- Brings together the most cutting edge, in-depth, and interesting scholarship on arguably the greatest living Asian filmmaker, from a multinational group of established and rising film scholars and critics
- Covers a huge breadth of topics such as the tradition of the jianghu in Wong's films; queering Wong's films not in terms of gender but through the artist's liminality; the phenomenological Wong; Wong's intertextuality; America through Wong's eyes; the optics of intensities, thresholds, and transfers of energy in Wong's cinema; and the diasporic presence of some ladies from Shanghai in Wong's Hong Kong
- Examines the political, historical, and sociological influence of Wong and his work, and discusses his work from a variety of perspectives including modern, post-modern, postcolonial, and queer theory
- Includes two appendices which examine Wong’s work in Hong Kong television and commercials

A Companion to Wong Kar-wai
by Nochimson, Martha P.Buy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Martha P. Nochimson has taught in the Department of Film and Television at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, and at Mercy College, where she developed and chaired a program in Film Studies. She is the author of several books, including most recently An Introduction to Film Genres (2013), David Lynch Swerves: Uncertainty from Lost Highway to Inland Empire (2013), World on Film: An Introduction (Wiley Blackwell, 2010), and Dying to Belong: Gangster Movies in Hollywood and Hong Kong (Wiley-Blackwell, 2007). She has been invited to appear on television in her capacity as a film and media critic in the United States, Canada, and France, and she has covered international film festivals in New York, Montreal, and Istanbul for over a decade. Her numerous articles about world film and interviews of major directors have appeared in Cineaste, Film Quarterly, and The New Review of Film and Television Studies. Further information is available at her website: www.marthapnochimson.com.
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors ix
Acknowledgments xv
Part One Introduction
Wong Kar-wai: Invoking the Universal and the Local 3
Martha P. Nochimson
Part Two Mapping Wong’s Liminality
1 Transnational Wong 23
Ken Provencher
2 It is a Restless Moment: Wong Kar-wai and the Phenomenology of Flow 47
Joseph G. Kickasola
3 Wong Kar-wai and his jiang hu 80
Bérénice Reynaud
Part Three Thresholds of Texture and Mood
4 Wong Kar-wai’s Cinema of Repetition 115
Ackbar Abbas
5 Wong Kar-wai: The Optics of the Virtual 135
Angelo Restivo
6 Color Design in the Cinema of Wong Kar-wai 153
Shohini Chaudhuri
7 The Value of Re-exports: Wong Kar-wai’s Use of Pre-existing Soundtracks 182
Giorgio Biancorosso
Part Four In the Corridors of History and Culture
8 Wong’s Ladies from Shanghai 207
Gina Marchetti
9 The Sinophone Cinema of Wong Kar-wai 232
Audrey Yue
10 New Queer Angles on Wong Kar-wai 250
Helen Hok-Sze Leung
11 “Pity about the furniture”: Violence, Wong Kar-wai Style 272
Karen Fang
12 In the Mood for Food: Wong Kar-wai’s Culinary Imaginary 295
Mike Ingham and Matthew Kwok-kin Fung
13 Chungking Express, Tarantino, and the Making of a Reputation 319
David Desser
Part Five Close-up of Wong’s Inflections of Time and Space
14 Chungking Express: Slow – Images – Ahead 347
Raymond Bellour (translated by Allyn Hardyck)
15 Wong Kar-wai: The Actor, Framed 353
Joe McElhaney
16 Infidelity and the Obscure Object of History 378
Vivian P.Y. Lee
17 Metonymy, Mneme, and Anamnesis in Wong Kar-wai 397
Thorsten Botz-Bornstein
Part Six Focus on Individual Films
18 Serial, Sequelae, and Postcolonial Nostalgia: Wong Kar-wai’s 1960s Hong Kong Trilogy 419
Yiman Wang
19 We Can’t Go On Not Meeting Like This: Fallen Angels and Wong’s Intertextuality 438
Martha P. Nochimson
20 The Third Reality: In the Mood for Love 462
Michel Chion (translated by Claudia Gorbman)
21 Cinephiliac Engagement and the Disengaged Gaze in In the Mood for Love 467
Yomi Braester
22 Wong’s America, North and South: My Blueberry Nights and Happy Together 485
Ken Provencher
23 Queer Utopias in Wong Kar-wai’s Happy Together 508
Carlos Rojas
24 Wong Kar-wai’s Genre Practice and Romantic Authorship: The Cases of Ashes of Time Redux and The Grandmaster 522
Stephen Teo
25 Wong Kar-wai, Auteur and Adaptor: Ashes of Time and In The Mood for Love 540
Wai-ping Yau
Filmography 558
Appendix I Wong Works in Television Chih-ting Chen 562
Appendix II Wong Works in Advertising Chih-ting Chen 569
Selected Bibliography 586
Index 600
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