BEIJING, June 9 -- Movie theatres across the country
will stop screening "The Da Vinci Code" from today, three weeks after its
general release.
The withdrawal is to make way for domestic movies,
Weng Li, spokesman for China Film Corporation, one of the two co-distributors of
the Hollywood blockbuster on the Chinese mainland told China Daily Thursday.
The decision was made in response to calls for
promotion of domestic movies by the Chinese Movie Distributors' Association, the
Chinese Movie Producers' Association and the Chinese Urban Movie Theatres
Association last month, he said.
"We are not against foreign films," the spokesman
noted. "My company will continue to arrange their screenings in China according
to market demand."
A gatekeeper at the Cineplex in Beijing's upscale
Oriental Plaza said: "It is surprising news. The movie has drawn the largest
number of viewers in the year."
Having made 104 million yuan (US$13 million) since
its release on May 19, it was well on its way to becoming one of the
highest-ever grossing foreign films.
It has been reported that its box office proceeds
were approaching that of "Pearl Harbor," which made 105 million yuan (US$13.1
million) as the No 2 foreign film in Chinese box office history.
"Titanic" is first, raking in 359 million yuan (US$45
million).
Before the movie was released in China, the Chinese
Catholic church issued a notice to followers nationwide asking them to "firmly
boycott" it, accusing the movie of going against, and distorting, the tenets and
history of the Catholic church.
"The contents of both the movie and the novel are
totally fictional," said the notice. (Source: China Daily)
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