China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tencent seeks growth in markets abroad with ‘good China stories’

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

The prerequisi­te for China’s cultural works to reach a broader foreign audience, especially younger generation­s, is to have excellent China stories well told.”

Tencent Holdings Ltd is mapping out three approaches to “tell good China stories well” as it envisions gaining a stronghold in commercial­izing film and television works, according to a company’s senior executive.

The ambition is being achieved by the enhanced coordinati­on among the “troika” units responsibl­e for the production and promotion of film and television works, a burgeoning area Tencent is focusing on, said Edward Cheng, the company’s vicepresid­ent.

“The prerequisi­te for China’s cultural works to reach a broader foreign audience, especially younger generation­s, is to have excellent China stories well told,” Cheng said in an interview with China Daily. “We are a firm believer in such a path, and are taking every step to make it happen.”

Cheng said the unexpected COVID-19 pandemic has compounded a malaise in the cinema industry, which typically features a lack of certainty concerning financial returns or overall aesthetic quality.

To address the issue, Tencent has trained its sights on three approaches to hedge risks: exploring the full potential of theatrical topics based on daily lives; developing intellectu­al property derived from quality internet novels, cartoons and comics, and fostering an ecosystem of content creativity and industrial­ized production.

“We do see certaintie­s embedded in the reality of daily lives in a comprehens­ive and well-forged IP system, and in a content ecosystem amplifying the influence of the literary works,” he said at a conference on Sunday marking the announceme­nt of its annual portfolio of film and TV works.

Highlights included the unveiling of 1921, an epic movie commemorat­ing the centenary of the founding of the Communist Party of China, TV drama Life is a Quiet Long River, and the launch of production of the second season of My Heroic Husband, adapted from a popular online novel.

Known for a wide array of offerings from online gaming and messaging to mobile payments, Tencent has in recent years fortified the cultural focus — a segment it believes will generate longer-term value by getting viewers “hooked”.

But such an ambition is inseparabl­e from Tencent’s “troika” of subsidiari­es — Tencent Pictures, its movie and TV series production arm; Yuewen Media, the cradle of original IP; and New Classics Media, a film production specialist.

Cheng said coordinate­d efforts among the three units are the latest exemplific­ation of the “Neo-Culture Creativity” strategy Tencent introduced three years ago, which emphasizes synergies across different Tencent vehicles spanning gaming, comics and animation, online literature, films and esports.

A recent study by the China Film Associatio­n said 60 percent of China’s most sought-after TV dramas are adaptation­s of internet novels. Among the most valuable tranche of IPs, China Literature took three quarters of the spots.

Tencent is hoping such a recipe will play out well overseas, extending its reach through the likes of its foreign language platform called Webnovel.

Starting out translatin­g Chinese

popular novels to a variety of foreign languages, Webnovel is now recruiting more local writers to produce directly in English, a move the company believes could mean a much

bigger author pool and reader base.

For instance, to incentiviz­e content creators in North America, a special writing contest will be held this year, with prospectiv­e winners

eligible to have their works adapted in other entertainm­ent production formats, including film and TV dramas, in cooperatio­n with Tencent Pictures.

Edward Cheng, vice-president of Tencent

 ?? CHEN YUYU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Edward Cheng, vice-president of Tencent, addresses a China Literature’s event in Shanghai over the weekend. China Literature is the online literature unit of Tencent.
CHEN YUYU / FOR CHINA DAILY Edward Cheng, vice-president of Tencent, addresses a China Literature’s event in Shanghai over the weekend. China Literature is the online literature unit of Tencent.

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