Los Angeles Times

‘Last Jedi’ falls short against local rom-com

- By Gaochao Zhang Zhang is a special correspond­ent.

BEIJING — “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” failed to conquer the world’s secondlarg­est box office last weekend, despite heavy promotion in China and broader success worldwide.

Not even a red-carpet premiere at the Shanghai Disney Resort and marketing partnershi­ps with Pepsi, Alibaba and Samsung could avert a disappoint­ing $28.6million debut for the latest “Star Wars” film, according to film consulting firm Artisan Gateway. The movie fell a distant second to a local romantic comedy.

One reason for the tepid interest is that Chinese moviegoers haven’t grown up with Luke Skywalker and his father. When “The Force Awakens” premiered in China in 2015, many fans didn’t understand the back story. This time, Disney tried to fill people in with written introducti­ons to each character.

But the film was no match for the lightheart­ed “The Ex-File 3: The Return of The Exes,” which topped the box office with $154.8 million. The film about relationsh­ips has generated more than $200 million at the box office in 10 days, making it the 11th-highest-grossing local film in China.

Feng Xiaogang’s period epic “Youth” finally lost some steam, although it took in an additional $26.2 million to gross $208.9 million in nearly a month.

Hong Kong actress Sandra Ng’s directoria­l debut, “Goldbuster,” a horror-comedy, pulled in $15.4 million to bring its 10-day total to $54.1 million.

Chinese fantasy comedy “Hanson and the Beast,” starring Disney’s new “Mulan” actress, Liu Yifei, garnered $14.9 million for a 10day total of $41 million.

 ?? Chandan Khanna AFP/Getty Images ?? PRODUCER Ram Bergman, left, director Rian Johnson and actors Daisy Ridley and Mark Hamill.
Chandan Khanna AFP/Getty Images PRODUCER Ram Bergman, left, director Rian Johnson and actors Daisy Ridley and Mark Hamill.

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