The Arts
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Taiwan: The Life and Death of Taiwanese Hokkien Cinema
Introduction
“Film researcher Su Chih-Heng guides readers through the rise and fall of Taiwan’s golden age of cinema, a brief flourishing of locallanguage blockbusters that swept the island nation during the 1960’s.
While Taiwanese directors like Hou Hsiao-Hsien and Ang Lee are well-known to film buffs worldwide, few outside Taiwan will have heard of the golden age of Taiwanese Hokkien cinema that predates these perennial award-winners, nor of the dramatic boom-and-bust that ended Taiwan’s first flash of cinematic glory.
Starting in the mid-1950’s with the first screen adaptations of Hokkien-language folk operas, Taiwan’s film industry quickly ramped up production, gracing local theaters with three new releases per week. In the 1970’s, however, this thriving industry collapsed, and Taiwanese Hokkien cinema showed no signs of recovery until the rise of the New Wave in the 1980’s.
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Taiwan brings this forgotten flourishing of Taiwanese Hokkien film to life. Blending narrative history and critical analysis, the book situates Taiwan’s golden age of cinema within the economic and political landscape of the times. A former researcher at the Taiwan Film Institute, author Su carefully considers the impact of politically imposed Mandarin-language standards, the technical challenges of conversion to color film, and structural problems within the industry in his post-mortem of Taiwan’s early film studios.
A valuable study of a neglected era of cinematic history, Once Upon
While Taiwanese directors like Hou Hsiao-Hsien and Ang Lee are well-known to film buffs worldwide, few outside Taiwan will have heard of the golden age of Taiwanese Hokkien cinema that predates these perennial award-winners, nor of the dramatic boom-and-bust that ended Taiwan’s first flash of cinematic glory.
Starting in the mid-1950’s with the first screen adaptations of Hokkien-language folk operas, Taiwan’s film industry quickly ramped up production, gracing local theaters with three new releases per week. In the 1970’s, however, this thriving industry collapsed, and Taiwanese Hokkien cinema showed no signs of recovery until the rise of the New Wave in the 1980’s.
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Taiwan brings this forgotten flourishing of Taiwanese Hokkien film to life. Blending narrative history and critical analysis, the book situates Taiwan’s golden age of cinema within the economic and political landscape of the times. A former researcher at the Taiwan Film Institute, author Su carefully considers the impact of politically imposed Mandarin-language standards, the technical challenges of conversion to color film, and structural problems within the industry in his post-mortem of Taiwan’s early film studios.
A valuable study of a neglected era of cinematic history, Once Upon
Info
Category:The Arts
Author:Chih-Heng Su
Publisher:SpringHill Publishing
Rights Contact:SpringHill Publishing
Email:springhillpublishing@gmail.com
ISBN:9789869849708