nanjing Massacre, sharing historical sources and urging us all to fact-check before hitting post.
The Chinese film ‘Dead to Rights’, centered on the 1937 Nanjing Massacre in the Chinese mainland, premiered in Toronto and Vancouver, prompting reflections on history.
‘Dead To Rights’ retells the 1937 Nanjing Massacre with raw intensity, topping China’s box office and reigniting conversations on justice, memory and resilience.
Dead to Rights has smashed 1.9 billion yuan at the Chinese mainland box office and gears up for global release on August 15 in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Malaysia, and Singapore.
Check out the haunting trailer for Dead to Rights, revisiting the 1937 Nanjing Massacre through chilling photo evidence and raw storytelling.
New trailer for Dead to Rights follows civilians risking everything to protect film evidence from the Nanjing Massacre—survival, resistance, and raw cinematic power.
Explore Dead To Rights, the Chinese mainland’s cinematic triumph that shines a light on heroism during the 1937 Nanjing Massacre with stunning visuals and moral depth.
How filmmaker Cao Haibin is preserving the last testimonies of Nanjing survivors and honoring Iris Chang’s legacy in a race against time.
Discover why Chinese film Dead to Rights is dominating global box office with powerful storytelling, historical depth, and rave reviews.