
Following the end of World War II and amidst the upheaval of the Chinese Revolution, three couples of varying backgrounds and nationalities embark on a perilous journey to escape mainland China and seek refuge on the island of Taiwan. Their escape is fraught with danger as they navigate a tumultuous era and confront personal challenges while forging unexpected connections.
Does The Crossing I have end credit scenes?
No!
The Crossing I does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of The Crossing I, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Masami Nagasawa
Masako Shimura

Takeshi Kaneshiro
Yan Shikun

Jack Kao
Yan Cangmeng

Angeles Woo
Mei Fang

Tony Yang

Song Hye-kyo
Zhou Yunfen

Zhang Jiayi

Zhang Ziyi
Yu Zhen

Lin Mei-Shiu

Bowie Lam Bo-Yee
Peter Yuan

Qin Hailu

Tong Dawei
Tong Daqing

Hitomi Kuroki
Mrs Shimura

Huang Xiaoming
Lei Yifang

Wang Zhifei
Captain Chen

Miura Kenichi

Wang Qianyuan

Denny Huang
Yang Tianhu

Yu Zhen

Li Xin-Meng

Cong Shan

Yang Kuei-mei
Yan's mother

Li Xinmin
Farmers's Leader

Zhang Guoqing
Old Guo

Yu Feihong

Annie Woo
Yan's neighbour
Discover where to watch The Crossing I online, including streaming platforms, rental options, and official sources. Compare reviews, ratings, and in-depth movie information across sites like IMDb, TMDb, Wikipedia or Rotten Tomatoes.
Challenge your knowledge of The Crossing I with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Which actor portrays the high‑ranking general Lei Yifang?
Huang Xiaoming
Tong Dawei
Takeshi Kaneshiro
Zhang Ziyi
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of The Crossing I, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
Part I
In a sweeping conflict set against World War II on the Manchurian frontier, Lei Yifang, Huang Xiaoming, a high-ranking general, orders a daring assault on entrenched Japanese forces despite pushback from his subordinates. The bold strike breaks through the enemy lines and the momentum shifts, winning a hard-fought victory that changes the careers of those involved. Dr. Yen Zekun, an ethnic Chinese field medic conscripted into the Japanese army from Taiwan, is captured during the chaos and shipped away to a prison camp in Fengtian. Lei’s rise continues as he’s promoted to lieutenant general, while Yen finds himself confined far from home. On the train transporting prisoners, Yen reads a letter from his Japanese lover, Masami Nagasawa, Masako, whose presence threads through the years that follow.
A few years pass, and the Chinese Civil War roars anew. In Shanghai, Yu Zhen, a poor and illiterate young woman who has become an orderly at a Nationalist hospital, clings to the hope of reuniting with her boyfriend Yang Tianhu, who fights on the other side of the conflict. Meanwhile, in a different social orbit, Lei Yifang captives’ world widens when Zhou Yunfen, Song Hye-kyo, a wealthy debutante, captures the general’s attention at a charity event hosted by her family. Their chemistry is undeniable, and their romance soon leads to marriage, set against a backdrop of looming war and social divides.
Months later, Yu Zhen encounters signal sergeant Tong Daqing, Tong Dawei, near the same photography studio used for Zhou and Lei’s wedding photos. Tong hopes to construct a “family portrait”—with a borrowed baby and a staged union—to help his parents secure more food rations. After they take the pictures, a student anti-war protest erupts outside the studio, and the scene spirals into violence as police crack down. In the studio, Yen reemerges, presenting separate photos of himself and Masako and requesting a clever alteration to simulate a life they never shared.
Tong and Yu slip away to a nearby noodle shop, where Tong speaks about why he joined the army, and Yu asks about soldier identification numbers that would let her locate him later, whether alive or dead. Yu’s expression brightens at the thought of her future, but Tong misreads it as a sign of romantic interest. He rushes to depart for duty, urging Yu to memorize his unit number so she can find him in the future. In the end, Yu orders a copy of the wedding portrait that supposedly captures the two of them with their “baby,” a dream that keeps her alive amid hardship.
As Zhou travels to Taiwan with Lei’s world quietly closing around her, she begins to sense the deeper layers of her husband’s life. Her pregnancy grows, and she speaks of not wanting to be sent away to Taiwan as war clouds gather. Her parents see her off, capturing one final image of Lei in the background as he silently watches from a hidden position, preparing for the front.
Back in Shanghai, the atmosphere for workers and dancers grows tense as war demands more sacrifices. Yu, having lost her earlier stability, turns to work as a dancer and, later, into prostitution to secure funds for her journey to Taiwan, hoping to find her missing lover. A new reality emerges: Lei’s 12th Army edges toward encirclement in the Huaihai Campaign, with supply routes cut and morale fraying. An attempt to break out is met with fresh orders that force Lei to confront the scars of battles fought earlier on the same ground, but now against fellow Chinese rather than foreign invaders. He laments the irony of returning to the same battlefronts, only to see comrades fall to their own countrymen.
In Taiwan, Zhou searches for music and memory, replacing a painting with a relic from her wedding. She discovers Masako’s diary tucked behind a painting, along with Masako’s sheet music, and she begins to understand that the house she occupies once belonged to Masako herself. Zhou encounters Yen again, and the two form a fragile, quiet alliance rooted in shared longing for a distant love. Yen explains how his mother sold Masako’s mother the piano that Zhou now treasures, and the two bond over the sound of music and the ache of separation, with quarters of history and family secrets binding them.
Meanwhile, Tong, back with Lei’s radio crew, forges a moment of solidarity with Lei as they share their photos and memories. In the broader war zones, the Communist forces gain momentum, while the Nationalists tighten their grip on dwindling resources. Lei makes a dramatic choice to stand his ground as the enemy advances, and Tong, moved by loyalty, returns to support him even as the end looms. A turning point arrives when Tong’s companion–a defector from the 108th Division–turns hostile, and Tong must navigate a dangerous moral landscape to preserve life. The two men face a final, brutal confrontation as the Chinese civil war consumes them all, with Lei making a last, selfless decision to ensure the survival of his diary and the memory of his family that anchors him to the future. In the end, Lei’s fate is sealed by a tank shell that destroys his command post, and Tong’s steadfast loyalty underlines the human cost of war.
Part II
The story leaps forward to the dawn of 1949 as three couples flee from China to Taiwan amid the Communist Revolution. A drunken ship captain endangers the voyage when his vessel collides with another, and the hull sinks in mere minutes. Surviving a chaotic scramble, Dr. Yen Zekun uses his medical knowledge to tend the injured on makeshift flotation devices as the wreckage drifts. Yu Zhen, recalling her days as a nurse, assists Yen and others while struggling to stay afloat. The desperate scramble for life turns grim when some men target lifebuoys for themselves, and Yen is stabbed in the melee. He drifts away, seeing a vision of Masako—whose own sorrow over her past life threads the memories of those he loves—before slipping away into the sea.
Yu Zhen, resilient and resourceful, is reunited with Tong Daqing, who has also survived, though he loses Lei Yifang’s notebook in the chaos. Yu Zhen clutches the diary’s pages as the survivors cling to debris, and an Australian warship, HMAS, rescues them along with thirty-one other survivors as the sun rises on a fragile new day. Four months pass, and Zhou Yunfen gives birth to Lei Yifang’s son, though she remains unaware of her husband’s fate. Tong Daqing then arrives at Zhou’s home to bring the bad news—and to offer Lei Yifang’s diary, which Yu Zhen had preserved. The two men’s acts of courage—Tong’s loyalty and Yu Zhen’s steadfast hope—allow Zhou to begin to understand the cost of love in war, and to give thanks to the people who helped them endure. In a quiet moment of gratitude, Zhou and Tong both acknowledge the gratitude they owe to Yu Zhen for keeping the memories alive, and for helping to carry the weight of the past into a fragile future.
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