This article is within the scope of WikiProject Hong Kong, a project to coordinate efforts in improving all Hong Kong-related articles. If you would like to help improve this and other Hong Kong-related articles, you are invited to join this project.Hong KongWikipedia:WikiProject Hong KongTemplate:WikiProject Hong KongHong Kong articles
I'm pretty sure this movie is a work of fiction, so why is it written as if this stuff actually happened? It is INSPIRED by the Defense of the Great Wall, but there was no group of seven soldiers holding off the Japanese for three days. There were some smaller units that managed to delay them, but it was a lot more than seven men. The plot of a movie should be written making it clear that it is discussing a fictional scenario, and that these things didn't actually happen. Like the end; "there were statues made of the fighting soldiers to commemorate them". Is this how the movie ends, with them making statues of the seven men? Did they actually make statues of the seven fictional soldiers in real life? If these are these real statues dedicated to the men who fought against the Japanese, A) it should be mentioned in the main Defence of the Great Wall article, not here, and B) It shouldn't be written making it sound as if there is some actual statue commemorating these "seven men", because that is not true..45Colt14:54, 20 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]