Context (C3)

Cards (69)

  • Cinematographer?

    Chris Doyle (previous collaborator)
  • Producer?
    Lau
  • Editor?
    Chang (previous collaborator)
  • Writer?
    Wong Kar-Wai
  • Genres:
    Neo-noir
    Crime
    Comedy-drama
  • Fallen Angels experiments with genre, post modernism and is an example of Hong Kong New Wave cinema  
  • What happened between China and HK in 1848?
    China gave HK to the British for 99 years
  • What happened in 1997?
    The lease expired and Thatcher organised 1 country, 2 systems for HK and mainland China which would last for 50 years
  • Fallen Angels makes few deliberate political or social points on surface level, but on a deeper level...

    The mood created can be linked to the status of HK at the time 
  • What does the transient, dislocated status of main protagonists reflect?
    Reflects the indistinct space of HK as in-between the UK and China 
  • In contemporary Hong Kong, commodification has displaced community, weakened traditions, and produced isolated individuals who are unsure of their identities – human activities rely solely around money
  • Wong constructs an image of HK that’s devoid of history and memory (the characters’ homes show no traces of the past –transitory and temporary) 
  • Experimental film and new wave...
  • What constitutes a film movement?
    -Distinctive body of films directed by auteur
    -Has a related body of critical writing
    -Thematic/stylistic innovations
    -Is a response to wider political/social or cultural changes in particular time/place 
  • The East Asian film movements were less a reflection of national cinema and more a reflection of global phenomena 
  • What are the five key developments in cinema from 1960-2000?
    1)Rise of auteur
    2) New waves
    3) Avant-garde political films
    4) Post-modernism
    5) Film-cultism
  • What's the rise of the auteur?
    The director becomes a ‘star,’ their signature is actively promoted as a mark of quality
  • What are the new waves?
    Different rebellions occurred against the conventional style, form, and mode of production of mainstream films
  • What are avant-garde political films?
    Filmmakers realised the standard form of feature film was complicit with ruling order, reinforcing political, social norms which they felt could be contested 
  • What's post-modernism?
    Post WW2 period – loss of faith in modernity, this manifested in an emphasis on playfulness, playing with genre and the above representing a collapse of confidence in reality 
  • What's film cultism?
    1960s onwards – film began to be taught as a subject; cult films emerged – one that has a passionate following but doesn’t appeal to everybody
  • What was the time span of the First Hong Kong New Wave?
    1979 --> 1984
  • What happened to the HK film industry in the late seventies?
    Film industry suffered serious decline due to popularisation of TV
  • What was the result of this/ how did the film industry respond?
    Studios were desperate to find solutions and were willing to innovate --> 30-40 new directors debuted
  • What was different about these directors who debuted?
    They were technically superior to earlier films made by the studios and more contemporary in style/theme 
  • Why were New Wave directors were influenced by Western filmmaking and culture?
    They had a Western-style education
  • What can New Wave films be defined as?
    New wave films were creative explorations of social issues and cinematic traditions
  • What did they utilise that set them apart?
    New technology (synchronous sound), new editing techniques, filming on location
  • How could their style be defined?
    Combined glamorous visuals, fast editing, modern urban settings and shared a “Honk Kong-centred” sensibility  
  • What occurred in the Mid 1980s?

    Because film industries financing came from a small number of companies, New Wave’s freedom from strict commercial demands ended
  • What was the result of this?
    Hong Kong Second Wave was born - Second Wave films worked within confines of commercial system while continuing technological advances and social sensibility of First Wave 
  • What contemporary issues in particular did Second Wave deal with?
    Those related to 1997 reunification of Hong Kong with China 
  • What's the primary reason Second Wave filmmakers shared a nostalgia for the 1960s?
    They spent their pre-adolescent years growing up then 
  • What's the secondary reason Second Wave filmmakers shared a nostalgia for the 1960s?
    It was a time economic growth prospered - living standards improved, job opportunities increased, notorious riots --> memorable
  • By the 1990s, postmodernism is fully developed, especially in films now seen as cult classics - what do pm films attempt to do?

    Subvert mainstream conventions of narrative structure and characterisation, testing audience’s suspension of disbelief
  • Postmodernism is interested in contradiction, fragmentation, instability, and destruction of hierarchies/boundaries 
  • 5 key characteristics of postmodernism:
    1)Homage/pastiche 
    2)Meta-reference/self-reflexivity 
    3)Un-chronological stories 
    4)Bridging the gap between highbrow and lowbrow artistic styles
    5)Contradictions 
  • What's homage/pastiche?
    Blending many fundamentally different genres and tones within the same film
  • What's self-reflexivity?
    Calls the viewers’ attention to the fact that the movie is only a movie, sometimes using intertextuality - the films construction in relation to other media
  • What are un-chronological stories?
    Deconstructing and fragmenting time to highlight that the film is constructed