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Hong Kong Dark Cinema - Film Noir, Re-conceptions, and Reflexivity

English · Hardback

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This book is a scholarly investigation of the historical development and contemporary transformation of film noir in today's Hong Kong. Focusing on the evolvement of cinematic narratives, aesthetics, and techniques, the author balances a deep reading of the multiple filmic plots with a discussion of the cinematic portrayals of gender, romance, identities and power relations. Nuancing the prototypical cinematic form and tragic sense of classical film noir, the recent Hong Kong cinema turns around the classical generic role of film noir at the turn of the century to convey very different messages-joy, hope or love. This book examines how the mainstream cinema, or pre-and-post-Hong Kong cinema in particular, applies a peculiar strategy that makes rooms for the audience to enjoy a pleasure-giving process of reflexivity and also critique the mainstream ideology. With new analytical approaches and angles, this book breaks new ground in offering transcultural and cross-genre analyses on the cinema and its impact in local and international markets.
This book is the first major scholarly investigation of the historical development and contemporary transformation of film noir in today's Hong Kong. Focusing on the evolvement of cinematic narratives, aesthetics, and techniques, the author balances a deep reading of the multiple filmic plots with a refreshing discussion of the cinematic portrayals of gender, romance, identities and power relations. This book also revisits conceptual categories developed by Foucault, Lacan, Derrida and Butler.

List of contents

1. Introduction.- 2. Film Noir, Crisis and Politics of Identity.- 3. The Private Eye Blues: A New Spectator-Screen Relationship.- 4. City of Glass: a Temporal Character of Plot.- 5. Happy Together: Reversing the Archetypal Roles.- 6. Swordsman II: Performance and Performativity.- 7. Conclusion.

About the author

Kim-mui E. Elaine Chan has been teaching film studies and cultural studies in Hong Kong for undergraduate and post-graduate core programmes respectively at Lingnan University and Hong Kong Baptist University since 2005. Her work has appeared in such academic journals as the Journal of Chinese Cinemas and the International Journal of Cinema. Chan received her PhD in Film Studies from the University of Kent, UK. 

Summary

This book is a scholarly investigation of the historical development and contemporary transformation of film noir in today’s Hong Kong. Focusing on the evolvement of cinematic narratives, aesthetics, and techniques, the author balances a deep reading of the multiple filmic plots with a discussion of the cinematic portrayals of gender, romance, identities and power relations. Nuancing the prototypical cinematic form and tragic sense of classical film noir, the recent Hong Kong cinema turns around the classical generic role of film noir at the turn of the century to convey very different messages—joy, hope or love. This book examines how the mainstream cinema, or pre-and-post-Hong Kong cinema in particular, applies a peculiar strategy that makes rooms for the audience to enjoy a pleasure-giving process of reflexivity and also critique the mainstream ideology. With new analytical approaches and angles, this book breaks new ground in offering transcultural and cross-genre analyses on the cinema and its impact in local and international markets.
This book is the first major scholarly investigation of the historical development and contemporary transformation of film noir in today’s Hong Kong. Focusing on the evolvement of cinematic narratives, aesthetics, and techniques, the author balances a deep reading of the multiple filmic plots with a refreshing discussion of the cinematic portrayals of gender, romance, identities and power relations. This book also revisits conceptual categories developed by Foucault, Lacan, Derrida and Butler.

Product details

Authors Kim-Mui E Elaine Chan, Kim-Mui E. Elaine Chan
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.11.2019
 
EAN 9783030282929
ISBN 978-3-0-3028292-9
No. of pages 241
Dimensions 157 mm x 24 mm x 213 mm
Weight 456 g
Illustrations XII, 241 p. 10 illus., 1 illus. in color.
Series East Asian Popular Culture
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Photography, film, video, TV

Genre, B, Popular Culture, Cultural Studies, Film Theory, Literature, Cultural and Media Studies, Asian Culture, Ethnology—Asia, Motion pictures, Film history, theory & criticism, Film genres, Film: styles & genres, Genre Studies, Motion pictures—Asia, Asian Film and TV, Asian Cinema and TV, Film history, theory or criticism

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