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The Crossing

The Crossing 2016

Runtime

8 mins

Language

Russian

Russian

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The Crossing Plot Summary

Read the complete plot summary and ending explained for The Crossing (2016). From turning points to emotional moments, uncover what really happened and why it matters.


Part I

In the brutal theater of World War II, a fierce clash unfolds in Manchuria between the Chinese National Revolutionary Army and the Imperial Japanese Army. A daring, unyielding push led by Major General Lei Yifang ends in a hard-won breakthrough that overpowers entrenched Japanese lines and seals a hard-earned victory. The triumph comes at a price: Dr. Yen Zekun, a Chinese field medic drafted into the Japanese forces from Taiwan, is captured, and Lei’s rising star culminates in a promotion to lieutenant general, reshaping both their fates. On a POW transport, Yen clings to a letter from his Japanese lover Masako, a quiet thread of personal longing amid the churn of war.

Years drift by as the Chinese Civil War flickers back to life. In Shanghai, Yu Zhen—a poor, illiterate woman with a stubborn will—volunteers as an orderly at a Nationalist hospital, dreaming of reuniting with her hunted boyfriend Yang Tianhu who has gone to fight the Communists. Lei’s world widens when he catches the eye of Zhou Yunfen, a wealthy debutante, at a charity event hosted by her parents. An instant, undeniable chemistry sparks between them, and after months of public tension and private tenderness, they marry, a union watched with mixed feelings by Shanghai’s elite.

A new thread of destiny pulls at Yu Zhen when she encounters signal corps sergeant Tong Daqing outside the photography studio that marked Lei and Zhou’s wedding. Tong’s interest in creating a convincing “family portrait”—with a borrowed baby to secure rations for his parents—leads Yu into a tense, fragile arrangement. The studio becomes a crossroads of deception and longing: Yen returns there with separate photographs of himself and Masako and asks the proprietor to alter a shot to imply a shared history. The city’s chaos spills into the studio as anti-war protests erupt, brutal police dispense the crowd, and a wounded Yu’s world intersects with a wounded national project.

Tong, restless and withdrawn, explains his soldierly path to Yu, admitting his belief that a simple soldier’s ID number could keep him connected to a world that might forget him. Yu’s picture-perfect dream of a husband and child dissolves into the hard demand of survival, and she begins a precarious descent into prostitution to secure passage to Taiwan in a bid to find the man she loves.

Lei’s fortunes ride the tides of battle. As the Huaihai Campaign tightens its grip and his supply lines falter, his army teeters on the edge of encirclement. An order to breakout is countermanded amid whispers of intelligence leaks, and Lei confronts the bitter truth that he has returned to the very ground where he once fought foreign invaders, only this time he faces an enemy within his own nation’s ranks.

In Taiwan, Zhou’s life unfolds with a new gravity. She discovers Masako’s diary tucked behind a painting in the music room, and Masako’s music sheets reveal a house that Masako once inhabited. A chance meeting with Yen at the lighthouse—where Zhou asks for stories of Masako to ignite the song she wants to write for Lei—begins an unlikely friendship born of shared longing for a distant beloved. Yen recounts how his mother sold Masako’s piano to Zhou’s family after the war’s shadows touched them all, a detail that binds their fates across oceans and generations.

The front steady drums on. Tong, now at Lei’s side to repair a radio, shares a quiet moment with the general as the two men study family photos and memories of home. In the trenches, a tense balance returns as civilians bring food to the Communist camp and morale blooms, while Nationalist soldiers starve. Lei’s resolve grows teeth; he even shoots his warhorse for meat when need gnaws at his men. A pivotal moment arrives when Tong, alongside an enlisted comrade and a local, faces a moment of choice under fire as a nearby Communist advance presses in.

The 108th Division mutinies, a chilling reminder that loyalties shift as the war drags on. Tong learns of the division’s defection, and Lei’s trust in those around him is tested to the limit. Yet, in a final act of shared courage, Lei orders his troops to hold the line, while Tong, badly burned in a moment of selfless heroism, drags Lei out of harm’s way as a truck explodes nearby. Limbs crushed and spirits frayed, Lei entrusts Tong with his diary, entrancing him with a promise that it must reach Zhou, the woman who has haunted his heart. Lei’s fate remains sealed in a tank shell’s final strike on the command post, a hero’s end that is both noble and haunting.

Among the smoke and ruin, the war’s threads tighten and stretch toward the future, leaving behind a scarred landscape of memory and unresolved longing.

Part II

The year is 1949, and the Chinese Communist Revolution sends three couples fleeing from the mainland toward Taiwan. A drunken ship captain cubes a fateful collision, and the vessel splinters into chaos as it sinks within minutes. Survivors cling to wreckage and debris, while the injured clamor for help in a desperate, improvised chorus of human endurance. Dr. Yen Zekun rises again as a beacon of medical knowledge, tending the wounded and guiding the group through peril as the sea becomes a brutal theatre of life and death.

Yu Zhen—who long ago supported Yen’s survival—reunites with Tong Daqing, who has become a lifeline in the terrifying moment after the disaster. In a cruel twist of fate, Tong loses the notebook Lei Yifang entrusted to him, a loss that propagates through the ship’s survivors as the dawn breaks on a fragile horizon. Yu Zhen’s resilience shines through as she helps the injured, and, in a moment of quiet victory against overwhelming odds, she and Tong find each other again, clinging to life until the first light of sunrise pierces the sea’s gray veil. An Australian cruiser, HMAS, glides into view and plucks the remaining survivors from the wreck, a small beacon of hope in a world of ruins.

Months pass with the weight of memory still pressing on everyone. Zhou Yunfen’s life takes on a new gravity as she gives birth to Lei Yifang’s son, a tiny flame of continuity in the wake of impossible loss. Yet the absence of Lei remains a constant ache, and Tong arrives at Zhou’s home bearing two crucial items: the news of Lei’s presumed death and the diary Lei wrote for Zhou. Yu Zhen’s careful, quiet gratitude for Tong’s loyalty surfaces as she thanks him and the shared circle of friends who helped see them through their darkest days. The diary, a manuscript of heartache and devotion, becomes a conduit that binds Zhou to the memory of her husband and to the child who bears his name.

In the end, the story circles back to the idea that love, memory, and endurance can outlast even the most cataclysmic upheavals. Zhou Yunfen, Tong Daqing, Yu Zhen, and Yen Zekun carry forward the precious threads of their past into a future that is at once uncertain and hopeful—and the diary Lei left behind serves as a living testament to a life shaped by both war and longing.

The Crossing Timeline

Follow the complete movie timeline of The Crossing (2016) with every major event in chronological order. Great for understanding complex plots and story progression.


Lei Yifang leads a breakthrough against Japanese lines in Manchuria

Major General Lei Yifang personally commands a daring assault that overthrows enemy positions and breaks Japanese resistance. His troops rout the lines and secure victory. The triumph earns Lei a promotion to lieutenant general, elevating his status during the war.

World War II, early 1940s Manchuria

Yen Zekun is captured and sent to a POW camp in Fengtian

Dr. Yen Zekun, conscripted into the Japanese army from Taiwan, is taken prisoner after the battle. He is shipped to a prison camp in Fengtian where his fate is bound for years. The capture sows the seeds for future moral and personal conflicts.

Shortly after the Manchuria battle Fengtian

Yen reads Masako's letter on the POW train

During the journey back to the camp, Yen reads a letter from Masako, revealing the depth of their complicated relationship. The letter heightens Yen's inner conflict between honor and love. It becomes a poignant memory that haunts him across the years.

During captivity, a few years later POW train

Yu Zhen volunteers as an orderly in Shanghai

A few years later, Yu Zhen, poor and illiterate, volunteers at a Nationalist hospital in Shanghai. She clings to the hope of reuniting with her boyfriend Yang Tianhu, who fights on the opposing side. Her life is defined by struggle and quiet resolve.

Late 1940s, during the resumption of the Chinese Civil War Shanghai

Lei and Zhou Yunfen marry after a rapid courtship

Lei encounters Zhou Yunfen, a wealthy debutante, at a charity event and they fall into a conspicuous romance. Their chemistry is obvious to all, and months later they marry. The union links political life with personal passion.

Months after their first encounter, late 1940s Shanghai

Yu Zhen and Tong Daqing pose for a family portrait

The next year, Yu Zhen meets signal sergeant Tong Daqing and agrees to a family portrait with a borrowed baby. They pose for a composite image to help secure meals amid wartime scarcity. The photo foreshadows later deceptions and blurred identities.

The year after Lei and Zhou's wedding Photography studio, Shanghai

Anti-war protest and altered photo at the studio

Outside the studio, a student anti-war protest erupts as the city pools through turmoil. Dr. Yen arrives and asks the proprietor to alter the photo to show him with Masako, exploiting the moment. The incident underscores how truth becomes a casualty of war.

Around the same time as item 6 Photography studio, Shanghai

Zhou Yunfen departs Shanghai for Taiwan

Now pregnant, Zhou Yunfen worries about leaving her homeland and future child. She departs for Taiwan aboard the Taiping, with a cousin taking a photo that captures Lei Yifang in the background. Lei watches from the shadows, bound to a distance that cannot be bridged.

Following year after their wedding Shanghai to Taiwan (Taiping)

Yu Zhen's descent into prostitution amid wartime hardship

Back in Shanghai, Yu Zhen struggles to find work as the war drains resources. She becomes a dancing girl at a club, then turns to prostitution to secure food and a way to travel in search of her missing lover. The city’s fall into chaos matches her own moral descent.

Late 1940s, wartime period Shanghai (boardinghouse and club)

Huaihai Campaign pushes Lei's forces toward collapse

Lei's 12th Army nears encirclement as supply lines are severed during the Huaihai Campaign. He orders a breakout, but the plan is undermined by countermanding orders. He laments fighting fellow Chinese instead of foreign invaders.

Late 1940s Huaihai Campaign front

108th Division defects; Tong confronts the truth

Tong discovers that the 108th Division has defected to the Communists. He attempts to report the betrayal, but his ally resists and the moment exposes shifting loyalties in the war. He carries the truth back to Lei amid mounting chaos.

Late 1940s Battlefield checkpoint

Breakout begins; Lei entrusts Tong with his diary; Lei dies

As the Nationalist lines crumble, Tong reports to Lei about the desertion and is told to press on. Lei entrusts Tong with his diary and urges him to keep faith. A tank shell tears into the command post, and Lei is killed, leaving his diary to endure beyond him.

During the breakout, late wartime Command post

Three couples flee to Taiwan; ship collision and sinking

In 1949, three couples make for Taiwan, but a drunken captain causes a fatal collision between ships. The vessel sinks within minutes, throwing survivors into the cold sea. The disaster begins a harrowing struggle for survival.

1949 Sea near Taiwan

Yen Zekun dies; Yu Zhen reunites with Tong on the sea

Zekun uses his medical skills to aid the wounded but is stabbed and dies, envisioning Masako in his final moments. Yu Zhen is later reunited with the injured Tong Daqing among the wreckage as survivors cling to debris.

1949, during sinking Sea

Diary delivered; Zhou Yunfen learns of Lei's fate and counts the memory of him

The survivors are finally rescued by HMAS. Four months later, Zhou Yunfen gives birth to Lei Yifang's son, while Tong Daqing arrives with news of Lei's death and brings Lei's diary, secured with Yu Zhen's help. Zhou thanks Tong and Yu Zhen for preserving the memory of a man who helped shape their lives.

Four months after rescue, 1949-1950 Taiwan

The Crossing Characters

Explore all characters from The Crossing (2016). Get detailed profiles with their roles, arcs, and key relationships explained.


Lei Yifang

A battle-hardened Nationalist general who leads a bold charge in Manchuria. His rapid promotion follows a hard-won victory against Japanese lines, but the war’s toll tests his faith in glory and duty. He faces the pivot from fighting foreign invaders to contending with civil strife, and his fate remains tied to the costs of command and loyalty.

⚔️ Duty 🗺️ Leadership

Yen Zekun

An ethnic Chinese field medic conscripted into the Japanese army, captured in Manchuria and sent to a POW camp. His loyalties are torn between his homeland and his role within the occupying force, a tension that shadows him across years. He survives the war, nurtures a complicated romance with Masako, and meets a brutal end during the 1949 maritime catastrophe.

🩺 Medicine 💔 Loyalty

Yu Zhen

A poor, illiterate woman who volunteers as an orderly in a Nationalist hospital and later turns to prostitution to survive wartime Shanghai. Her pursuit of a missing lover drives much of the plot, including the adoption of a fake family portrait to secure food and hope. Her resilience anchors the film’s exploration of poverty, desire, and endurance.

🌾 Survival 💪 Resilience

Tong Daqing

A signal corps sergeant who forms a bond with Yu and Lei, helps repair radios, and returns to fight even after learning harsh truths. His loyalty is tested by military deception and desertion within his ranks, and he ultimately sacrifices for Lei as the battle collapses around them. He carries Lei’s diary to the hope of reuniting loved ones.

🤝 Loyalty 🎖️ Soldier

Zhou Yunfen

A wealthy debutante who marries Lei and faces the fear of being sent away to Taiwan. Her world expands as she connects with Yen and discovers Masako’s diary, revealing shared longing and the cultural legacies of the island’s past. Her pregnancy and the wartime upheavals frame the personal stakes of political decisions.

💍 Romance 🏛️ Society

Masako

A Japanese artist and Masako’s diaries anchor the cross-cultural threads of the story, linking Yen’s past with Zhou’s present. Her relationship with Yen and her own life choices underline the complexity of affection under empire and upheaval. Her memory persists through letters and sheet music that shape Zhou’s creative impulse.

🎨 Art 💔 Forbidden Love

Passer-bye

A minor figure glimpsed amid the chaos of war, embodying the countless ordinary people whose lives touch the major players only briefly. The character serves as a quiet reminder of the civilians who witness history from the margins and carry its scars forward.

👀 Observer 🕊️ Quiet Presence

Topless

A nickname-bearing soldier who appears in the trenches, illustrating the rough, unglamorous reality of frontline life. His presence highlights camaraderie and the grittier humor that helps sustain troops during disorienting campaigns.

🪖 Soldier 🧩 Nickname

Woman

An unnamed female figure representing Shanghai’s women whose lives are upended by rationing, migration, and the war’s social changes. Her experiences reflect the broader impact of conflict on daily life and survival.

🧡 Women's Resilience 🗺️ Social Change

The Crossing Settings

Learn where and when The Crossing (2016) takes place. Explore the film’s settings, era, and how they shape the narrative.


Time period

1930s-1949

The film spans the late 1930s through the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949. It begins in the wartime years of World War II, with Manchuria as a frontline theater between Chinese and Japanese forces. The narrative then shifts to the postwar period, depicting the 1949 exodus to Taiwan as families and lovers seek safety and rebuild amid new political realities.

Location

Manchuria, Shanghai, Taiwan (Keelung)

The story unfolds across Manchuria during the Second Sino-Japanese War, moving from battlefield frontlines to the civilian cities of Shanghai and Taiwan. Manchuria is depicted as a brutal, strategic arena where armies clash and trenches are forged. Shanghai serves as a wartime hub where civilians struggle to survive amidst rationing, protests, and social upheaval, while Taiwan emerges as a postwar crossroads reflecting shifting political boundaries and the fates of those who flee the mainland.

❄️ War-torn 🏙️ Urban 🗺️ Historical

The Crossing Themes

Discover the main themes in The Crossing (2016). Analyze the deeper meanings, emotional layers, and social commentary behind the film.


⚔️

Loyalty

Loyalty threads through every major choice, from generals and soldiers to lovers separated by war. Lei Yifang remains steadfast in leading his troops while facing mounting casualties and shifting allegiances. Tong Daqing demonstrates a complex loyalty to comrades, his diary, and the fragile bond that keeps him fighting. The film uses these loyalties to explore what characters owe to each other when the battlefield becomes a battlefield of the heart as well.

💔

Forbidden Love

Romance crosses borders and social boundaries, revealing how love endures amid occupation and war. Yen Zekun’s liaison with Masako complicates his identity and loyalties, while Zhou Yunfen’s marriage to Lei highlights the personal costs of political duty. Masako’s diary and the entwined histories of these relationships illuminate how affection persists even as empires crumble. The theme shows that love can be both a solace and a source of peril in turbulent times.

🕯️

Memory

Memory is preserved through letters, diaries, and photographs that bridge decades and loyalties. Lei Yifang’s diary and Tong Daqing’s role as custodian keep a personal record of a vanished life and a man’s last stand. Masako’s diary and Zhou’s music become vessels for longing, connecting generations across war-torn landscapes. The film uses memory to question what survives when cities fall and generations are displaced.

🌍

Displacement

War forces people to move, reinvent, and seek new homes, often across contested borders. The narrative follows three couples who flee to Taiwan as the revolutionary tide rises, signaling a reordering of national identities. Survival hinges on improvisation—prostitution, kinship, and the aid of strangers—while homeland feels increasingly distant. The displacement motif frames the end of one era and the fragile beginnings of another.

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The Crossing Spoiler-Free Summary

Discover the spoiler-free summary of The Crossing (2016). Get a concise overview without any spoilers.


In a turbulent mid‑century China where the echo of artillery blends with the clatter of bustling streets, the film opens on a landscape scarred by conflict and brimming with personal yearning. Shanghai’s neon‑lit alleys and the stark, rain‑slick underpasses of an occupied city become a backdrop for lives caught between duty and desire, each footstep hinting at larger forces that shape their futures. The tone is a gritty, poetic mix of wartime realism and intimate drama, inviting viewers to feel the weight of history while lingering on quiet moments of human connection.

Lei Yifang is a rising military commander whose reputation grows amid fierce battles, yet his heart is pulled toward a world beyond strategy and orders. Across the city, Yu Zhen is a resilient young woman working in a hospital, driven by love and a fierce will to survive in a society that offers her few choices. In the midst of these intersecting paths, Yen Zekun—a medic whose loyalties are complicated by his own past—carries a secret longing that colors his every decision. The story also follows Tong Daqing, a signal‑corps sergeant whose quiet determination provides a steady counterpoint to the chaos around him, while Zhou Yunfen moves through elite circles, her affluent background masking a deep personal quest.

The film weaves these characters together through shared spaces—photo studios, charity balls, and the cramped corridors of wartime hospitals—showing how fleeting encounters can become anchors in an unsettled world. Their relationships pulse with unspoken tension, hinting at alliances and betrayals without ever spelling them out, and the mood shifts from the hushed urgency of night‑time underpasses to the charged atmosphere of public gatherings. This atmospheric tapestry suggests that love, memory, and hope persist even when the ground beneath them trembles.

Through muted lighting, sparse dialogue, and a lingering soundtrack, the narrative invites the audience to linger on the spaces between action and aftermath, encouraging curiosity about how these intertwined lives will navigate the storm that looms on the horizon.

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