The Borneo Post

China box office tops North American market in first quarter

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SHANGHAI: China surpassed North America to become the world’s largest movie market during the first quarter of 2018, fuelled in part by big- grossing domestic films, according to US and Chinese box- office figures.

China’s movie market made 20.21 billion yuan ( RM12.7 billion) between January and March, according to the China Movie Data Informatio­n Network, while US trade journal Variety said the North America box office reached US$ 2.85 billion.

Almost three quarters of the revenue — 15 billion yuan — came from Chinesepro­duced movies, the China data showed.

Of the top 10 films watched in China during the first quarter, seven were domestical­ly produced, and Chinese-made movies occupied the top five slots.

Military blockbuste­r Operation Red Sea was the top- grossing film in China during the period, with a take of 3.6 billion yuan. It followed in the footsteps of a movie on a similar nationalis­tic theme – Wolf Warrior 2 starring Wu Jing.

Along with action film Detective Chinatown 2 and the fantasy genre Monster Hunt, the three Chinese movies accounted for almost half of China’s total box office during the first quarter.

US super-hero film Black Panther and sci- fi flick Pacific Rim Uprising did well after their releases in China, moving up to second and third in the Marchonly box office.

The Chinese numbers were also boosted by movie- goers flocking to cinemas during the extended Lunar New Year holiday in February.

China’s box- office revenues surged in 2017 after slowing sharply the preceding year, official media reported in January.

Ticket revenue grew 13.45 percent to 55.9 billion yuan ( RM34.4 billion) in 2017, staterun news agency Xinhua had said, citing data from the State Administra­tion of Press, Publicatio­n, Radio, Film and Television. Hollywood has a keen eye on China’s potentiall­y lucrative movie market, although Beijing strictly limits the number of foreign films that can be released in Chinese cinemas.

China also takes measures to help boost domestic films’ performanc­e, including limiting the screening of foreign films during peak seasons and rewarding cinemas for playing more domestic titles.

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