The Phnom Penh Post

Why Hollywood is relying on China to halt a box office slide

- Brooks Barnes

ALL year, Hollywood executives have been brushing aside worries about box-office stagnation in the United States and Canada by pointing to strong ticket sales in China.

Ticket sales for imported films in China are up 34 percent this year, to roughly $2.3 billion, according to the Beijing research firm EntGroup. Look at Paramount’s Transforme­rs: The Last Knight. That sequel managed only $45 million in its opening weekend in North America, but it took in $120 million in China.

On closer look, however, the rosy picture doesn’t quite hold up, underscori­ng why Hollywood has been pushing so hard for film-related concession­s from the Chinese government.

New data from comScore, a Virginia-based analytics firm, indicate that Hollywood is having a tough time in China. From January 1 to June 30, Chinese cinemas played 24 movies from Hollywood, generating $1.76 billion in ticket sales. In the same period a year earlier, the country let in 22 Hollywood movies, which collected about $1.73 billion.

That is a 1.7 percent increase – a far shot from 35 percent, the figure for all imported movies. Films from countries other than the US made up the difference. One was Dangal, a Bollywood drama that collected a runaway $191 million in China.

Overall, box-office revenue in China totalled $3.7 billion in the first six months of the year, up 2 percent, a very rate compared with what the market has delivered recently. The slowdown is one reason the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America, which represents the six biggest Hollywood studios, recently hired Transforme­rs:TheLastKni­ght an accounting firm to audit the box-office figures reported by Chinese theatres.

Any uptick is positive, of course, but Hollywood is counting on China to deliver gains that are substantia­lly higher. In North America, ticket sales for the summer are down 8 percent compared with the same period in 2016; box-office revenue for the year is flat.

So as they scratch for growth, studios like 20th Century Fox and Universal have been scrambling to position themselves as players in China, where the number of movie screens has increased to more than 40,600 from 12,407 in 2012. The accounting firm PwC recently estimated that China would have 80,377 screens by 2021 – double the number in the US.

Studios have even made minimal fuss over the censorship demands. China not only limits the number of foreign films, but often asks for substantia­l cuts in those it does allow in.

Some Hollywood offerings have done very well in China this year. A Dog’s Purpose, made by Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners, collected a strong $88.2 million; in comparison, it took in $64 million in North America, which remains the world’s largest movie market. Sony’s Resident Evil: The Final Chapter collected about $160 million in China; it managed only about $26.8 million in North America.

At the same time, however, Hollywood suffered a parade of duds, including The Lego Batman Movie, Sing and King Arthur: Legend of the Sword. Even Rogue One: A Star Wars Story did only so-so. And after that initial box-office pop, Transforme­rs: The Last Knight fell off a cliff.

Hollywood could always make a comeback in China in the second half of the year, particular­ly if Beijing relaxes its late-summer blackout period for foreign films, as some analysts predict. “Everything can be changed as the political needs dictate,” said Stanley Rosen, a political scientist with the USChina Institute at the Univer- sity of Southern California. He noted that Universal’s Despicable Me 3 had a strong arrival last week, taking in $66 million over its opening weekend there.

But analysts say studios are facing systemic challenges, including a slowing economy. Chinese moviegoers are also growing more discerning; film quality is increasing­ly important. Movie theatres in China may also be hurt as streaming services proliferat­e. More than 80 million people in the country now pay to watch video online, a 32 percent increase from last year.

“People just don’t have time to go to theatres,” Zhang Zhao, CEO of Le Vision Pictures, a subsidiary of the financiall­y troubled Chinese tech company LeEco, said at a conference in Shanghai last month. (On the plus side, some Hollywood studios are benefiting from selling content to streaming services.)

Difficulti­es at the Chinese box office come as Hollywood presses Beijing to loosen its restrictio­ns on imported films. Under an expiring five-year deal, China annually allows 34 new overseas movies to play in its theaters. Although Chinese regulators have quietly inched that number higher, Hollywood studios want an expanded quota formalised and have asked for at least 50 slots.

Hollywood also wants to receive a bigger portion of ticket sales. Studios receive about 50 percent of box-office revenue in the United States, but China allows foreign companies to receive only a 25 percent cut. Studios have asked for closer to 40 percent.

Rosen said negotiatio­ns over revised film terms, taking place between Chinese officials and the Office of the United States Trade Representa­tive, could drag into next year. He noted that the Communist Party’s 19th Party Congress will take place in Beijing in the fall.

“I would be very, very surprised if anything was in place related to Hollywood before that,” Rosen said.

 ??  ?? from Paramount took in $120 million in its opening weekend in China, compared with only $45 million in North America, but then ticket sales plummeted.
from Paramount took in $120 million in its opening weekend in China, compared with only $45 million in North America, but then ticket sales plummeted.

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