Reading Response: Katarzyna Ancuta

The reading focuses on how ghosts are portrayed in Asian horror films. It highlights he failures of modern urbanization and the alienation of urban communal lifestyles. It acknowledges cultural nuances and historical context of the films and their message. The most interesting part was the social implications of apartment living in Asia. The rapid urbanization and focus on profit maximization led to public housing estates that lack consideration for living quality. Temporariness and disconnection from them resulted in a loss of homeliness and a feeling of isolation among residents. Horror films serve as a critique of this situation, highlighting the

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Reading Response – L6

Portrayal of ghosts in films are closely tied to their relationship with the city or buildings in which they ‘appear’ in. Generally, they act as foils to living characters, and help illustrate the latter’s relationship to their living environment. Their method and means of appearance also highlight their cultural significance in the city that the film is set, and are likely to reveal the nuances of urbanisation in specific eras. Depending on the director’s vision or plot context, their ‘haunting’ helps to visualise the unseen, and in turn, encourages viewers to prioritise the tension created between the living and the

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Reading Response: Ancuta, K. (2020)

Seeing how Asian cities allow the supernatural to surround us made me realize how much we differ from the West. K. Ancuta uses the multi-apartment building as an example, which houses a great number of tenants that come and go. The interior tends to be eerie with narrow alleyways, never-ending flats beside each other, small windows and doors, and staircases that lead nowhere. I found the strategically placed mirrors to be an iconic feature of these haunted buildings. Mirrors are considered as passageways to other dimensions, and also from an interior designing point of view, as illusions of a bigger

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Reading Response: Katarzyna Ancuta

Films serve as an effective and compelling medium to reflect the underlying contemporary societal issues and ghost-themed movies are no exception to this. In light of the introduction of neoliberal urbanism happening in Japan and South Korea, traditional communities are dissolving and fading. The portrayal of ghosts in movies in such cities are used to depict the ongoing migration from rural to urban areas which also evokes the theme of loneliness and social isolation. The deteriorated high-rise apartments shown in ghost-themed movies serve to isolate the socially marginalised inhabitants and the non-living from the outside world as if nothing exists

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Reading Response: Esther M. K. Cheung

The prison-like dwellings behind barred windows, having reduced to the sole material base of their inhabitants, speak of nothing but melancholia and sorrow — there are perhaps no other words than Cheung’s that better evoked my sensation of watching Made in Hong Kong. The film engulfed me in somber grief, triggered by the hopelessness faced by the alienated youth, from whom the future slipped away. Cheung put it as the “feeling of estrangement and defamiliarization” provoked by the public housing estate. I completely resonate with him. Near the movie’s ending, the scene at nightfall of protagonist Moon’s dark-blue profile beside

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Response to readings (L6)

The part portraying Hong Kong as a ghostly space impressed me greatly. I didn’t relate politics to ghost stories or places before. Usually, when I watch ghost films, I only focus on the appearance of the ghost or the manipulation of light and darkness, enjoying the excitement and the ambiance brought by watching horror movies and watching those scenes at a superficial level. I never thought that an unheimlich house can be a metaphor for Hong Kong in the tense Hong Kong – China relationship in a specific period. The director ingeniously combines horror and politics these two seems like unrelated

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Reading Response: Ancuta

The author finds this strong link between ghost stories and the urban city in Asian context, this seemed like a new perspective for me as I usually see horror tropes of isolated suburban setting where the protagonist gets threatened while having no one to ask for help. The alternate trope is finding the uncanny out of the familiar. Chinese ghosts are special for they are built upon the cultural notions of Buddhist karmic cycle, Confucian ideals and Taoist rituals. Therefore, they are often seen as human beings in their afterlife lingering on earth for they were unfulfilled. As sociable beings,

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Reading Response: Ancuta — Draft

Ancuta’s article discusses “ghosts”. I myself am interested in ghost films and usually watch them with friends. After reading the material, I started to think about the connection between ghost films and architecture. The Chinese horror film that has impressed me most recently is the 2022 Taiwanese production Incantation. This film also caused very heated discussions and even insults among the audience. The reason for this is the interactive way in which the ‘curse’ of the plot is conveyed to everyone who watches it. Many people expressed their anger by giving the film a low rating, even though they usually

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[Reading Response] – In Search of the Ghostly in Context

In Hong Kong filming industry, lots of classic ghost-themed films are born, and one of the famous directors, Fruit Chan, has done a good job of it. Hong Kong is the birthland of most Chinese ghost films, as “ghost culture” is a traditional cultural issue that kind of life-form. In most of the film, the idea of “loneliness” is significant to show the isolation and interaction between the living environment and ghosts, which recall our attention to the social issue. In this reading, the writer detailly explained Fruit Chan’s films. For “Made in Hong Kong”, is one of three films

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[Reading Response: Cheung, E. M. K.]

In this book chapter, Esther M. K. Cheung explores how Fruit Chan illustrates the ghostly context in his movies. After reading this chapter, I have gained some interesting insights about the roles of ghosts and housing estates in Chan’s films. Speaking of the roles of ghosts, they are allegorizations of recalcitrant elements of the past that resist erasure. In Chan’s movies, ghosts persist doggedly in the space that they do not belong to because they have some stories to tell. Also, ghosts act as a metaphor for the struggles faced by Hong Kong. From my point of view, Chan tries

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