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Journal ArticleDOI

Connections and Crossovers: Cinema and Theatre in Hong Kong

Frank Bren
- 01 Feb 1998 - 
- Vol. 14, Iss: 53, pp 63-74
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TLDR
The connections between film and theatre in Hong Kong have always been close, from the film adaptations of Cantonese opera in the 1930s, through the female movies of the post-war period and the western following for Bruce Lee's kung fu movies, to the present dominance of the cross-generic production company, Springtime, in the 1990s, with a creative interest in its own past which verges on the metatheatrical as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
From the run-up to its return to Chinese rule in July 1997 to the stock-market crash in October, Hong Kong has seldom been out of the news during the past year. But the attention paid to its political and economic provenance has not been matched by much interest in its cultural output – despite the existence in Hong Kong of a cinema industry with a prodigious output now approaching ten thousand films. Although a professional theatre has been a relatively more recent development, the connections between film and theatre in Hong Kong have always been close – from the film adaptations of Cantonese opera in the 1930s, through the ‘female’ films of the post-war period and the western following for Bruce Lee's kung fu movies, to the present dominance of the cross-generic production company, Springtime, in the 1990s, with a creative interest in its own past which verges on the metatheatrical. Frank Bren, who is presently living and working in Hong Kong, here captures something of the history and the distinctive flavour of the overlapping movie and theatre industries, and assesses why the relationship remains mutually profitable in artistic as well as economic terms.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Post-Colonialism and Contemporary Hong Kong Theatre: Two Case Studies

Yun Tong Luk
TL;DR: The authors explored the social and cultural significance of two influential local productions, staged almost a decade apart, We're Hong Kong, shortly after the Sino-British Joint Declaration of 1984, and Tales of the Walled City, coinciding with the moment of Hong Kong's reversion to Chinese rule.
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