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Chinese cinema toasts to 100 years
29/12/2005 10:37

In the so-called Chinese Blockbuster Age, the country's film industry has plenty of reasons to toast to its 100 years of moviemaking.
Looking into the crystal glass ball, pundits are watching the signs and predicting a promising future despite the hurdles that remain.
"With 100 years behind it, the Chinese film industry is regaining its self-confidence despite setbacks and difficulties of all kinds," said Beijing-based film historian Sun Jianshan. "Looking at its history gives us both good lessons and enough reasons to predict a brighter future for the Chinese film industry."
Chinese cinema is not holding back when it comes to marking its achievements.
As Chinese audiences fill theatres to watch the much-hyped epic "The Promise" (Wuji) and Shanghai romance "Perhaps Love" (Ruguo Ai), a string of lavish celebrations are also being staged for the centenary of Chinese cinema art.
Early this month, a five-day international seminar on 100 years of Chinese film was held in Beijing and attended by about 200 film scholars from around 60 countries and regions.
On December 22, a stone tablet with golden characters was erected at the Daguanlou Movie Theatre, once called Fengtai Photo Shop some 100 years ago, in southern Beijing to indicate the very birthplace of Chinese film art in 1905. Yesterday, Chinese leaders attended a celebration at the Great Hall of the People to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Chinese cinema art and the local film industry.
This morning, the China Film Museum, said to be the largest in Asia, opens to the public in northeast Beijing.
What's more, between December 25 and March 31, 2006, 100 selected Chinese films produced during the last century are being screened in cinemas across the country to mark the anniversary.
Phenomenal figures
It is an exciting time for Chinese film-makers and for Chinese film viewers.
"The year 2005 marks a third consecutive year of harvest for the Chinese film industry, a decent gift for the centenary of Chinese film," said State Film Bureau Chief Tong Gang, at a news briefing last weekend in Beijing.
Partly due to the enactment of a series of favourable film policies encouraging the inflow of foreign and private money into the film business in the autumn of 2004, the Chinese mainland has churned out 260 feature films in 2005, an increase of 48 over the last year.
Excluding those made by Hong Kong and Taiwan since the founding of New China in 1949, China has turned out a total of 26,300 films since 1905 when the country's first movie was shot and screened, including more than 7,200 features, about 650 cartoons and animations, more than 12,400 news documentaries, about 4,800 science and educational ones, and more than 700 made-for-TV flicks.
On the international front, Chinese home-made films have won 32 international awards, one of the indications of a booming Chinese film industry, Tong said.
A total of 18 homegrown films won 32 international awards in 24 international film festivals in 2005. Meanwhile, at least 26 SARFT-authorized overseas Chinese film exhibitions were held in 2005, with 215 Chinese-made films displayed in 22 countries and regions, he said.
A recent Xinhua report described: "Facing fierce commercial onslaught from Hollywood, the Chinese movie industry advances carefully and optimistically."
Costumed love epic "Hero" (Yingxiong), directed by Zhang Yimou, reaped 1.45 billion yuan (US$180 million) in box office revenue and 30 million yuan (US$3.75 million) in revenue in film tie-in products, including DVDs, stamps and cartoons distributed worldwide.
A Wall Street Journal article said the film had ushered in a Chinese Blockbuster Age. "Chinese films are participating in the international competition by involving themselves in the international mainstream markets," said Beijing Film Academy professor Huang Shixian.
Since the mid-1980s, the Chinese movie industry has gone through a series of deregulating and liberalizing reforms. "During that time, market prices were consolidated, and the government moved decisively to eliminate restrictions on private ownership," said associate professor Hong Jun-Hao of the Department of Communication at the State University of New York in Buffalo at the film seminar.
"Meanwhile, Hollywood pictures were permitted to be released in China. The industrial structure and market practices created and practised by Hollywood have become the new model for the Chinese movie industry," he said.
In 2004, despite a global market share of 0.9 per cent in box office, the box office revenues in the Chinese mainland hit 1.5 billion yuan (US$183 million), up 60 per cent over the previous year.
And in 2005, domestic box office yields have surpassed 2 billion yuan (US$246.6 million) while overseas box office income has so far scored 1.7 billion yuan (US$209.6 million), and profits from TV showings nationwide scooped up 1.2 billion yuan (US$148 million), totalling 4.8 billion yuan (US$592 million) 1.2 billion yuan (US$148 million) more than that in 2004, said Tong Gang. Tong added that new media such as the Internet screening, mobile phone screening, online games, and digital movie theatres have opened a new gate of fortune for Chinese film-makers.
In 2005, a total of 55 cinemas were constructed with 272 new screens, adding to the existing 2,668 screens in 1,243 cinemas; and the number of film screens is expected to grow rapidly next year as more and more private and foreign investments are pouring into this newfound profitable industry, observers said.
For instance, on December 26, Warner Brothers unveiled its plan to build digital cinemas in the Chinese capital next June, following its ventures in other major Chinese cities such as Shanghai, Dalian, Nanjing and Tianjin over the past three years.
As China gave free rein to overseas investors in its digital cinema sector in July this year, Warner Brothers accelerated its steps to open more digital cinemas in China.
Under the new plan, the US film giant plans to increase its digital projection halls in China to 170 by the end of 2007. All these new developments are indicating a hard-earned rejuvenation of the country's film industry, critics said.

(Source: China Daily)


A century-long journey for Chinese film

The Chinese film industry has experienced a long and tumultuous century.
In 1905, "Mt Dingjunshan" was believed to be the first-ever homegrown Chinese movie that combined an imported film technology and media genre with Peking Opera, a quintessential Chinese art.
The movie was shot by Ren Qingtai (1850-1932), owner of Beijing Fengtai Photo Shop.
However, in its early years, the Chinese film industry did not prosper in Beijing but in East China's Shanghai, then the most international Chinese city and also a cradle for Chinese films.
In the 1930s, the Chinese film industry saw its first boom and many films produced by local companies even beat imported Hollywood flicks in box office revenues.
For quite a long period of time after the founding of New China, the Chinese film industry was solely invested by public funds, and there once existed at least 30 provincial and regional State-owned film studios, with the three biggest ones being Beijing Film Studio, Changchun Film Studio and Shanghai Film Studio.
During the first few years and early years of the "cultural revolution" (1966-76), the Chinese film industry experienced hard times, producing mainly films instilled with political ideology and aiming to educate and instruct rather than to entertain the audiences.
Between the late 1970s and early 1980s, with China left behind after more than a decade of political turmoil, the Chinese film industry enjoyed a short-lived prosperity, attracting a record 29.3 billion moviegoers within less than a decade.
However, in the few years since the mid-1990s, the Chinese film industry, lagging behind other sectors that were undergoing dramatic reforms, suffered a lot in the local market, with the number of moviegoers reportedly dropping to less than 220 million in 2001.
The reforms and opening up in the Chinese film sector, in the real sense, kicked off in 1993 when most State-owned film studios were forced to earn their living in the free market instead of receiving funds from central and local governments.
From then on, "commercial film," "profitability" and "marketability" have become part of the daily mantra of more and more Chinese film-makers.
Since 1994, more and more big-budget Hollywood blockbusters have been introduced to the Chinese mainland market.
Between the late 1990s and 2003, Hollywood films took in at least 60 per cent in box office income, followed by Hong Kong films accounting for 30 per cent and mainland films making up merely 10 per cent in the local markets.
Though posing a big threat to local film studios and companies, the introduction of competitive Hollywood movies did help inject a shot in the arm to the Chinese film industry as the Chinese Government began taking steps to "revitalize" the local film sector, allowing larger and larger access of private money into the fledgling "cultural business."
In 2004, a total of 212 feature films were produced by local film studios but only 40 were shown in movie theatres across the country, while most films were relegated to the DVD market and China Central Television's Film channel and cable TV channels nationwide. Among the 40 "lucky ones," only about one-fourth reportedly made profit.
But it was in 2004 that for the second time in Chinese movie history, Chinese movies beat Hollywood blockbusters in box office takings.
Zhang Yimou's "House of Flying Daggers" (Shimian Maifu), Stephen Chow's "Kung Fu Hustle" (Gongfu) and Feng Xiaogang's "A World without Thieves" (Tianxia Wuzei) all reportedly scored at least 100 million yuan (US$12 million) each in box office in local markets while Hollywood blockbuster "Lord of the Rings 3" raked in only 86 million yuan (US$10.6 million) in Chinese mainland markets.
In 2005, a total of 260 feature films have been produced, a record high in the whole Chinese film-making history.

(Source: China Daily)