city on fire

review

Filmbill, Nov/Dec 1999

City on Fire By Lisa Odham Stokes and Michael Hoover

Gary Kramer


CITY ON FIRE: Hong Kong Cinema
By Lisa Odham Stokes
and Michael Hoover
Verso, 372 pages


An excellent, in-depth exploration of Hong Kong moviemaking, City on Fire describes the past and future state of this "city of commerce," which is host to the number one per capita film production base in the industry.

As directors John Woo (Face/Off), Stanley Tong (Mr. Magoo) and Peter Chan (The Love Letter), as well as actors Chow Yun-fat (Anna and the King), Jackie Chan (Rumble in the Bronx) and Michelle Yeoh (Tomorrow Never Dies), emigrate to Hollywood, they leave behind a cinematic culture rich in style and energy. The Hong Kong film industry, as City on Fire shrewdly shows, is one in which multiple films are made simultaneously, and on the cheap. Many of the productions are completed hours before they are screened, with editing done as it is being shot.

Yet this guerilla style of filmmaking does have its benefits - gutsy action sequences, inventive camera angles anf rhythmic editing - as Woo's series of films about triads, A Better Tomorrow, demonstrates. Movies such as these incorporate elements of of qing (emotion, feelings) and jing (body) in their moral action heroes.

In addition, many filmmakers can introduce parallels to the 1997 handover from Britain in their work. In Kar-wai Wong's stunning film, Happy Together, the director makes subtle political allusions to Hong Kong's freedom in this story about two lovers trying to work things out in Buenos Aires after a break-up.

City on Fire also includes an outstanding epilogue in which celebrated actors and directors offer their perspectives about working in Hollywood. It is a suitable end to an honorable book that shows the impact one culture has on the other.





Dr. Lisa Stokes, Humanities

stokesl@scc-fl.edu

407-328-2079

Seminole Community College

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