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Chinese Cinema, 1930s. Lecture 9. Year indicates the year Japan gained control. Shanghai. First Opium War (1839-1942) British forces occupy the city Treaty of Nanjing (1942) Treaty with Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) results in the opening of trading ports for international trade
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Chinese Cinema,1930s Lecture 9
Shanghai • First Opium War (1839-1942) • British forces occupy the city • Treaty of Nanjing (1942) • Treaty with Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) results in the opening of trading ports for international trade • China’s semi-colonial status • Subsequent treaties negotiated on unfavorable terms allow foreign nations (U.S., France, Britain) to govern and administer territories of Shanghai
1930s: Shaghai International Settlement (U.S. plus British Territories); French concession to the southwest
British Armored Car, Shanghai International Settlement, 1932
The Gardens (Huangpu Park) in the Shanghai International Settlement
Postcard, Nanjing Road, Shanghai International Settlement, 1930s
Modernity • Technology • Transportation—trains, planes, automobiles • Communication • Capitalist production (i.e. division of labor,etc.) • industrialization
Shanghai: Symbol of Chinese ModernityBanking, Finance, Trans portation • Modern transportation and communications • By 1921, 20 of 27 most important banks were headquartered in Shanghai • By 1935, there were 109 banks in Shanghai • By 1935, Shanghai’s financial market was the third largest in the world (after New York and London) • Of 1,500 novels appearing in the late Qing period, 2/3 were translated from foreign languages • Shengbao, first major daily Chinese newspaper, was distributed in Shanghai in 1872
Shanghai: Symbol of Chinese ModernityCulture and Communications • Of 1,500 novels appearing in the late Qing period, 2/3 were translated from foreign languages • Shengbao, first major daily Chinese newspaper, was distributed in Shanghai in 1872 • Largest publishing houses were established in 1897 and 1912 in Shanghai • Wenmingxi (civilized drama) born in Shanghai • European origin • 1907: Students put on “Black Slave Cries Out to Heaven” based on Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin
History of Chinese Cinema • 1896: first public screenings of imported films from the West in Shanghai • 1896:Lumiere brothers sent their cameraman to film in Hong Kong • First Chinese film: Dingjunshan (Conquering Jun Mountain, 1905) filmed by RenJungfeng (owner of a photo studio); shot with a French camera bought from a German; featuring popular Beijing Opera Star, Tan Xingpei
History of Chinese Film • Film Exhibition was dominated by foreign interests (90% foreign) • b/t 1896-1937: 5,000 films were shown, most of which were foreign • 8 U.S. film companies established distribution systems in China • By the end of the 1920s: most films shown were American including The Three Muskateers, Robin Hood (with Douglas Fairbanks), The Big Parade, Way down East (with Lilian Gish of Broken Blossoms); Chaplin, Keaton were popular in China • Ordinary Chinese did not see American films b/c/ they cost 4 times the price of admission to national product (30-50 cents) • Many directors, cinematographers, and technicians were trained abroad (in the U.S. or France)
History of Chinese Cinema • From 1905-early 1930s: business and profitability were the main preoccupations • 1925: 175 film companies in the major cities (141 were in Shanghai • Early 1930s main companies: Mingxing (est. 1922); Tianyi(est. 1925); Lianhua • 3 main genres: • Martial arts • Confucian morality tales (ex: the Orphan Saves his Grandson) • Love stories
Audiences for Domestic Products • These films were aimed at popular audiences. A contemporary observer, Harriet Sergeant, claimed that the Shanghai studios “aimed to attract the ordinary man and woman on Nanking Road who has never read a Lu Xun essay or appreciated a woodblock print… Any rickshaw-puller or factory worker could have told you about Shanghai films. Film succeeded where the novel, essay, woodblock print failed. It reached in the heart of the worker.”
Ex: Laborer’s Love (a.k.a Romance of a Fruit Peddler), d. Zhang Shichuan, w. ZhengZhengqui (founders of Mingxing Company), 1922 (22 minutes)Earliest Surviving Chinese Film
Emergence of Chinese Nationalism, 1930s • May Fourth Movement (1919)—turning point, intellectuals turn to the left • Begins with student protest against imperialism and the unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Versailles • Dissatisfaction leads to establishment of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1921 • 1931: Japanese invasion of Manchuria • 1932: Japanese attack on Shanghai • 1937-1945: Japanese occupation of Shanghai during the Second Sino-Japanese War
A Break with the Past: Chinese Cinema, 1930s • Confrontation b/t Nationalist government (Kuomintang Party-KMP) and the Chinese Communist Party • The Political Parties enter cultural scene • CCP organizes the Leftwing Dramatist League of China, leading to “Left Wing Film Movement” • KMP exerts censorship and spawns the Nationalist Film Movement • Shift away from commercial considerations to political-didactic ones
Left Wing Film Movement, 1932-1937 • Alliance between profit seeking film companies like Mingxing, Lianhua, Tianyi AND leftwing screenwriters backed by the CCP • Subject to censorship by the KMP government • Censored by producer • Censored by director • Censored by the state • At the screenplay stage • After production
Left Wing Film Movement, 1932-1937 • Narrative structure is melodramatic, indebted to Hollywood • Conflicts between good and evil • Goodness and unrecognized virtue are first unrecognized and then recognized and rewarded • Stories are contemporary, daily life • Centered on the poor and working class • Film style: traditional, continuity editing; eliciting diegetic absorption • Mode of Production: industrial, profit-seeking methods like Hollywood • Politics: not as radical as one might expect; exposing social ills merely; anti-imperialism and anti-fedualism