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What's the name of the little girl in the movie "South of the City"? What will she be like when she grows up?

Eiko. There is no plot of growing up in the movie.

In the late 1920s, a six-year-old girl named Lin lived in a small alley in the south of Beijing. Xiuzhen, a "crazy" woman who often stands in the alley looking for her daughter, is the first friend Eiko makes. Xiuzhen once had a crush on a college student. Later, college students were taken away by the police, and Xiuzhen's daughter, Xiao Guizi, was left at the foot of the city by her family. Life and death are unknown.

Eiko is very sympathetic to her. Eiko learned that the little girl's life is very similar to that of the little devil, found the mark on the back of her neck, and quickly took her to Xiuzhen. After Xiuzhen met her daughter who had been separated for six years, she immediately took her to her father. As a result, the mother and daughter died tragically under the train wheels.

Houjia moved to Xinlian Hutong. Eiko met a young man with thick lips in a nearby desert garden. In order to pay for his brother's education, he had to steal. Eiko thinks she is kind, but she can't tell whether she is a good person or a bad person. Not long after, Eiko found a small bronze Buddha on the barren grass, which was discovered by police spies. He took the young man away with the police, which made Eiko very sad.

When Eiko was nine years old, Feng Daming, the husband of her wet nurse Ma Song, came to the Lins. Eiko was very sad to learn that Ma Song's son fell into the river and drowned two years ago, and her daughter was sold to someone else by her husband. She couldn't understand why Ma Song left her children to wait on others. Later, Eiko's father died of lung disease. Ma Song was also picked up by her husband with a little donkey. Eiko took his family on a long-distance carriage and said goodbye to his childhood with all kinds of doubts.

Extended data

Creation background

The film is adapted from the novella of the same name published by Taiwan Province woman writer Lin 1960. "Old Things in the South of the City" was first adapted into a film literary script by Yi Ming, director of Beijing Film Factory.

The original novel was written by five people in five paragraphs. When I adapted it, I deleted the second half of Aunt Lan and Snowball. "The Legend of Hui 'an Pavilion" remained basically the same and became the first film. The first half of Let's Go to the Sea, Rolling on the Donkey and Dad's Flowers Falling are mixed together, and the next part is composed of two paragraphs.