Los Angeles Times

Chinese films continue reign during holiday week

- By Yanan Wang Wang is a special correspond­ent.

BEIJING — Moviegoers in China celebrated last week’s National Day with homegrown production­s as Chinese films dominated the box office.

“Operation Mekong,” an action thriller about the 2011 Mekong River massacre, topped the chart with $77 million during the national weeklong holiday, according to the film industry consulting firm Artisan Gateway.

Produced by the Beijingbas­ed Bona Film Group, the movie follows an investigat­ion into how crystal methamphet­amine pills ended up on the ships of murdered Chinese sailors.

A romantic comedy following the lives of two radio DJs, “I Belonged to You,” grossed $51.7 million, sliding to the No. 2 spot after a winning opening weekend. The film was produced by Beijing Enlight Pictures and based on short stories by popular Chinese writer Zhang Jiajia.

In the third spot, “L.O.R.D.: Legend of Ravaging Dynasties,” a stop-motion CGI film, garnered $24.2 million at the box office. In fourth place, the Hong Kong action comedy “Mission Milano” grossed $18 million.

“The Wild Life” (released in the U.S. as “Robinson Crusoe”) was the sole non-Chinese movie that made the top five, coming in at $6 million after its Oct. 4 release. The animated adventure-comedy produced by Belgium’s NWave Pictures loosely recounts the castaway’s tale from the perspectiv­e of animals on the island.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States