BEIJING, Feb. 27 (Xinhua) -- Chinese experts warned
on Tuesday that Chinese "super blockbusters" -- heavily-invested home-made
movies -- are facing crisis after their rosy market debut.
Chinese film producers and Hollywood ended in a tie at Chinese cinemas in 2006, with Zhang Yimou's "Curse of the
Golden Flower" and Feng Xiaogang's "The Banquet" leading the way among the top
10.
Yin Hong, professor with the media college of the
Tsinghua University, said domestic movies took up half of the box office at
Chinese cinemas last year due to the good performance of Zhang and Feng's movies
at the box office.
Yin dubbed the two movies "super blockbusters"
because they were highly publicized and heavily invested that "even someone who
did not like cinemas was tempted to have a look at it".
"However, the domestic audience begin to feel
disappointed after the big fanfare around their market debut and people don't
think they are as good as what they preached," said Yin at a press conference
held by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Meanwhile both of the movies were not well-received
at the overseas market, let alone reach the Oscars, he said, adding blockbusters
often greatly depend on their performance overseas.
"The Curse" had earned 250 million yuan (31.25
million U.S dollars) by the start of January while "The Banquet" pulled in 130
million yuan (16.25 million U.S. dollars) during its run.
The production of "the Curse", a story of bloody
palace intrigue in ancient China, cost 360 million yuan (45 million U.S.
dollars). Up to now, the movie has not made ends meet.
"Some domestic blockbusters cannot reflect any of
China's culture and tradition. Instead, they put more emphasis on visual
pleasure and take more resemblance to Hollywood movies," said Huang Shixian,
professor with the Beijing Film Academy.
Those movies surely cannot attract overseas audience
who expect to see more Chinese element in Chinese movies, said Huang, adding
"Chinese movie" should be a well-known brand featuring strong oriental flavors.
"Fine art was not built on money. Extravagant and
lavish scenes do not make a good movie," a Party school magazine article earlier
pointed out.
Chinese director Jia Zhangke, who won the Golden Lion
for Best Film at the Venice Film Festival with his "Still Life", has warned the
fixation with big budget blockbusters could erode creativity in China's film
industry.
Jia said he hoped more Chinese films would portray
the lives of common people, rather than being just commercial extravaganzas.
He denied he was against making commercially-oriented
films, but he objected to the "money worship" attitude in producing
blockbusters.
"The model for those commercial films is to gain huge
profits by pinning hopes on big investments, which will remove creativity and
imagination from Chinese films," said Jia.
"Chinese movie industry should readjust its
development path in 2007. The first and foremost subject is to cultivate a
movie-watching habit among Chinese," said Yin.