BEIJING (AP) — The thrills and chills of the big screen are back big-time in the world’s largest film market.
With coronavirus well under control in China and cinemas running at half capacity, moviegoers are smashing China’s box office records, setting a new high mark for ticket sales in February, with domestic productions far outpacing their Hollywood competitors.
February marked China’s all-time biggest month for movie ticket sales, which have so far totaled 11.2 billion yuan ($1.73 billion). China overtook the U.S. as the world’s biggest market for movie ticket sales last year as the American box office took a massive hit from the closure of cinemas because of the coronavirus pandemic.
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Chinese theaters were able to reopen by midyear and have seen steady audience growth since then. Local movies have also benefited from periodic unofficial “blackout” periods, when only domestic productions are allowed to be screened. A dearth of major Hollywood blockbusters over recent months appears to have also boosted the market for Chinese films.
“People were encouraged to stay in Beijing for the Lunar New Year, and so watching movies in the cinema became the top choice of entertainment,” said Chu Donglei, marketing manager at Poly Cinema’s Tiananmen branch in central Beijing.
Mask-wearing is mandatory and moviegoers must register with a mobile phone app so they can be traced in the event of an outbreak. Only every other seat was allowed to be occupied, making it even harder to obtain tickets for the most popular films.
According to the China Movie Data Information Network, 95% of ticket sales came from the seven top-grossing films timed for release around the Lunar New Year festival, which began this year on Feb. 12.
“Hi, Mom,” a time-traveling comedy written, directed and starring Jia Ling, was the top earner with 4.36 billion yuan, followed by action comedy “Detective Chinatown 3,” with 4.13 billion yuan.
Wang Xiaoyu, 32, who works in the film industry, was only able to procure a ticket for “Hi, Mom” on Thursday and called the viewing experience “deeply moving.”
“I know there are some movies that are released and streamed online. But I think the experience of watching movies online is not as good as that of watching in a cinema. I prefer going to the cinema to watch movies. The experience is different,” Wang said.
A lack of entertainment options had helped pump up ticket sales during the pandemic, foretelling a bright future for the Chinese film industry, Wang said.
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College student Zhang Jiazhi, 21, said the live movie theater experience was a welcome break from staying at home watching videos. Successful online film promotion had also helped attract many viewers to brick-and-mortar cinemas, Zhang said.
“I’m bored, and you can’t stay at home watching (streaming service) Douyin all the time, so I came to the cinema to watch a movie. There’s nothing to do,” said Zhang, who is on winter break and came to the cinema to see “A Writer’s Odyssey,” a Chinese fantasy film which he said he didn’t quite understand.
China became the world’s biggest box office last year, selling an estimated $2.7 billion in tickets compared to $2.3 billion in the U.S., which saw an 80% drop in ticket sales. “The Eight Hundred,” an action drama glorifying China’s resistance to Japanese invaders in 1930s Shanghai, was the world’s biggest hit, making $461.3 million at the box office, most of it within China.
China’s theaters also closed for a time during the height of COVID-19 in the country last spring, but gradually reopened over the summer. As of Friday, China has gone 11 days without reporting a single new case of local transmission of the virus.
Since the outbreak was first detected in the central city of Wuhan in late 2019, China has reported a total of 89,877 cases of COVID-19 with 4,636 deaths.
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Associated Press news assistant Caroline Chen contributed to this report.
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