Craziness and Carnival in Neo-Noir Chinese Cinema offers an in-depth
discussion of the "stone phenomenon" in Chinese film production and
cinematic discourses triggered by the extraordinary success of the 2006
low-budget film, Crazy Stone. Surveying the nuanced implications of
the film noir genre, Harry Kuoshu argues that global neo noir
maintains a mediascape of references, borrowings, and re-workings and
explores various social and cultural issues that constitute this Chinese
episode of neo noir. Combining literary explorations of carnival,
postmodernism, and post-socialism, Kuoshu advocates for neo noir as a
cultural phenomenon that connects filmmakers, film critics, and film
audiences rather than an industrial genre.