<P>This book provides a framework by which a global audience might think theologically about contemporary films produced in mainland China by Chinese directors. Up to this point the academic discipline of Christian theology and film has focussed predominantly on Western cinema, and as a result, has missed out the potential insights offered by Chinese spirituality on film. </P><P></P><P>Mainland Chinese films, produced within the nation¿s social structure, offer an excellent <I>lingua franca</I> of China. Illuminating the spiritual imagination of Chinese filmmakers and their yearning for transcendence, the book uses Richard A. Blake¿s concept of <I>afterimage</I> to analyse the potential theological implications of their films. It then brings J¿rgen Moltmann¿s "immanent-transcendence" and Robert K. Johnston¿s "God¿s wider Presence" into conversation with Confucianist and Daoist ideas of there being, spirituality-speaking, "More in Life than Meets the Eye" than simply material existence.