South China Morning Post

HUGE DEMAND TO SECURE HK$30 TICKETS FOR CINEMA DAY EVENT

Up to 18,000 film fans join the queue on one website, with operators expecting close to full houses

- Wynna Wong wynna.wong@scmp.com

People queued to buy discounted film tickets yesterday for this weekend’s Cinema Day, and at least one business said it expected close to full houses for the event.

Sixty-three cinemas, including ones owned by Emperor Cinemas, MCL, Golden Harvest and Broadway Cinemas, were selling tickets for HK$30 each.

Tickets for the Sunday event, organised by the Hong Kong Theatres Associatio­n, were released at noon.

Checks by the Post found congested access at a variety of cinema websites at 12.30pm, including a 25-hour wait to connect to Broadway Circuit, which had more than 18,000 people in the queue. Emperor Cinemas showed almost 14,000 people in its queue.

About two dozen people were queuing to buy tickets at Grand Kornhill Cinema in Quarry Bay at 11.30am – half an hour before tickets were released.

Among the crowd was Vikki Au, a tutor, who said she planned to buy tickets for herself and her family to see Arthur The King – an American film starring Mark Wahlberg, Simu Liu and Juliet Rylance about an adventure racing team that adopts a stray dog during a gruelling endurance event.

“The price is really quite attractive and it’s a once-a-year event,” Au said.

“I love going to the movies anyway, and HK$30 is such a good deal – you can’t even get that watching the discounted early showings.”

The Hong Kong Movie website showed a Grand Kornhill Cinema ticket for a 10.10am screening of

Arthur The King today cost HK$60. Tickets for the 3.35pm show were priced at HK$80.

Jeremy Choi, a Form Five student, said the HK$30 price was well within his budget and he would be buying tickets for the anime film Haikyuu!! The Dumpster Battle to watch with friends.

“It will be a nice break from studying,” he said.

A staff member at the cinema said the queue was about 30 per cent longer than on typical days and that he expected there to be near-full houses on Sunday.

“Last year, we had completely full houses, but this year is the second year, so the novelty may be gone,” he said.

The staff member added the city was still being affected by the pandemic last year, but that there was now a tendency for people to travel to Shenzhen on the weekends. But the industry was “still optimistic” about the event, the employee added.

The first Cinema Day was held on April 27 last year and the Theatres Associatio­n reported a record high single-day attendance of almost 222,000 film fans.

It yesterday said the event had received “enthusiast­ic support” from the public and that overall ticket sales had been smooth throughout the day.

“Cinemas learned from the experience last year and made sufficient preparatio­ns for both online and offline ticket sales,” associatio­n chairman Timothy Yuen Yin-man said.

“They have also prepared a rich and diverse film line-up for the event to ensure that audiences with different preference­s can have an enjoyable Sunday.”

 ?? Photo: Jelly Tse ?? People queue to buy tickets outside a cinema in Admiralty yesterday. The first Cinema Day last year attracted record single-day attendance of almost 222,000.
Photo: Jelly Tse People queue to buy tickets outside a cinema in Admiralty yesterday. The first Cinema Day last year attracted record single-day attendance of almost 222,000.

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