ABSTRACT

Cinematic products in the twenty-first century increasingly emerge from, engage with, and are consumed in cross-cultural settings. While there have been a number of terms used to describe cinematic forms that do not bear allegiance to a single nation in terms of conceptualization, content, finance and/or viewership, this volume contends that "crossover cinema" is the most apt contemporary description for those aspects of contemporary cinema on which it focuses. This contention is provoked by an appreciation of the cross-cultural reality of our post-globalization twenty-first century world.

This volume both outlines the history of usage of the term and grounds it theoretically in ways that emphasize the personal/poetic in addition to the political. Each of the three sections of the volume then considers crossover film from one of three perspectives: production, the texts themselves, and distribution and consumption.

part |48 pages

Producing a Hybrid Grammar

chapter |11 pages

Crossover Cinema

A Genealogical and Conceptual Overview

chapter |13 pages

My Tehran for Sale

A Coproduction with Poetry at Stake

chapter |9 pages

Maps and Movies

Talking with Deepa Mehta

part |56 pages

Reading outside the Canon

chapter |15 pages

Hong Kong Film as Crossover Cinema

Maintaining the HK Aesthetic

chapter |17 pages

On No Longer Speaking Chinese

Crossover Stardom and the Performance of Accented English

chapter |11 pages

Bridging Pop Culture and Identity Politics

Fatih Akin's Road Movie In July

chapter |11 pages

Film Policy and the Emergence of the Cross-Cultural

Exploring Crossover Cinema in Flanders (Belgium)

part |62 pages

Watching Other Worlds

chapter |16 pages

Leaping the Demographic Barrier

Theoretical Challenges for the Crossover Audience

chapter |17 pages

Seduced “Outsiders” versus Skeptical “Insiders”?

Slumdog Millionaire through Its Re/Viewers

chapter |13 pages

Control Room

Film and Websites

chapter |14 pages

Desi Turns Malay

Indian Cinema Redefined as Crossover in the Malaysian Market