The dramatic retelling of a decisive Korean War battle between Chinese soldiers and U.S.-led United Nations forces smashed box office records last month to become China's third-highest grossing film of all-time, according to state media, amid a new push for patriotic-only historical accounts by the Communist Party.
Released over China's National Day holidays in early October, The Battle at Lake Changjin is set during November 1950 and recounts how Chinese soldiers forced a retreat of U.N. forces from the Choisin Reservoir in present-day North Korea.
The film has already earned $875.5 million (5.6 billion RMB) since opening on September 30, according to the e-ticketing platform Maoyan, and it is still showing at some cinemas in China more than a month after opening.
The Battle at Lake Changjin was commissioned by the Chinese government ahead of the Communist Party's 100th anniversary this year, and it is the latest in a series of patriotic war-time films to hit Chinese theatres in the last few years.
Other notable hits include The Korean War epic, The Sacrifice, The Eight Hundred, which recounts the 1937 Battle of Shanghai between invading Japanese forces and the National revolutionary Army, and The Wolf Warrior action film franchise about contemporary People's Liberation Army soldiers.