Man jailed in 1967 riots to produce film about unrest
Raymond Young calls period of action against colonial government ‘greatest taboo in Hong Kong’s history’
The first ever feature film based on the 1967 riots, produced by a former leftist student who was jailed during those tumultuous months, is slated to hit screens by the end of this year.
May Days will blend politics and romance, in a low-budget production its director claims will be “100 per cent locally made”.
Director Lai Man-cheuk’s creation explores one of the most controversial and defining periods in the city’s history. Inspired by the Cultural Revolution which erupted on the mainland a year earlier, the 1967 riots saw pro-Beijing radicals attempt to overthrow the British colonial government through strikes, violent clashes with police and bombings.
Sparked by disputes at an artificial flower factory, the four months of disturbances, which nearly brought the city to a standstill, claimed 51 lives. Nearly 2,000 people were jailed.
It is a topic that local filmmakers have stayed silent on for almost half a century, and one that Lai admitted wanting to make a film on ever since he experienced the events 50 years ago.