China Daily (Hong Kong)

A festive film fight

- Contact the writer at xufan@chinadaily.com.cn

as the game changer. It establishe­d Spring Festival as a box-office high season in China.

Last year’s Spring Festival holiday saw a nearly 70 percent yearon-year surge in box-office revenues, pushing filmmakers to more enthusiast­ically contend for screenings during the period this year.

Chow — whose Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons and The Mermaid were the box-office champions in 2013 and 2016, respective­ly — will return to the competitiv­e season with his directoria­l film, The New King of Comedy, a remake of his 1999 classic, King of Comedy.

The film, starring Wang Baoqiang, is about the struggles of a film extra. It’s considered to be a semiautobi­ographical story about Chow’s own experience­s.

Chow says he selected Wang because the actor’s rocky path also resembles that of the film’s protagonis­t.

“We’ve both worked as extras,” Chow says.

“So, we understand each other better. Wang told me when we met about his tough times early on. They reminded me of my own past and inspired my film.”

Chow sires nostalgia among people on the Chinese mainland who were born in the 1970s and ’80s.

But the film market is dominated by people in their 20s, who particular­ly enjoy comedies.

Ning Hao’s Crazy Alien currently tops the presales box-office charts for the 2019 Spring Festival’s first day, grossing 29.3 million yuan ($4.4 million), box-office tracker Maoyan’s figures show. It’s tightly followed by Han Han’s comedy, Pegasus, at 28.8 million yuan. The New King of Comedy is in the third slot at around 18 million yuan.

Crazy Alien — the third installmen­t of Ning’s Crazy dark-comedy franchise — is a sci-fi film about two friends drawn into a series of adventures after they encounter an extraterre­strial being.

Han is perhaps the most-successful writer-turned-director in recent years on the mainland.

He uses a familiar formula in his new film, which focuses on Zhang Chi — a former race car driver, who runs an open-air fried-rice street stall — who aspires to restore his lost glory by returning to racing. But, ironically, he must get a driver’s license first.

Both films star Shen Teng, who will also make a cameo in the forthcomin­g comedy, Overall

Peppa Pig Bonnie Bears: Blast into the Past.

Peppa Pig is a Sino-UK production that blends live-action sequences of Chinese stars Zhu Yawen and Liu Yun with the animated, anthropomo­rphic piglet siblings, Peppa and George.

Blast into the Past is the sixth film of the Boonie Bears animation franchise. The bear brothers, Briar and Bramble, and the logger, Vick, travel to prehistori­c times and encounter saber-toothed tigers and mammoths.

China Film Critics Associatio­n’s president, Rao Shuguang, points out that audiences have come to consider watching movies in theaters as part of Spring Festival celebratio­ns and he predicts stable growth in the film market this year.

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