SHANGHAI, June 20 (Xinhua) -- Western film
producers and investors are eyeing co-production with their Chinese peers to
explore huge business opportunities.
This comes after Hollywood movies are no longer big
hits in the world's most populous country where China-made films have been
rising from obscurity.
Dan Glickman, chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture
Association of America, told Xinhua Wednesday in Shanghai that he hoped that
more U.S. film companies would come to invest in and shoot movies in China.
"It is Chinese film resource that attracts me,
especially the stories," Toby Simkin, a Broadway producer, said Wednesday at the
12th Shanghai International Film Festival that ends on June 21.
Chinese film market saw robust growth last year even
in the economic downturn, lifting its box office into the world's top ten for
the first time.
Its overall box office reached 4.3 billion yuan
(628.9 million U.S. dollars) in 2008, up 25 percent from a year earlier,
according to the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT).
During the period, home-made movies contributed to 69
percent of the box office and they outperformed imported ones for the sixth
consecutive year.
"Nowadays people are eager to watch homemade and
Chinese-language movies," Han Sanping, chairman of China Film Group Corporation,
told reporters.
"U.S. films have seen their box office fall in China
over the past six years, and fewer of them could earn 100 million yuan in box
office returns each," Han said.
Chinese films, however, saw a rising box office in
the period, he said, adding that eight China-made movies had box office of more
than 100 million yuan each.
Han predicted that China's total box office would
jump to 30 billion yuan to 35 billion yuan in 10 years.
The mainland and Hong Kong have seen co-production
yield fruitful results. And now the cooperation is expanding, even with policy
support from the Chinese authorities.
Tong Gang, director of the SARFT's film bureau, said
the co-produced movies are the key to the success of Chinese film industry.
But there are also worries that co-production will
help U.S. film companies gain a dominant position in China.
Gordon Chan, chairman of Hong Kong Film Awards, said
that the Chinese film industry should be wary of losing home market to the U.S.
film industry in five years to 10 years.
There, however, are supporters of such cooperation.
"We do not need capital, but need market. That is why
we co-produce movies," Wang Zhongjun, CEO and chairman of Huayi Brothers, told
reporters.
Huayi Brothers has made investment in 'Forbidden
Kingdom', a 2008 American martial arts-adventure film starring Jackie Chan and
Jet Li. It was the first Chinese film company to invest in a Hollywood movie and
gained film distribution rights in the greater China region.
The film soared to the top spot in its debut week in
the United States and broke the box office record by overseas films with 128
million U.S. dollars.
"It's a win-win deal," Wang said.
Co-production may offer a good way for Chinese
culture to meet foreign audience by presenting famous Chinese figures,
counterparts of Superman and Terminator in Hollywood movies.
Julian Alcantara, an American producer, showed his
optimism toward Chinese films going outside.
"Co-production is definitely not the only way for
Chinese films to go outside," he told Xinhua. "It's China who decides to make
movies to whom."