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Painting the City Red: Chinese Cinema and the Urban Contract. Yomi Braester. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010. Xiv + 405 pp. £16.99; $26.95. ISBN 978-0-8223-4723-1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2012

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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2011

Yomi Braester's Painting the City Red: Chinese Cinema and the Urban Contract is a revisionist study of, as well as an important theoretical intervention in, Chinese urban cinema and drama between 1949 and 2008 that is rooted in close textual readings and archival research. By tracing the urban development of such cities as Beijing, Shanghai and Taipei, Braester's work sheds new light on the intimate and shifting power relationships between urban planning, film and theatrical productions on the one hand, and the tensions between cinematic representations of city spaces and urban discourses of global modernity on the other. In Painting the City Red, Braester returns to the centre stage the role of urban visual media in creating real and imaginary temporal, spatial and ideological dimensions of today's Chinese cityscapes. The “urban contract” (p. 1) forged between urban planners, policy makers and filmmakers, reveals how visual representations could both adopt and resist the official regulatory power over the visions of post-socialist China.

Structured by Mikhail Bakhtin's concept of “chronotopes,” or the symbiosis pairing of “locations and temporal perceptions” (p. 18), each of the seven chapters in Painting the City Red interrogates how the construction of cityscapes in and through cinema and drama shapes people's urban identities and changing visions of urban sites such as Shanghai's Nanjing Road and Taipei's veterans' villages. The first three chapters examine how the government often intervened in both staged dramas and film productions to influence the public opinion of its urban policies. For instance, in order to justify the transformation of Beijing's Longxugou area into an urbanized neighbourhood for modern living in the early 1950s, the government presented this public works project as a “socialist utopia” (p. 41) in the play and film versions of Dragon Whisker Creek (chapter one). Similarly, state-sponsored heavy-handed “main melody” plays such as Goldfish Ponds (2001) were used as vehicles to quell the debates between the preservation of vernacular architectural heritage of Beijing's courtyard houses on the one hand and the post-Maoist policies and projects of demolition-and-relocation in the new global economy of marketization on the other.

Whereas the first three chapters recount the top-down intervention of the government in film and drama productions, the next four chapters offer glimpses of “dissident resistance” (p. 153) and alternative visions of Chinese cityscapes. The statist monopoly over public urban spaces and national identity is contested and negotiated for instance in and through the visual renditions of Tiananmen Square from 1949 to the present by such directors as Teng Wenji and Zhang Yuan (chapter four). Their bold cinematic and aesthetic visions of Tiananmen Square “[tilted] the balance of power” (p. 186) by transforming the singular “state symbolism” of this “monumental space” (p. 153) into a daily-lived space infused with multiple uses and meanings for the citizens.

In the 1980s, amidst the urbanization of Taipei and Beijing, these cities experienced the trauma of the gentrification processes (chapters five and six). Despite the fact that both the New Taiwan Cinema and recent mainland films could not stop the violence of gentrification policies on the citizens, filmmakers took on the crusade to document the changing cities. Through their cinematic strategy of preserving the very acts of demolition on the celluloid, filmmakers were able to symbolically challenge official policies of demolition and relocation.

Braester's innovative reinterpretations of films by such renowned Chinese filmmakers as Tsai Ming-Liang, Chen Kaige, Feng Xiaogang and Jia Zhangke move beyond the auteurist approach and offer new assessments of their contributions in the rewriting of urban Chinese history and identities. Although this study focuses on the hegemonic ethos of political seats of power in major cities at the expense of “marginalized locations” at “the city's edge” (p. 24), this omission by no means detracts the importance of Braester's work but rather signals the possibilities of his new methodological approach to Chinese film studies. Another area that needs further exploration is the role of citizens as critical spectators and active participants in the forging of the urban contract. Just as the meanings of urban spaces could never be monopolized by the singular statist gaze of the Maoist and post-Maoist regimes, in post-socialist China's globalizing economy, citizens become travellers in transit who may offer new visions of unbounded cinematic and spatial configurations of urban spaces which could encompass a multitude of experiences of virtual communities beyond the limits of geopolitical boundaries.

This theoretically sophisticated and painstakingly researched monograph is a welcome addition to the fields of Chinese film studies and urban history. Students and scholars from a wide range of disciplines such as Chinese and Asian studies, film and theatre, urban planning, global studies and cultural studies will find valuable approaches not only to the study of Chinese cities and urban cinema but also to new understandings of the urban milieus and visual media representations of other global cities.