China's movie box office revenue is expected to grow
in 2017 at more than three times the pace of last year thanks to the success of
blockbusters like "Wolf Warrior 2", the media regulator said on
Friday.
Takings would rise 11.6 percent to 55 billion yuan
($8.31 billion) this year, beating 2016 growth of 3.7 percent, said Zhang
Hongsen, vice minister of the State Administration of Press, Publication,
Radio, Film, and Television.
"The rapid development of the film industry has
been a big bright spot for China's culture industry," Zhang told a press
conference in Beijing.
The Chinese Communist Party is supporting
Hollywood-style films that portray China as the rejuvenated great power
described in this week's speech by President Xi Jinping to the Party Congress.
"Wolf Warrior 2", a patriotic action movie
that has raked in 5.6 billion yuan ($845.59 million) to become China’s
highest-grossing film, depicts a Chinese hero fighting Western mercenaries in a
war-torn African country.
While privately financed, the film has received
strong support from state organisations, and China's film regulators have
submitted it in the foreign-language category at the 2018 Oscars.
Sun Zhijun, deputy director of the Publicity
Department of the Communist Party Central Committee, said films should have
social and "educational" benefits, not just make money.
"We cannot take market share, distribution
figures, box office and audience ratings as the sole standard. We cannot be the
slave of the market and led by the nose," he said at the same press
conference.
After disappointing box office growth in 2016,
regulators announced that all sales grosses would include service fees for each
ticket purchased online. This has boosted this year's growth, although
moviemakers see little of the additional revenue.
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