[BOOK][B] Remaking Chinese Cinema: Through the Prism of Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Hollywood

Y Wang - 2017 - degruyter.com
2017degruyter.com
From melodrama to Cantonese opera, from silents to 3D animated film, Remaking Chinese
Cinema traces cross-Pacific film remaking over the last eight decades. Through the
refractive prism of Hollywood, Shanghai, and Hong Kong, Yiman Wang revolutionizes our
understanding of Chinese cinema as national cinema. Against the diffusion model of
national cinema spreading from a central point—Shanghai in the Chinese case—she
argues for a multi-local process of co-constitution and reconstitution. In this spirit, Wang …
From melodrama to Cantonese opera, from silents to 3D animated film, Remaking Chinese Cinema traces cross-Pacific film remaking over the last eight decades. Through the refractive prism of Hollywood, Shanghai, and Hong Kong, Yiman Wang revolutionizes our understanding of Chinese cinema as national cinema. Against the diffusion model of national cinema spreading from a central point—Shanghai in the Chinese case—she argues for a multi-local process of co-constitution and reconstitution. In this spirit, Wang analyzes how southern Chinese cinema (huanan dianying) morphed into Hong Kong cinema through trans-regional and trans-national interactions that also produced a vision of Chinese cinema.
Among the book’s highlights are a rereading of The Goddess—one of the best-known silent Chinese films in the West—from the perspective of its wartime Mandarin-Cantonese remake; the excavation of a hybrid genre (the Western costume Cantonese opera film) inspired by Hollywood's fantasy films of the 1930s and produced in Hong Kong well into the mid-twentieth century; and a rumination on Hollywood’s remake of Hong Kong’s Infernal Affairs and the wholesale incorporation of “Chinese elements” in Kung Fu Panda 2.
De Gruyter