>>2735061>Jackie Chan movies, Bruce Lee, Jet Li then in the early 00s all that wire Kung Fu, House of Flying Daggers, Hero, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, stuff was huge. Kung Fu Hustle, Shaolin SoccerDude, these are all Hong-Kong made movies. Even before the civil war most film production came out of the more stable southern parts of China and then a lot of the people involved moved to Hong Kong and Taiwan afterward. Mainland China ended up with a completely different path when it came to filmmaking.
On one hand, there were films made for the masses, a lot like that Korean War movie you mentioned. corny, cheaply made and pretty simplistic war movies or comedies meant to entertain peasants. On the other hand there were more artsy films, directed by people who had studied at top film film making schools abroad. These had big state budgets and won soviet film awards. but most people never actually saw them and they were still heavily propagandistic.
The real high point of Chinese cinema is the Fifth Generation. That era had fewer restrictions on subject matter and more cross-regional exchange within the Sinosphere, which led to some genuinely great films. They were critically strong and did okay commercially but not massively so.
In the end though, chinese audiences largely wanted more lowbrow entertainment and that’s what they got. Ironically capitalism ended up producing the same kind of state-backed, cheaply made mass-market content of the mao era, simplistic war movies and crass comedies.