The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Lunar New Year’s theatre attendance in S. Korea plunges amid pandemic

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SEOUL: Lingering concerns over Covid-19 kept South Korean people from going to cinemas during the Lunar New Year holiday, but recently eased social distancing is expected to brighten prospects for the virushit film industry, Yonhap news agency reported yesterday.

The number of moviegoers reached a total of 707,000 during the four-day lunar New Year holiday weekend that began on Thursday, according to the data from the Korean Film Council (KOFIC).

It is just one seventh of more than 4.9 million attendees tallied over last year’s Lunar New Year holiday that fell on Jan 24-27.

The Lunar New Year, one of the two most important traditiona­l holidays in the country, is a high season for the local cinema scene as blockbuste­r movies compete before the spring season.

Last year, the political drama ‘The Man Standing Next’ topped the holiday leaderboar­d, attracting a cumulative 4.75 million moviegoers.

But this year, big-name films postponed theatrical releases for the holidays due to a resurgence in Covid-19 cases in the winter and tightened social distancing in theaters.

Disney-Pixar’s latest animated film ‘Soul,’ released on Jan 20, drew a 273,000 viewers over the four-day period, for a total of 1.57 million. It has remained atop the country’s box office for four straight weeks since its release.

Japanese animated film ‘Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the Movie: Mugen Train,’ released on Jan 27, came in second with 115,000 moviegoers over the same period, totaling 620,000.

Released on Wednesday, the South Korean romantic comedy ‘New Year Blues,’ garnered 109,000 viewers to finish third, followed by the science fantasy ‘Monster Hunter’ with 72,000.

Insiders expected that more movie fans will likely return to cinemas in the coming weeks as the 9pm curfew imposed on movie theatres was lifted and their seating cap was increased to 70 per cent from 50 per cent from yesterday.

 ??  ?? A theatre in Seoul is relatively empty as new releases of movies are disrupted by the new coronaviru­s pandemic.
A theatre in Seoul is relatively empty as new releases of movies are disrupted by the new coronaviru­s pandemic.

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