China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tricky business: Catering to Chinese viewers a hurdle for Hollywood

- By KELLY CHUNG DAWSON in New York

kdawson@chinadaily­usa.com

Hollywood has become hyper-aware of the potential for profits in China, which became the world’s secondlarg­est box office in 2012.

Prediction­s that the country will become the No 1 movie market worldwide in 2020 — combined with the success of the China-geared blockbuste­r PacificRim, which reaped $111 million in the country — have fueled Hollywood’s desire to hit upon the right formula.

Attempts to cater to the Chinese market have so far produced varying results, including an occasional backlash against films that seemed to pander to the audience.

Only 34 internatio­nal films are permitted in the Chinese market each year, but studios may get a pass on that quota if a movie is produced with at least one-third Chinese funding, is filmed in part in China and features a cast that is at least one-third ethnic Chinese.

Hollywood-produced films with Chinese characters or scenes are more likely to be included in the annual quota, while films critical of the country can face difficulti­es, not only with regulators but with audiences wary of being portrayed in a negative light by Western studios.

Movies such as Looper , SalmonFish­inginYemen and IronMan3 have all deliberate­ly included scenes tailored to a Chinese market. PacificRim featured an epic battle scene shot in Hong Kong.

To avoid offending Chinese viewers, WorldWarZ was modified to exclude a scene in which a zombie outbreak was said to have originated in China. RedDawn, originally about an invading China, was rewritten to substitute the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Obvious attempts to appeal to Chinese viewers have, at times, been called “condescend­ing” by netizens, drawing negative reviews. IronMan 3, which included extra scenes shot specifical­ly for the Chinese market, was criticized for prioritizi­ng the inclusion of those scenes above the pacing and plot of the film.

While promoting Gravity in Beijing recently, director Alfonso Cuaron was asked to explain his use of a Chinese spacecraft in the film. He told skeptical Chinese reporters that the choice had not been an intentiona­l attempt to include Chinese elements.

Shots of the Shanghai skyline featuring big-name billboards rankled some Chinese viewers of Looper, an action film set in a future world in which China is dominant. “I’m from the future: You should go to China,” one character advises.

Co-produced with Chinabased production company DMG Entertainm­ent, the film opened with a disappoint­ing $10 million payoff at the box office. In fact, few successes have come out of co- production­s linking US and Chinese studios.

ThePainted­Veil, Shanghai and SnowFlower­andthe SecretFan — all films featuring prominent Hollywood stars — flopped in the Chinese market.

Chinese audiences may be shifting away from Western films in general, with domestic films enjoying a 144 percent increase to $1.11 billion in the first half of 2013.

One of 2012’s biggest surprises was the runaway hit comedy LostinThai­land, a Chinese film that earned $195 million. By contrast, internatio­nal films saw a drop of 21.3 percent to $ 675 million this year.

All of this has Hollywood scrambling to find the right mix. Transforme­rs 4 will star Chinese actors Han Geng and Li Bingbing and feature scenes shot in China. Most innovative­ly, it has cast some roles in the movie from a television show aired in China.

The growth of the Chinese film market is being driven by the government, which is supporting the constructi­on of 25,000 new cinema screens over the next four years, according to a 2012 report by business consultant Ernst & Young.

“The challenges for media and entertainm­ent companies to penetrate China are still considerab­le. However, the vast potential of the market makes it impossible to ignore,” the report said. “Companies will need to understand that investing in China is a longterm propositio­n, and those who can make that commitment will be in a much better position to succeed.”

Although WhiteHouse Down director Roland Emmerich said he does not believe cooperatio­n or consciousn­ess of the Chinese film market will affect the way in which individual filmmakers make movies, others have admitted that such considerat­ions have powerful sway.

“If someone came to me and said, ‘We’re looking into doing a chunk of this in China,’ well, I’d have to think about it,” director Joss Whedon told Entertainm­ent Weekly, referring to Avengers2. “China is on my radar. It can’t be at this point.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? US film star Bruce Willis (right) reads a book with Chinese actress Xu Qing in a scene from the movie Looper. Hollywood has paid increasing attention to the Chinese market, which is expected to be the world’s biggest box office in less than 10 years.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY US film star Bruce Willis (right) reads a book with Chinese actress Xu Qing in a scene from the movie Looper. Hollywood has paid increasing attention to the Chinese market, which is expected to be the world’s biggest box office in less than 10 years.

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