Li Xuelian y su marido Qin Yuhe organizan un falso divorcio para obtener un segundo apartamento. Pero seis meses más tarde, él se volverá a casar con otra mujer. Entonces Li, llena de ira, presenta una demanda que perderá, ya que en su momento cumplieron con todos los procedimientos legales. Además, Qin ahora la acusa de haber sido impura en su noche de bodas. Diez años después, Li emprende un viaje a la capital durante el Congreso Nacional del Pueblo, con el objetivo de completar su absurdo periplo de una década por el hijo que no tuvo.
The Chinese medical drama-thriller “Sentence Me Guilty” gives too much away in the early running and has nowhere special to go after that. Centered on a female doctor framed for highly unethical behavior in the wake of her young daughter’s death, the pic has some intriguing elements but generates little tension and doesn’t deliver the emotional clout auds might reasonably expect from a tale involving a grieving mother.
Brings viewers into a small Chinese city and inspires familiarity with the rhythms of everyday existence, with people's dreams, shortcomings and illusions in a way that is universal.
The film is a key film project for the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Party by the Propaganda Department of the Guangdong Provincial Party Committee, revealing the unknown revolutionary party history of Shantou Red Transportation Station. The film tells the story of a group of unsung heroes in Shantou who, during the period of the Agrarian Revolution, fought against the enemy with their blood and lives in the revolutionary struggle