The Borneo Post

Hidden dragon: Cannes eyes higher share in elusive Chinese movie market

- By Katy Lee

CANNES, France: Like an advancing army in a historical epic, the world’s film studios are massing on the frontier of China’s movie market, desperate to conquer the other side of the Great Wall. At the Cannes film festival, it’s difficult to find a producer who isn’t interested in a slice of the Chinese box office, set to be the globe’s most valuable by 2019. With a burgeoning middle class among its 1.3 billion- strong population, China already has the most movie screens — with new ones popping up at a dizzying rate of 27 per day last year, according to analysts IHS Markit. And while ticket sales have dipped slightly, the potential profits from a smash-hit in China are bigger than ever.

The latest Fast and Furious movie has earned even more in China than in the US and the country is in the grip of a craze for the Indian film Dangal, about a father who wants his daughters to become profession­al wrestlers.

“Chinese people have more money in their pocket and they want to pay for entertainm­ent, to see a different life through cinema,” said Lin Jing, producer of the only Chinese film showing in the official selection at Cannes, Walking Past the Future.

Tie-ups have come thick and fast at the festival, with Beijingbas­ed Jetsen taking a stake in the thriller American Made starring Tom Cruise, and a deal announced to sell the children’s animation franchise Moomins for Chinese release.

But there’s a snag: the Communist Party keeps tight limits on foreign films imported for screening in China, with the annual limit currently set at 34.

Rumours have swirled for months that Beijing is planning to expand the quota. But Jerome Paillard, director of the Cannes Film Market — a deal-making shop that runs parallel to the main festival — said Hollywood should wait before cracking open the champagne.

It remains to be seen whether Beijing “really has a strategic will to open up”, Paillard told AFP, adding: “We don’t feel for the moment that commercial relations in cinema have really taken off.”

A Cannes speed- dating event between Western producers and companies like Jackie Chan’s Sparkle Roll was neverthele­ss packed, with filmmakers on both sides eager to work together.

In Cannes, there’s speculatio­n that the big showbiz spending may have come to a halt due to a Chinese clampdown on overseas investment­s, which reportedly led Wanda to drop its US$ 1 billion bid for the operator of the Golden Globe Awards in March.

And while there’s ample enthusiasm on both sides for co-production­s — which under certain circumstan­ces are able to dodge China’s stiflingly water-tight foreign film quotas — producers are also asking why so many such projects have previously failed.

The Great Wall starring Matt Damon, a fantasy epic billed as heralding a bright new era of big-budget co-production­s, was an epic flop in both countries last year, leading many to conclude it made a fatal error in trying to appeal to audiences in both East and West.

“The ways Chinese tell stories and the way Westerners tell stories is so different,” said YuFai Suen, the Hong Kong-born managing director of Britain’s Pinewood Pictures.

Western movie- goers want a clear story arc, he said, while in China “they’re in your face more, they’re less subtle.”

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