Sino-Enchantment: The Fantastic in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas
Although Chinese film audiences have always maintained a foundational cultural interest in the fantastic, this trend has dramatically increased over the last decade. Sino-Enchantment is the first work in English to approach this recent explosion of fantastic film in Chinese cinemas, where each re-envisioning of the form is determined by cultural, economic, political and technological factors to produce fresh inventions and creative reinventions of familiar narratives, characters and tropes. With case studies of films such as The Assassin (2015), Monster Hunt (2015) and The Great Wall (2016), this novel approach uses the framework of ‘Sino-enchantment’ as a new theoretical lens through which readers can engage with elements of the fantastic in Chinese cinema.

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Sino-Enchantment: The Fantastic in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas
Although Chinese film audiences have always maintained a foundational cultural interest in the fantastic, this trend has dramatically increased over the last decade. Sino-Enchantment is the first work in English to approach this recent explosion of fantastic film in Chinese cinemas, where each re-envisioning of the form is determined by cultural, economic, political and technological factors to produce fresh inventions and creative reinventions of familiar narratives, characters and tropes. With case studies of films such as The Assassin (2015), Monster Hunt (2015) and The Great Wall (2016), this novel approach uses the framework of ‘Sino-enchantment’ as a new theoretical lens through which readers can engage with elements of the fantastic in Chinese cinema.

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Sino-Enchantment: The Fantastic in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas

Sino-Enchantment: The Fantastic in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas

Sino-Enchantment: The Fantastic in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas

Sino-Enchantment: The Fantastic in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas

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Overview

Although Chinese film audiences have always maintained a foundational cultural interest in the fantastic, this trend has dramatically increased over the last decade. Sino-Enchantment is the first work in English to approach this recent explosion of fantastic film in Chinese cinemas, where each re-envisioning of the form is determined by cultural, economic, political and technological factors to produce fresh inventions and creative reinventions of familiar narratives, characters and tropes. With case studies of films such as The Assassin (2015), Monster Hunt (2015) and The Great Wall (2016), this novel approach uses the framework of ‘Sino-enchantment’ as a new theoretical lens through which readers can engage with elements of the fantastic in Chinese cinema.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474460859
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 01/25/2023
Series: Edinburgh Studies in East Asian Film
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Kenneth Chan is Professor of English and Film Studies at the University of Northern Colorado

Dr Andrew Stuckey is an independent scholar.

Table of Contents

    Introduction: The Fantastic as Sino-Enchantment in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas, Kenneth Chan and Andrew Stuckey

    Visuality/Virtuality

    1. Heroic Human Pixels: Mass Ornaments and Digital Multitudes in Zhang Yimou’s Spectacles, Jason McGrath

    2. The Spectacle of Co-Production in The Great Wall, Dan North

    3. The Blockbuster Breakthrough: The Fantastic in Hero, Li Yang

    Genres of Sino-Enchantment

    4. The Restrained Fantastic in Hou Hsiao-hsien’s The Assassin, Andrew Stuckey

    5. An Auteurist Journey through the Fantastic Mode: A Case Study of Ho Meng-hua, Shi-Yan Chao

    6. Tracing the Science Fiction Genre in Hong Kong Cinema, Tom Cunliffe

    7. Chick Flick Fantasy and Postfeminism in Chinese Cinema: 20 Once Again as a Transnational Remake, Elaine Chung

    8. The Sacred Spectacle: Subverting Skepticism in Tsui Hark’s Detective Dee Films, Ian Pettigrew

    Ethics

    9. Almost Wild, But Not Quite: The Indexical and the Fantastic Animal Other in China-Coproduced (Eco)Cinema, Yiman Wang

    10. Domesticity, Sentimentality and Otherness: The Boundary of the Human in Monster Hunt, Mei Yang

    11. Transforming Tripitaka: Toward a (Buddhist) Planetary Ethics in Stephen Chow’s Adaptation of Journey to the West, Kenneth Chan

    Coda: Sino-Enchantment in a Time of Crisis, Kenneth Chan and Andrew Stuckey

    Selected Filmography Bibliography

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