City branding is a strategic instrument to publicize a city’s competitive advantages by
highlighting distinctive characteristics of the city. This study uses cinema as a discursive
lens to examine city branding and explicates a framework for implementing city branding
through cinema. An analysis of 81 Hong Kong films produced between 2008 and 2015
reveal the modalities by which city officials and media producers affect a city brand that
distinguishes Hong Kong from other East Asian cities. Specifically, Hong Kong
filmmakers 1) use local color as backdrops for stories, 2) emphasize freedom of
expression, 3) highlight regional localities, and 4) claim historical figures associated with
the city. The findings reflect strategic attempts by Hong Kong city officials and media
producers to negotiate the city’s postcolonial identity, even two decades after Hong
Kong’s reunification with China. The results suggest that Hong Kong uses cinemamediated
city branding as a form of subversive resistance to China. More broadly, the
implementation framework could be deployed by other emergent cities (e.g. Dubai),
which are looking to increase their profile and cultural footprint in the global stage
through creative markets.