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March 8, 2014 |
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The New Wave was a major factor in the creation of a cinema with a contemporary Hong Kong identity and in the Cantonese (linguistics)|Cantonese dialect of most residents - between World War II and the '70s, the industry had been led by transplanted Cinema of China|mainland Chinese filmmakers who continued the traditions they brought with them, largely in Mandarin (linguistics)|Mandarin dialect films. New Wavers were technically audacious compared with the mainstream Hong Kong cinema of the time. They furthered the use of location shooting and Sync Sound|sync sound recording and explored a grittier, rougher look and feel. The vivid use, in Hong Kong film since then, of authentic locations in the bustling, cramped urban space is one of their legacies. The New Wave filmmakers were particularly given to revisionist explorations of popular genres, like the thriller film|thriller (Hui's 1979 The Secret, Tam's 1981 Love Massacre), martial arts (Tsui's 1979 The Butterfly Murders, Tam's 1980 The Sword) and crime (Alex Cheung's 1979 Cops and Robbers, Yim's 1980 The Happenings). The latter category was particularly friendly to their experiments with realism, and their tactic of wrapping social commentary in genre trappings. But the New Wave also produced personal dramas about relationships, domesticity and family (Fong's 1981 Father and Son, Yim's 1984 Homecoming) and hard-hitting political comment - Hui's 1982 Boat People presented a brutal portrait of communist Vietnam, but was widely viewed as an allegory of Hong Kong's anxieties regarding communist China (Teo, 1997). The New Wave helped carve out a small niche for art films in Hong Kong's populist cinema, although most were absorbed into the mainstream to one extent or another (Bordwell, 2000).
HK-stub HK-film-stub Category:New Wave Category:Cinema of Hong Kong|New Wave zh:香港新浪潮 This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hong Kong New Wave".
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