In the West, Hong Kong's vigorous pop cinema has long had a strong cult following, which has become large enough that it is now arguably a part of the cultural mainstream, widely available and imitated. This influence has been particularly heavy on recent Hollywood trends in the genre.
The Hong Kong industry
Unlike many film industries, Hong Kong has enjoyed little to no direct government support, through either subsidies or import quotas. It is a thoroughly commercial cinema: highly corporate, concentrating on crowd-pleasing like comedy and action, and relying heavily on s, sequels and remakes.
Hong Kong film derives a number of elements from Hollywood, such as certain genre parameters, a "thrill-a-minute" philosophy and fast pacing and . But the borrowings are filtered through elements from and , particularly a penchant for stylization and a disregard for Western standards of . This, combined with a fast and loose approach to the filmmaking process, contributes to the energy and surreal imagination that foreign audiences note in Hong Kong cinema.
The star system
As is common in commercial cinema, the industry's heart is a highly developed . In earlier days, beloved performers from the Chinese opera stage often brought their audiences with them to the screen. For the past three or four decades, television has been a major launching pad for movie stardom, through acting courses and widely watched drama, comedy and variety series offered by the . Possibly even more important is the overlap with the . Many, if not most, movie stars have recording sidelines, and vice versa; this has been a key marketing strategy in an entertainment industry where American-style, multimedia advertising campaigns have until recently been little used . In the current commercially troubled climate, the casting of young Cantopop idols to attract the all-important youth audience is endemic.
In the small and tightly knit industry, actors are kept very busy. During previous boom periods, the number of movies made by a successful figure in a single year could routinely reach double digit.
Budgets
Films are typically low-budget in comparison with . A major release with a big star, aimed at "hit" status, will typically cost around US$5 million . A low-budget feature can go well below US$1 million. Occasional projects by the very biggest stars or international co-productions aimed at the global market, can go as high as US$20 million or more, but these are rare exceptions. Hong Kong productions can nevertheless achieve a level of gloss and lavishness greater than these numbers might suggest, given factors like lower wages, the efficient professionalism typical of behind-the-scenes personnel, and the general lack of the expensive frills that are typical on Hollywood sets.
Language and sound
Since the 1980s, films have been made mostly in the language.
For decades, films were typically , with dialogue and all other sound afterwards. In the hectic and low-budget industry, this method was faster and more cost-efficient than recording live sound, particularly when using performers from different dialect regions; it also helped facilitate dubbing into other languages for the vital export market. Many busy stars would not even record their own dialogue, but would be dubbed by a lesser-known performer. Shooting without sound also contributed to an improvisatory filmmaking approach. Movies often went into production without finished scripts, with scenes and dialogue concocted on the set; especially low-budget productions on tight schedules might even have actors mouth silently or simply count numbers, with actual dialogue created only in the editing process.
A trend towards sync sound filming grew in the late '90s and this method is now the norm, partly because of a widespread public association with higher quality cinema.
History
1909 to World War II
During its early history, Hong Kong's cinema played second fiddle to that of the , particularly the city of Shanghai, which was then the movie capital of the Chinese-speaking world. Very little of this work is extant: one count finds only four films remaining out of over 500 produced in Hong Kong before World War II . Detailed accounts of this period, especially those by non- speakers, therefore have inherent limitations and uncertainties.
Pioneers from the stage
As in most of China, the development of early films was tightly bound to Chinese opera, for centuries the dominant form of dramatic entertainment. Opera scenes were the source for what are generally credited as the first movies made in Hong Kong, two 1909 short comedies entitled ''Stealing a Roasted Duck'' and ''Right a Wrong with Earthenware Dish''. The director was stage actor and director Liang Shaobo. The producer was an American, Benjamin Brodsky , one of a number of Westerners who helped jumpstart Chinese film through their efforts to crack China's vast potential market.
Credit for the first Hong Kong feature film is usually given to ''Zhuangzi Tests His Wife'' , which also took its story from the opera stage, was helmed by a stage director and featured Brodsky's involvement. Director Lai Man-Wai was a theatrical colleague of Liang Shaobo's who would become known as the "Father of Hong Kong Cinema". In another borrowing from opera, Lai played the role of wife himself. His brother played the role of husband, and his wife a supporting role as a maid, making her the first Chinese woman to act in a Chinese film, a milestone delayed by longstanding taboos regarding female performers . ''Zhuangzhi'' was the only film made by Chinese American Film, founded by Lai and Brodsky as the first movie studio in Hong Kong, and was never actually shown in the territory .
The following year, the outbreak of World War I put a large crimp in the development of cinema in Hong Kong, as Germany was the source of the colony's film stock . It was not until 1923 that Lai, his brother and their cousin joined with Liang Shaobo to form Hong Kong's first entirely Chinese-owned-and-operated production company, the Company. In 1924, they moved their operation to the Mainland after government red tape blocked their plans to build a studio.
The advent of sound
With the popularity of talkies in the early 1930s, China's many, mutually unintelligible, spoken had to be grappled with. Hong Kong was a major center for , one of the most widely spoken, and political factors on the Mainland provided other opportunities. The government of the Kuomintang or Nationalist Party wanted to enforce a "-only" policy and was hostile to Cantonese filmmaking in China. It also banned the wildly popular ''wuxia'' genre of martial arts swordplay and fantasy, accusing it of promoting superstition and violent anarchy. Cantonese film and ''wuxia'' film remained popular despite government hostility, and the British colony of Hong Kong became a place where both of these trends could be freely served. The name soon became the standard name for black and white Cantonese movies.
Filmed Cantonese operas proved even more successful than ''wuxia'' and constituted the leading genre of the 1930s. Major studios that thrived in this period were Grandview, Universal, Nanyue and Tianyi .
The advent of war
Another important factor in the '30s was the . "National defense" films - patriotic war stories about Chinese resisting the Japanese invasion - became one of Hong Kong's major genres; notable titles included Kwan Man Ching's ''Lifeline'' , Chiu Shu Sun's ''Hand to Hand Combat'' and Situ Huimin's ''March of the Partisans'' . The genre and the film industry were further boosted by emigre film artists and companies when Shanghai was taken by the Japanese in 1937.
This of course came to an end when Hong Kong itself to the Japanese in December 1941. But unlike on the Mainland, the occupiers were not able to put together a collaborationist film industry. They managed to complete just one propaganda movie, ''The Attack on Hong Kong'' before the British returned in 1945 . A more important move by the Japanese may have been to melt down many of Hong Kong's pre-war films to extract their silver nitrate for military use .
The 1940s-1960s
Postwar Hong Kong cinema, like postwar Hong Kong industries in general, was catalyzed by the continuing influx of capital and talents from Mainland China. This became a flood with the 1946 resumption of the Chinese Civil War and then the 1949 victory. These events definitively shifted the center of Chinese-language cinema to Hong Kong. The colony also did big business exporting films to countries and to Chinatowns in Western countries .
Competing languages
The postwar era also cemented the bifurcation of the industry into two parallel cinemas, one in , the dominant dialect of the Mainland emigres, and one in , the dialect of most Hong Kong natives. Mandarin movies had much higher budgets and more lavish production. Reasons included their enormous export market; the expertise, capital and prestige of the Shanghai filmmakers; and the cultural prestige of Mandarin, the official language of China and the tongue of the Chinese cultural and political elite. For decades to come, Cantonese films, though sometimes more numerous, were relegated to second-tier status .
Another language-related milestone occurred in 1963: the British authorities passed a law requiring the of all films in English, supposedly to enable a watch on political content. Making a virtue of necessity, studios included Chinese subtitles as well, enabling easier access to their movies for speakers of other dialects. Subtitling later had the unintended consequence of facilitating the movies' popularity in the West.
Cantonese movies
During this period, Cantonese opera on film dominated. The top stars were the female duo of Yam Kim Fai and Pak Suet Sin . Yam specialized in male scholar roles to Pak's female leads. They made over fifty films together, ''The Purple Hairpin'' being one of the most enduringly popular .
Low-budget martial arts films were also popular. A series of roughly 100 kung fu movies starring Kwan Tak Hing as historical folk hero Wong Fei Hung were made, starting with ''The True Story of Wong Fei Hung'' and ending with ''Wong Fei Hung Bravely Crushing the Fire Formation'' . Fantasy ''wuxia'' serials with special effects drawn on the film by hand, such as ''The Six-Fingered Lord of the Lute'' starring teen idol Connie Chan Po-chu in the lead male role, were also popular , as were contemporary melodramas of home and family life.
Mandarin movies and the Shaws/Cathay rivalry
In Mandarin production, and were the top studios by the 1960s, and bitter rivals. The Shaws gained the upper hand in 1964 after the death in a plane crash of MP&GI founder and head Loke Wan Tho. The renamed Cathay faltered, ceasing film production in 1970 .
A musical genre called '''' was derived from Chinese opera; the Shaws' record-breaking hit ''The Love Eterne'' remains the classic of the genre. Historical costume epics often overlapped with the ''Huángméidiào'', such as in ''The Kingdom and the Beauty'' . . Romantic melodramas such as ''Red Bloom in the Snow'' , ''Love Without End'' , ''The Blue and the Black'' and adaptations of novels by Chiung Yao were popular. So were Hollywood-style , which were a particular specialty of MP&GI/Cathay in entries such as ''Mambo Girl'' and ''The Wild, Wild Rose'' .
In the second half of the '60s, the Shaws inaugurated a new generation of more intense, less fantastical ''wuxia'' films with glossier production values, acrobatic moves and stronger violence. The trend was inspired by the popularity of imported samurai movies from Japan , as well as by the loss of movie audiences to television. This marked the crucial turn of the industry from a female-centric genre system to an action movie orientation . Key trendsetters included Xu Zenghong's ''Temple of the Red Lotus'' , King Hu's ''Come Drink with Me'' and ''Dragon Inn'' , and Chang Cheh's ''Tiger Boy'' , ''The One-Armed Swordsman'' and ''Golden Swallow'' .
Years of transformation
Mandarin-dialect film in general and the Shaw Brothers studio in particular began the 1970s in apparent positions of unassailable strength. Cantonese cinema virtually vanished in the face of Mandarin studios and Cantonese television, which became available to the general population in 1967; in 1972 no films in the local dialect were made . The Shaws saw their longtime rival Cathay ceasing film production, leaving themselves the only megastudio. The martial arts subgenre of the ''kung fu'' movie exploded into popularity internationally, with the Shaws driving and dominating the wave. But changes were beginning that would greatly alter the industry by the end of the decade.
The Cantonese comeback
Paradoxically, television would soon contribute to the revival of Cantonese in a movement towards more down-to-earth movies about modern Hong Kong life and average people.
The first spark was the ensemble comedy ''The House of 72 Tenants'', the only Cantonese film made in 1973, but a resounding hit. It was based on a well-known play and produced by the Shaws as a showcase for performers from their pioneering television station TVB .
The return of Cantonese really took off with the comedies of former TVB stars the Hui Brothers . The rationale behind the move to Cantonese was clear in the trailer for the brothers' ''Games Gamblers Play'' : "Films by devoted young people with you in mind." This move back to the local audience for Hong Kong cinema paid off immediately. ''Games Gamblers Play'' initially made US$1.4 million at the Hong Kong box office, becoming the highest grossing film up to that point, even beating such favourites as the films of worldwide kung fu superstar Bruce Lee. The Hui movies also broke ground by satirizing the modern reality of an ascendant middle class, whose long work hours and dreams of material success were transforming the colony into a modern industrial and corporate giant . Cantonese comedy thrived and Cantonese production skyrocketed; Mandarin hung on into the early '80s, but has been relatively rare onscreen since.
Golden Harvest and the rise of the independents
In 1970, former Shaw Brothers executives Raymond Chow and Leonard Ho left to form their own studio, Golden Harvest. The upstart's more flexible and less tightfisted approach to the business outmaneuvered the Shaws' old-style studio. Chow and Ho landed contracts with rising young performers who had fresh ideas for the industry, like Bruce Lee and the Hui Brothers, and allowed them greater creative latitude than was traditional. By the end of the '70s, Golden Harvest was the top studio, signing up Jackie Chan, the kung fu comedy actor-filmmaker who would spend the next twenty years as Asia's biggest box office draw .
Meanwhile, the explosions of Cantonese and kung fu and the example of Golden Harvest had created more space for independent producers and production companies. The era of the studio juggernauts was past. The Shaws nevertheless continued film production until 1985 before turning entirely to television .
Other transformative trends
The rapidly growing permissiveness in film content that was general in much of the world affected Hong Kong film as well. A genre of softcore erotica known as ''fengyue'' became a local staple . Such material did not suffer as much of a stigma in Hong Kong as in most Western countries; it was more or less part of the mainstream, sometimes featuring contributions from major directors such as Chor Yuen and Li Han Hsiang and often crossbreeding with other popular genres like martial arts, the and especially comedy . Violence also grew more intense and graphic, particularly at the instigation of martial arts filmmakers.
Director blended these trends into the social-issue dramas which he had already made his specialty with late '60s Cantonese classics like ''The Story of a Discharged Prisoner'' and ''Teddy Girls'' . In the '70s, he began directing in Mandarin and brought elements to serious films about subjects like prostitution , the atomic bomb and the fragility of civilized society .
The brief career of Tang Shu Shuen, the territory's first noted woman director, produced two films, ''The Arch'' and ''China Behind'' , that were trailblazers for a local, socially critical . They are also widely considered forerunners of the last major milestone of the decade, the so-called Hong Kong New Wave that would come from outside the traditional studio hierarchy and point to new possibilities for the industry .
1980s-early 1990s: the boom years
The 1980s and early '90s saw seeds planted in the '70s come to full flower: the triumph of Cantonese, the birth of a new and modern cinema, superpower status in the East Asian market, and the turning of the West's attention to Hong Kong film.
A cinema of greater technical polish and more sophisticated visual style, including the first forays into up-to-date special effects technology, sprang up quickly. To this surface dazzle, the new cinema added an eclectic mixing and matching of genres, and a penchant for pushing the boundaries of sensationalistic content. Slapstick comedy, sex, the supernatural, and above all ruled, occasionally all in the same film.
The international market
During this period, the Hong Kong industry was one of the few in the world that thrived in the face of the increasing global dominance of Hollywood. Indeed, it came to exert a comparable dominance in its own region of the world. The regional audience had always been vital, but now more than ever Hong Kong product filled theaters and video shelves in places like Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and South Korea. Taiwan became at least as important a market to Hong Kong film as the local one; in the early '90s the once-robust came close to extinction under the onslaught of Hong Kong imports . They even found a lesser foothold in Japan, with its own highly developed and better-funded and strong taste for American movies; Jackie Chan in particular became popular there.
Almost accidentally, Hong Kong also reached further into the West, building upon the attention gained during the '70s kung fu craze. Availability in Chinatown theaters and video shops allowed the movies to be discovered by Western attracted by their "exotic" qualities and excesses. An emergence into the wider popular culture gradually followed over the coming years.
Leaders of the boom
The trailblazer was production company Cinema City, founded in 1980 by comedians Karl Maka, and Dean Shek. It specialized in contemporary comedy and action, slickly produced according to explicitly prescribed commercial formulas. The lavish, effects-filled spy spoof ''Aces Go Places'' and its numerous sequels epitomized the much-imitated "Cinema City style."
Directors and producers Tsui Hark and Wong Jing can be singled out as definitive figures of this era. Tsui was a notorious Hong Kong New Wave tyro who symbolized that movement's absorption into the mainstream, becoming the industry's central trendsetter and technical experimenter . The even more prolific Wong is, by most accounts, the most commercially successful and critically reviled Hong Kong filmmaker of the last two decades, with his relentless output of aggressively crowd-pleasing and cannily marketed pulp films.
Other hallmarks of this era included the gangster or "" movie fad launched by director John Woo, producer and long-time actor Alan Tang and dominated by actor Chow Yun-Fat; romantic melodramas and martial arts fantasies starring Brigitte Lin; the comedies of stars like Cherie Chung and Stephen Chow; and contemporary, stunt-driven kung fu action epitomized by the work of Jackie Chan.
Category III films
The government's introduction of in 1988 had a certainly unintended effect on subsequent trends. The "Category III" rating became an umbrella for the rapid growth of and generally outré films; however, while considered graphic by Chinese standards, these films would be more on par with movies rated "R" or "NC-17" in the United States, and not "XXX". By the height of the boom in the early '90s, roughly half of the theatrical features produced were Category III-rated softcore erotica descended from the fengyue movies of the '70s. A definitive example of a mainstream Category III hit was Michael Mak's ''Sex and Zen'' , a comedy inspired by ''The Carnal Prayer Mat'', the seventeenth century classic of comic-erotic literature by .
The rating also covered a fad for grisly, taboo-tweaking and films, often supposedly based on true crime stories, such as ''Dr. Lamb'' , ''The Untold Story'' and ''Ebola Syndrome'' .
Since the mid-'90s, the trend has withered with the shrinking of the general Hong Kong film market and the wider availability of pornography in home video formats . But in 2000's, three Category III movies: '''' its sequel, ''Election 2'' , and ''Mad Detective'' still enjoyed surprising box office successes in Hong Kong.
Alternative cinema
In this landscape of pulp, there remained some ground for an alternative cinema or , due at least in part to the influence of the . Some New Wave filmmakers such as Ann Hui and Yim Ho continued to earn acclaim with personal and political films made at the edges of the mainstream.
The second half of the '80s also saw the emergence of what is sometimes called a "Second Wave." These younger directors included names like Stanley Kwan, Clara Law and her partner Eddie Fong, Mabel Cheung, Lawrence Ah Mon and Wong Kar-wai. Like the New Wavers, they tended to be graduates of overseas film schools and local television apprenticeships, and to be interested in going beyond the usual, commercial subject matters and styles .
These artists began to earn Hong Kong unprecedented attention and respect in international circles and the global film festival circuit. In particular, Wong Kar-wai's works starring Leslie Cheung, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Maggie Cheung in the 1990s has made him an internationally acclaimed and award-winning filmmaker.
Mid-1990s-Present: Post-boom
The industry in crisis
During the 1990s, the Hong Kong film industry underwent a drastic decline from which it has not recovered. Domestic ticket sales had already started to drop in the late '80s, but the regional audience kept the industry booming into the early years of the next decade . But by the mid-'90s, it went into freefall. Revenues were cut in half. By the decade's end, the number of films produced in a typical year dropped from an early '90s high of well over 200 to somewhere around 100 American blockbuster imports began to regularly top the box office for the first time in decades. Ironically, this was the same period during which Hong Kong cinema emerged into something like mainstream visibility in the U.S. and began exporting popular figures to Hollywood.
Numerous, converging factors have been blamed for the downturn:
* The Asian financial crisis, which dried up traditional sources of film finance as well as regional audiences' leisure spending money.
* Overproduction, attended by a drop in quality control and an exhaustion of overused formulas .
* A costly early '90s boom in building of modern multiplexes and an attendant rise in ticket prices .
* An increasingly cosmopolitan, upwardly mobile Hong Kong middle class, that often looks down upon local films as cheap and tawdry.
* Rampant video piracy throughout East Asia.
* A newly aggressive push by Hollywood studios into the Asian market.
The greater access to the Mainland that came with the July '97 to China was not as much of a boon as hoped, and presented its own problems, particularly with regard to censorship.
The industry had one of its darkest years in 2003. In addition to the continuing slump, a SARS virus outbreak kept many theaters virtually empty for a time and shut down film production for four months; only fifty-four movies were made . The unrelated deaths of two of Hong Kong's famous singer/actors, Leslie Cheung, 46, and Anita Mui, 40, rounded out the bad news.
The Hong Kong Government in April 2003 introduced a Film Guarantee Fund as an incentive to local banks to become involved in the motion picture industry. The guarantee operates to secure a percentage of monies loaned by banks to film production companies. The Fund has received a mixed reception from industry participants, and less than enthusiastic reception from financial institutions who perceive investment in local films as high risk ventures with little collateral. Film guarantee legal documents commissioned by the Hong Kong Government in late April 2003 are based on Canadian documents, which have limited relevance to the local industry.
Recent trends
Efforts by local filmmakers to retool their product have had middling results overall. These include technically glossier visuals, including much ; greater use of Hollywood-style mass marketing techniques; and heavy reliance on casting teen-friendly Cantopop music stars. Successful genre cycles in the late '90s and early 2000s have included: American-styled, high-tech action pictures such as ''Downtown Torpedoes'' , ''Gen-X Cops'' and ''Purple Storm'' ; the " kids" subgenre launched by ''Young and Dangerous'' ; yuppie-centric romantic comedies like ''The Truth About Jane and Sam'' , ''Needing You...'' and ''Love on a Diet'' ; and supernatural chillers like ''Horror Hotline: Big-Head Monster'' and ''The Eye'' , often modeled on the then making an international splash.
In the 2000s, there have been some bright spots. , founded by filmmakers Johnnie To and Wai Ka-Fai in the mid-'90s, has had considerable critical and commercial success, especially with offbeat and character-driven crime films like '''' and ''Running on Karma'' . An even more successful example of the genre was the blockbuster ''Infernal Affairs'' trilogy of police thrillers co-directed by Andrew Lau and Alan Mak . Comedian Stephen Chow, the most consistently popular screen star of the '90s, directed and starred in ''Shaolin Soccer'' and ''Kung Fu Hustle'' ; these used digital special effects to push his distinctive humor into new realms of the surreal and became the territory's two highest-grossing films to date, garnering numerous awards locally and internationally. Johnnie To's two Category III movies: '''' and ''Election 2'' also enjoyed Hong Kong box office successes. ''Election 2'' has even been released in the theatrically under the new title ''''; this movie received very positive reviews in the United States, with a more than 90% "Fresh" rating on .
Still, some observers believe that, given the depressed state of the industry and the rapidly strengthening economic and political ties among Hong Kong, mainland China and Taiwan, the distinctive entity of Hong Kong cinema that emerged after World War II may have a limited lifespan. The lines between the mainland and Hong Kong industries are ever more blurred, especially now that China is producing increasing numbers of slick, mass-appeal popular films. Predictions are notoriously difficult in this rapidly changing part of the world, but the trend may be towards a more pan-Chinese cinema, as existed in the first half of the twentieth century.
Notable persons
Directors
*Fruit Chan
*Peter Chan
*Samson Chiu
*Stephen Chow
*King Hu
*Ann Hui
*Michael Hui
*Wong Jing
*Stanley Kwan
*Dante Lam
*Ringo Lam
*Andrew Lau
*Lau Kar-Leung
*
*Alan Mak
*Patrick Tam
*Johnnie To
*Stanley Tong
*Tsui Hark
*John Woo
*Wong Kar-wai
*Herman Yau
*Yuen Woo-ping
Cinematographers
*Christopher Doyle
*Peter Pau
*Arthur Wong
Actors
*Jackie Chan
*Ekin Cheng
*Jacky Cheung
*Leslie Cheung
*David Chiang
*Stephen Chow
*Chow Yun-Fat
*Sammo Hung
*Takeshi Kaneshiro
*Aaron Kwok
*Leon Lai
*Andy Lau
*
*Bruce Lee
*Tony Leung Chiu-Wai
*Tony Leung Ka-Fai
*Jet Li
*Alan Tang
*Eric Tsang
*
*Daniel Wu
*
*Donnie Yen
*Yuen Biao
Actresses
*Sammi Cheng
*Maggie Cheung
*Cheng Pei-Pei
*Chin Tsi-Ang
*Fung Bo Bo
*Gigi Lai
*Gigi Leung
*Gong Li
*Lin Dai
*Ivy Ling Po
*Betty Loh Ti
*Anita Mui
*Shu Qi
*Michelle Reis
*Lydia Shum
*Sally Yeh
*Michelle Yeoh
*Miriam Yeung
*Michelle Yim
*Xia Meng
*Zhang Ziyi
*Moon Lee
*Yukari Oshima
Further reading
In English
Hong Kong cinema
* Baker, Rick, and Toby Russell; Lisa Baker . ''The Essential Guide to Deadly China Dolls''. London: Eastern Heroes Publications, 1996. ISBN 1-899252-02-9. Biographies of Hong Kong action cinema actresses.
* Baker, Rick, and Toby Russell; Lisa Tilston . ''The Essential Guide to Hong Kong Movies''. London: Eastern Heroes Publications, 1994. ISBN 1899252002. Contains reviews, but is best for its Hong Kong Film Personalities Directory.
* Baker, Rick, and Toby Russell; Lisa Tilston . ''The Essential Guide to the Best of Eastern Heroes''. London: Eastern Heroes Publications, 1995. ISBN 1-899252-01-1.
* Charles, John. ''The Hong Kong Filmography 1977–1997: A Complete Reference to 1,100 Films Produced by British Hong Kong Studios''. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., 2000. ISBN 0-7864-0842-1. Very comprehensive.
* Cheung, Esther M. K., and Yaowei Zhu . ''Between Home and World: A Reader in Hong Kong Cinema''. Xianggang du ben xi lie. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN 0195929691.
* Chu, Yingchi. ''Hong Kong Cinema: Coloniser, Motherland and Self''. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003. ISBN 0700717463.
* Fitzgerald, Martin. ''Hong Kong's Heroic Bloodshed''. North Pomfret, VT: Trafalgar Square, 2000. ISBN 1903047072.
* Fonoroff, Paul. ''At the Hong Kong Movies: 600 Reviews from 1988 Till the Handover''. Hong Kong: Film Biweekly Publishing House, 1998; Odyssey Publications, 1999. ISBN 962-217-641-0, ISBN 962-8114-47-6.
* Fu, Poshek, and David Desser, eds. ''The Cinema of Hong Kong: History, Arts, Identity''. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, July 2000. ISBN 0521772354.
* Glaessner, Verina. ''Kung Fu: Cinema of Vengeance''. London: Lorimer; New York: Bounty Books, 1974. ISBN 0856470457, ISBN 0517518317.
* Hammond, Stefan. ''Hollywood East: Hong Kong Movies and the People Who Make Them''. Contemporary Books, 2000. ISBN 0809225816.
* Hammond, Stefan, and Mike Wilkins. ''Sex and Zen & A Bullet in the Head: The Essential Guide to Hong Kong's Mind-bending Films''. New York: Fireside Books, 1996. ISBN 0-684-80341-0, ISBN 1-85286-775-2.
* Kar, Law, and Frank Bren. ''Hong Kong Cinema: A Cross-Cultural View''. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 2004. ISBN 0810849860.
* Li, H. C. ''Chinese Cinema: Five Bibliographies''. Hong Kong: Studio 8, 2003.
* Lo Che-ying . ''A Selective Collection of Hong Kong Movie Posters: 1950's–1990's''. Hong Kong in Pictorials Series. Hong Kong: Joint Publishing Co., Ltd., 1992. ISBN 962-04-1013-0. Bilingual:
* O'Brien, Daniel. ''Spooky Encounters: A Gwailo's Guide to Hong Kong Horror''. Manchester: Headpress, 2003. ISBN 1900486318.
* Pang, Laikwan, and Day Wong . ''Masculinities and Hong Kong Cinema''. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2005. ISBN 9622097375, ISBN 9622097383.
* Stokes, Lisa Odham, Jean Lukitsh, Michael Hoover, and Tyler Stokes. ''Historical Dictionary of Hong Kong Cinema''. Historical dictionaries of literature and the arts, no. 2. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 2007. ISBN 0810855208.
* Stringer, Julian. "Problems with the Treatment of Hong Kong Cinema as Camp". ''Asian Cinema'' 8, 2 : 44-65.
* Stringer, Julian. ''Blazing Passions: Contemporary Hong Kong Cinema''. London: Wallflower, 2008. ISBN 1905674309, ISBN 1905674295.
* Tobias, Mel C. ''Flashbacks: Hong Kong Cinema After Bruce Lee''. Hong Kong: Gulliver Books, 1979. ISBN 9627019038.
* Wong, Ain-ling. ''The Hong Kong-Guangdong Film Connection''. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Film Archive, 2005. ISBN 9628050338.
* Wong, Ain-ling. ''The Shaw Screen: A Preliminary Study''. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Film Archive, 2003. ISBN 9628050214.
* Wood, Miles. ''Cine East: Hong Kong Cinema Through the Looking Glass''. Guildford, Surrey: FAB Press, 1998. ISBN 0952926024. Interviews with Hong Kong film makers.
* Yau, Esther C. M., ed. ''At Full Speed: Hong Kong Cinema in a Borderless World''. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2001. ISBN 0816632340, ISBN 0816632359.
* Zhong, Baoxian. ''"Hollywood of the East" in the Making: The Cathay Organization Vs. the Shaw Organization in Post-War Hong Kong''. : Centre for China Urban and Regional Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University, 2004. ISBN 9628804448.
* Zhong, Baoxian. ''Moguls of the Chinese Cinema: The Story of the Shaw Brothers in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Singapore, 1924–2002''. Working paper series ; no. 44. Hong Kong: David C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University, 2005.
Note that "very year, since 1978, the HKIFF has published both a catalog of films released that year and a retrospective book -- and sometimes, special interest publication or two in the form of books and pamphlets. In 1996, a 10th Anniversary special was issued, and from 1997 onward, there have been yearly 'Panorama' special interest books in addition to the annual catalogs, retrospective books, and occasional pamphlets. In 2003, the HKIFF started carrying publications of the Hong Kong Film Archive, as well."—
Works which include Hong Kong cinema
* Access Asia Limited. ''Cinemas, Film Production & Distribution in China & Hong Kong: A Market Analysis''. Shanghai: Access Asia Ltd, 2004. ISBN 1902815629.
* Berry, Chris . ''Perspectives on Chinese Cinema''. London: British Film Institute, 1991. ISBN 0851702716, ISBN 0851702724.
* Berry, Michael. ''Speaking in Images: Interviews with Contemporary Chinese Filmmakers''. New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 2004. ISBN 0231133308, ISBN 0231133316.
* Browne, Nick, et al. . ''New Chinese Cinemas: Forms, Identities, Politics''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. ISBN 0521448778.
* Eberhard, Wolfram. ''The Chinese Silver Screen; Hong Kong & Taiwanese Motion Pictures in the 1960's''. Asian folklore and social life monographs, v. 23. , 1972.
* Fu, Poshek. ''Between Shanghai and Hong Kong: The Politics of Chinese Cinemas''. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 2003. ISBN 080474517X, ISBN 0804745188.
* Hunt, Leon. '' Kung Fu Cult Masters: From Bruce Lee to Crouching Tiger''. Columbia University Press, 2003. ISBN 1903364639.
* Julius, Marshall. ''Action!: The Action Movie A–Z''. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; London: Batsford, 1996. ISBN 0253332443, ISBN 0253210917, ISBN 0713478519.
* Leung, Helen Hok-Sze. ''Undercurrents: Queer Culture and Postcolonial Hong Kong''. Sexuality studies series. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2008. ISBN 0774814691.
* Lu, Sheldon Hsiao-peng, ed. ''Transnational Chinese Cinemas: Identity, Nationhood, Gender''. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8248-1845-8.
* Marchetti, Gina, and Tan See Kam . ''Hong Kong Film, Hollywood and the New Global Cinema: No Film Is an Island''. London: Routledge, 2007. ISBN 0415380685, ISBN 0203967364.
* Meyers, Ric. ''Great Martial Arts Movies: From Bruce Lee to Jackie Chan and More''. New York, NY: Citadel Press, 2001. ISBN 0806520264.
* Meyers, Richard, Amy Harlib, Bill and Karen Palmer. ''From Bruce Lee to the Ninjas: Martial Arts Movies''. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1985 . ISBN 0806509503, ISBN 0806510099.
* Mintz, Marilyn D. ''The Martial Arts Film''. South Brunswick, N.J.: A.S. Barnes, 1978. ISBN 0498017753.
* Mintz, Marilyn D. ''The Martial Arts Films''. Rutland, VT: C.E. Tuttle, 1983. ISBN 0804814082.
* Palmer, Bill, Karen Palmer, and Ric Meyers. ''The Encyclopedia of Martial Arts Movies''. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1995. ISBN 0810830272.
* Read, Pete. ''The Film and Television Market in Hong Kong''. : Canadian Heritage, 2005. ISBN 0662437675.
* Server, Lee. ''Asian Pop Cinema: Bombay to Tokyo''. Chronicle Books, 1999. ISBN 0-8118-2119-6.
* Tasker, Yvonne. ''Spectacular Bodies: Gender, Genre and the Action Cinema''. London: Routledge, November 2003. ISBN 041509223X, ISBN 0415092248.
* Thomas, Brian. ''Videohound's Dragon: Asian Action & Cult Flicks''. Visible Ink Press, 2003. ISBN 1578591414.
* Tobias, Mel C. ''Memoirs of an Asian Moviegoer''. Quarry Bay, Hong Kong: South China Morning Post Ltd., 1982. "The book is actually an updated, enlarged and revised edition of 'Flashbacks' which was first published in 1979. I have decided to change the book's title because it now has widened its scope in the world of cinema."—from the book's introduction.
* Tombs, Pete. ''Mondo Macabro: Weird and Wonderful Cinema Around the World''. London: Titan Books, 1997; New York, NY: Griffin Books, 1998. ISBN 1852868651, ISBN 0-312-18748-3.
* Weisser, Thomas. ''Asian Cult Cinema''. New York: Boulevard Books, 1997. ISBN 1572972289. Updated and expanded version of both volumes of ''Asian Trash Cinema: The Book''; reviews and filmographies.
* Weisser, Thomas. ''Asian Trash Cinema: The Book ''. Miami, Florida: Vital Sounds Inc./Asian Trash Cinema Publications, 1995.
* Weisser, Thomas. ''Asian Trash Cinema: The Book''. Houston: Asian Trash Cinema/European Trash Cinema Publications, 1994.
* Weyn, Suzanne, and Ellen Steiber. ''From Chuck Norris to the Karate Kid: Martial Arts in the Movies''. New York: Parachute Press, 1986. ISBN 0938753002. Juvenile audience.
In other languages
French
* Armanet, Fran?ois, and Max Armanet. ''Ciné Kung Fu''. France: Ramsay, 1988. ISBN 2859566996.
* Fonfrède, Julien. ''Cinéma de Hong-Kong''. Les élémentaires - une encyclopédie vivante series. Montréal: L'Ile de la tortue, 1999. ISBN 2-922369-03-X.
* Glaessner, Verina. ''Kung fu: La Violence au Cinéma''. Montreal: Presses Select, 1976. Translation of ''Kung Fu: Cinema of Vengeance''.
* Glaessner, Verina. ''Kung Fu: La Violence au Cinéma''. Paris: Edit. Minoutstchine, 1975. ISBN 2856940064. Translation of ''Kung Fu: Cinema of Vengeance''.
* Reynaud, Bérénice. ''Nouvelles Chines, nouveaux cinémas''. Paris, France: éditions des Cahiers du Cinéma, 1999. ISBN 2866422260.
German
* Kuhn, Otto. ''Der Eastern Film''. Ebersberg/Obb.: Edition 8 1/2, 1983. ISBN 3923979029, ISBN 3923979029.
* Morgan, Jasper P. ''Die Knochenbrecher mit der Todeskralle: Bruce Lee und der "Drunken Master" - Legenden des Eastern-Films''. Der Eastern-Film, Bd. 1. Hille: MPW, 2003. ISBN 3931608565, ISBN 978-3931608569.
* Umard, Ralph. ''Film Ohne Grenzen: Das Neue Hongkong Kino''. Lappersdorf, Germany: Kerschensteiner, 1996. ISBN 3-931954-02-1.
Italian
* Bedetti, Simone, and Massimo Mazzoni. ''La Hollywood di Hong Kong Dalle Origini a John Woo'' . Bologna: PuntoZero, 1996. ISBN 8886945019. Book + computer disk filmography.
* Esposito, Riccardo F. ''Il Cinema del Kung-fu: 1970–1975''. Rome, Italy: Fanucci Editore, March 1989. ISBN 88-347-0120-8.
* Esposito, Riccardo F. ''Il Drago Feroce Attraversa le Acque'' . Florence: Tarab Edizioni, 1998. A "little handbook" about kung-fu movies released in Italy.
* Esposito, Riccardo, Max Dellamora and Massimo Monteleone. ''Fant'Asia: Il Cinema Fantastico dell'estremo Oriente'' . Italy: Grenade, 1994. ISBN 88-7248-100-7.
* Nazzaro, Giona A., and Andrea Tagliacozzo. ''Il Cinema di Hong Kong: Spade, Kung Fu, Pistole, Fantasmi'' . Recco : Le Mani, 1997. ISBN 88-8012-053-0.
* Parizzi, Roberta. ''Hong Kong: Il Futuro del Cinema Abita Qui''. Parma: S. Sorbini, 1996. ISBN 8886883056. Notes: At head of title: Comune di Parma, Assessorato Alla Cultura, Ufficio Cinema; Cineclub Black Maria.
* Pezzotta, Alberto. ''Tutto il Cinema di Hong Kong: Stili, Caratteri, autori'' . Milan: Baldini & Castoldi, 1999. ISBN 88-8089-620-2.
Spanish
* Escajedo, Javier, Carles Vila, and Julio ?ngel Escajedo. ''Honor, plomo y sangre: el cine de acción de Hong Kong''. : Camaleón, 1997.
* Domingo López. ''Made in Hong Kong: Las 1000 Películas que Desataron la Fiebre Amarilla''. Valencia: Midons Editorial, S.L.: 1997. ISBN 84-89240-34-5.
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* —Reviews the vast majority of the movies currently coming out of Hong Kong
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* —Celebrating Asian Films
* —includes an extensive bibliography on martial arts films.
* —another extensive bibliography on Chinese film.
* , Film Services Office
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Nice post.
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