Nankin Road, Shanghai
- Nanjing Lu (Nanking Road)
- 1900-08
Join the hustle and bustle of Peking and Shanghai city life with this richly detailed 1930s home movie.
Opening in Beijing - known to westerners as Peking until the 1970s - this rich amateur film explores a busy market in the Outer City. Cyclists weave their way between traders, horses and carts. Carved pailous (traditional ceremonial archways) mark this out as an important street. The closing scenes of a similar market were probably shot in Shanghai, with a barber at work among a cornucopia of goods.
The film was shot by Dr Reginald Clay, a London teacher who travelled to China after his retirement in the early 1930s. Dr Clay visited Peking before staying with his daughter, a medical missionary, in Shanghai.
When cinema first came to China's shores, Shanghai was one of the most cosmopolitan cities in the world. The new technology was exhibited at the city's Xu Gardens in August 1896 (just months after the Lumière Brothers' first demonstration in Paris), and the earliest ever filmed images of the city were captured - by Western filmmakers - soon after.
Some of the oldest surviving footage of Shanghai was shot by a British war correspondent, dispatched to China to cover the 1900 Boxer Rebellion. It captures the teeming multi-national traffic on the central Nanjing Lu thoroughfare, from gliding bicycles and rattling rickshaws, to a Sikh police detachment and German soldiers enjoying a cigarette. Shanghai's famous waterfront, the Bund, captivated numerous filmmakers in the 20s and 30s, and several films here show a remarkable thronging harbour life, with sampans clustering beneath the Bund's baroque temples of commerce and leisure.
Also featuring in this collection of newsreels, travelogues and home movies are scenes of the Japanese occupation of the city in 1937, and the death and destruction that followed. These are sombre, even harrowing scenes, but a crucial chapter in Shanghai's history.