Victor Fan
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Poetics of double erasure
British East/South-East Asian cinema and Lilting
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In comparison with other metropolitan cities, London is rarely featured in Hong Kong cinema. The only exceptions are two films made by British Chinese director Leong Po-chih, who was born in the UK in 1939, raised in London and trained at the BBC. This chapter examines two films made by Leong in the 1980s that were set in London: Jingleon peipaa (1984) and Ping Pong (1986). In both films, London is featured not as a fantastical cosmopolitan wonderland but as a site of brute reality. On the one hand, London is the linguistic, cultural and sociopolitical root of British Chinese and middle-class, young and Anglicised Hong Kongers. On the other, it is also a site of deceit, violence and subjectival confusion, which actively occupies and colonises the subjectivity of these individuals, yet ostensibly ostracises them as the others. This chapter argues that London is featured in Leong Po-chih’s films not as a crystallisation of cosmopolitanism. Instead, it is best understood as a site where the illusion of cosmopolitanism is contested, negotiated, deconstructed and reconfigured in the eyes of the colonised subjects. The chapter’s argument is constructed by first contextualising and historicising what London was – and to some extent, still is – for British Chinese and Hong Kongers during the 1980s. The chapter also conducts a close comparative analysis of these two films, with reference to other representations of London in Hong Kong cinema, including Lee Chi-ngai’s Daoma ji (2014), which features London as a fantasy for its Mainland Chinese audience.

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Global London on screen

Visitors, cosmopolitans and migratory cinematic visions of a superdiverse city

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