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This article begins by asking why colour has ignited only limited interest in the field of Chinese film studies, and it uses the critical reception of China's first colour film — Fei Mu's Shengsi hen/Remorse at Death (1948) — as a condensed case study. An analysis of scholarly responses to Fei Mu's film, the article argues, suggests that colour as a critical category in Chinese-language cinemas has vanished at the intersection of two persistent biases in the discipline: a certain reluctance to research Chinese film history in technological terms; and the early dominance of the cinema-as-realist-paradigm across the field, which led to a lengthy neglect of colour as an independent aesthetic property. The article goes on to argue that the vibrant use of colour in much recent Chinese-language auteur cinema — dubbed ‘chromatic expressionism’ here — merits more attention. In particular, the article suggests that colour can pose an intense provocation to the long-standing notion that the cinema-as-spectacle exists in a dichotomous relationship with the cinema-as-storytelling. The article explores this idea through a close reading of Fruit Chan's Jiaozi/Dumplings (2004), focusing on the film's vivid use of saturated complementary colours.
Margaret Hillenbrand (Sun,) studied this question.