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    Film,Industry,Regains,Vitality,as,Production,Resumes

    时间:2020-10-13 04:00:59 来源:达达文档网 本文已影响 达达文档网手机站

    It was a sweltering morning in early September when the production crew of a crime movie started filming their first scene at a convenience store in Xiamen, Fujian Province in southeast China.

    The crew was one of the many production houses that have resumed work in Xiamen since the coastal city recommenced film and television shooting in April. About 20 crews have started fi lming and over 10 others were in preproduction in the fi rst half of this year, according to local authorities.

    Filming in other parts of China has resumed as well. Statistics showed that 48 crews have already begun filming, and 63 others have been preparing to resume shooting in “Chinese Hollywood” Hengdian World Studio in Zhejiang Province in east China since July, a 16-percent increase from last year.

    “Too many projects were put on hold in the fi rst half-year due to the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, so we might see a retaliatory rebound in the number of busy fi lm crews for the remainder of the year,” said Xue Qiaofeng, Vice General Manager of Xiamen Service Center for Film and TV Industry.

    Although heavily battered by the COVID-19 outbreak, film investment, production and the box office in China are embracing the dawn of a full recovery as the epidemic has been largely contained in the country.

    Favorable policies, including tax cuts and rent relief at national and provincial levels, have been helping film-related businesses tide over the difficulties amid the epidemic.

    Fujian has allocated 48.17 million yuan($7.03 million) to support its fi lm industry, benefi ting fi lm crews, studios and cinemas.

    Xiamen provides virtual reality-driven online location scouting services for filmmakers. It also offers to cover the costs of nucleic acid testing for fi lm crews working in the city.

    Since cinemas reopened in late July nationwide after a months-long hiatus, rereleased films and newly screened titles have both accelerated the pace of recovery of Chinas box offi ce.

    According to big data provider Endata, Chinas box offi ce in August was more than 3 billion yuan ($442.5 million) while in July it came in at only 192 million yuan ($28.32 million). The box office of the 34th and 35th weeks combined reached 2.3 billion yuan ($339.25 million), up 77 percent over the same period last year.

    Chinese cinemagoers demands are still robust and the box office is expected to perform even better during the upcoming National Day holiday, traditionally one of the peak seasons for box-offi ce sales in China.

    Some highly anticipated domestic productions are slated to hit the screen during the week-long October holiday this year. The much-awaited titles include Leap, a movie based on stories from Chinese womens national volleyball team starring Gong Li, and Legend of Deification, a 3D animated fantasy adventure fi lm.

    The hashtag “Films for this years National Day holiday” has garnered over 46 million views on the Chinese social media platform Weibo with many young users expressing their enthusiasm for the coming blockbusters.

    “I sincerely miss the days when people used to laugh together in the cinema,” a Weibo user wrote. Many others even joked about living in cinemas during the holiday.

    The Eight Hundred, a China-produced World War II epic, has fueled enthusiasm among moviegoers. It raked in 2.5 billion yuan ($368.75 million) in 22 days.

    With rising enthusiasm among movie buffs, Chinas box offi ce is expected to rekindle the entire fi lm industry chain.

    The regained vitality of the box offi ce is alleviating the stress of sluggish return of funds for fi lm investors.

    According to local authorities, in the first half of 2020, 175 film and television companies and 66 fi lming projects landed in Xiamen, generating a total investment of nearly 30 billion yuan ($4.4 billion).

    Some companies have found their own way to strive against the impact of the epidemic.

    Mini TV shows, with less than 10 minutes per episode, have become the new focus for a Xiamen-based company named Dayu Cultural Media.

    “While maintaining a high level of quality, such shorter series require less investment and bear lower risks,” said Chen Senhui, general manager of the company.

    A report by Maoyan Entertainment shows that Chinas online entertainment market, including online TV and film streaming platforms, saw a big surge when movie theaters were shuttered due to COVID-19.

    According to Xue, the industry might see a reshuffl e as many traditional fi lm and television companies were squeezed out of business while many well-performing companies are newcomers.

    相关热词搜索: Regains industry Film

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