How does People's Daily evaluate Escape from the British Museum?

People's Daily commented on Escape from the British Museum: Even if the rivers and lakes are in a hurry, Wan Li will return to the ship within a certain period of time, and one day they will go home with dignity and dignity!

"Escape from the British Museum" is a self-created network short play directed by online user Pancake Fruit, starring Sister Xia and Pancake Fruit. It tells the story of a China jade pot with a thin embryo and branches tied, who escaped from the British Museum and became a lovely girl. She met a China media person who worked overseas, and then they set foot on the road home together. People's Daily commented on Escape from the British Museum: Even if the rivers and lakes are in a hurry, Wan Li will return to the ship within a certain period of time, and one day they will go home with dignity and dignity!

This creative short play was shot with great care, and many shots were shot in Britain. The anthropomorphic setting is very interesting. MengMeng's small jade pot can transform people's hearts. Some media commented that this drama makes the flowers in the depths of cultural value flow.

Escape from the creative background of the British Museum

Known as the "Stolen Cathedral", the British Museum has about 23,000 pieces of China cultural relics, ranging from Shang and Zhou bronzes to Tang and Song porcelains and Ming and Qing jade products, of which about 2,000 pieces have been on display for a long time. Most of them come from the crazy plunder in the war of aggression, as well as the sale of stolen goods by grave robbers in the late Qing Dynasty and the private sale of the royal family in the Qing Dynasty. As the short film alludes to, due to the chaotic management, these artistic treasures can not play the role of inheriting history and culture, but will face the fate of being stolen, destroyed and hung on the e-commerce platform.

Looking around the world, 2,654.38+08 museums in at least 47 countries have collected more than 6,543.8+0,670 pieces of China cultural relics. According to statistics, since the Opium War in 1840, more than 100,000 pieces of China cultural relics have been scattered abroad due to war and unfair trade. Those treasures that left their homes recorded their sad stories in exile, and also reminded China people of the painful lesson that "they will be beaten if they fall behind".