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BEIJING, Feb. 9 -- Blockbuster movies for Lunar New
Year audiences are a tradition in China, but the box office success of this
season's home-made hits over foreign imports is a sign that the country's
struggling film industry may finally be ready for take-off in its centenary
year.
กกกก
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| Feng Xiaogang's crime caper 'A World
Without Thieves' -- has already raked in estimated takings of more than
100 million yuan (US$12 million). [AFP/file]
| Two festive big-budget comedies -- Steven Chow's "Kung
Fu Hustle" and Feng Xiaogang's crime caper "A World Without Thieves" -- have
already raked in estimated takings of more than 100 million yuan (12 million
dollars) each.
Following on from the success of Zhang Yimou's epic
"House of Flying Daggers", last year's top revenue earner which grossed 153
million yuan (18.5 million US dollars), analysts see a cinema boom in China.
"We are happy to see the success of 'Kung Fu Hustle'
and 'A World Without Thieves'," said Woody Tsung, chief executive of Hong Kong's
Motion Pictures Industry Association.
"The Lunar New Year movie tradition started in Hong
Kong but the mainland is fast catching up. There's no doubt China is a huge
market and this is only the tip of the iceberg," Tsung said.
Chinese cinema takings rose to a total of 1.5 billion
yuan in 2004 from 1.1 billion the previous year, according to the State
Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT).
But analysts stress the numbers are still small for a
country with a population of 1.3 billion and warn the perennial problem of
rampant piracy remains an impediment to the industry's growth.
"With barely 7 million people, Hong Kong's takings
were roughly the same," said Zheng Dongtian, professor at the Institute of
Cinema in Beijing and member of the national censorship body.
Significantly Chinese film receipts exceeded those
from foreign films for the first time since 1994, according to SARFT, while a
record 212 movies were produced in China last year, a huge jump on the 140 made
in 2003.
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| Pedestrians walk past a huge poster
advertising the New Year blockbuster "A World Without Thieves" in Shanghai
in this December 19, 2004 file photo.
[newsphoto] | This was
despite a doubling of the number of foreign movies allowed to be shown in China,
from 10 to 20, with takings split between the foreign distributor and the
Chinese cinema.
Thirty other overseas films annually are permitted to
be bought by Clouded Film Import Export Corporation, which monopolises imports
and pays a lump sum but no box office percentage to the distributor.
Yet only a select few domestic productions, in
particular those made by heavyweights like Zhang, Feng and Hong Kong's king of
comedy Chow, draw large numbers of punters.
"Whether home-made movies will dominate in China it
is still too early to say," said Tsung.
China now has 1,188 cinemas with 2,396 screens,
although that works out at about one screen for every 650,000 people. This
compares with the more than 30,000 cinemas in the United States.
Yet many seats remain empty.
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| Steven Chow speaks to reporters in Shanghai in this
January 19, 2005 file photo. His movie "Kung Fu Hustle" generated a box
office revenue of 155 million yuan. [newsphoto]
| The high price of tickets, which cost as much as 60
yuan (US$7.2) in major cities like Beijing or Shanghai, and rampant piracy, are
blamed for the poor attendances.
In China, DVD versions of the latest films can often
be found on the streets for as little as six yuan.
In the mid-80s, before television, video and DVDs
became widely available and popular, annual takings at cinemas were as much as
two billion yuan, according to Zheng Yang.
With the market ripe for exploitation, many new
cinemas are being built in big cities to take advantage of growing affluence as
China's economy expands at a blistering pace.
Most recently, Warner Brothers this week signed an
agreement with a Chinese company to open five new cinemas in Shenzhen, Nanchang,
Changsha, Zhengzhou and Chongqing, with the first one to open in May.
The American movie giant will hold a controlling 51
percent stake in the cinemas while the state-owned Shenzhen International Trust
Investment Corp will hold the rest.
Rules under which China joined the World Trade
Organisation now allow foreign investors to hold up to 75 percent in cinemas.
In rural areas, where incomes are lower, the rush to
build cinemas is not yet on. Many picture houses here still belong to the state
and are forced to show a small number of propaganda films as well as
blockbusters,
This is not popular, with few profits to be made from
propaganda.
"Distributors and cinema owners do not want to make
efforts to promote films that are more difficult to sell," said Zheng Dongtian.
"Distributors are focussing on coastal cities where
people have higher earnings," said the industry association's Tsung. "Only when
the economic benefit can be broadened to inland cities and provinces will we see
China's full potential."
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)
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