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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Weekend -> 
China film quota full for 2015
    2015-11-06  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    “STAR Wars — The Force Awakens,” which opens Dec. 18 in the United States, will have to wait until sometime in 2016 for a release in the world’s second-largest film market, Hollywood Reporter says.

    After being blocked from the Chinese market during the lucrative fall holiday period, Hollywood has a busy — and brutally competitive — November coming up at the Chinese box office.

    China’s gatekeepers have packed six major Hollywood releases into November, reported Shanghai-based Xinmin. Come the peak movie-going season of December, Hollywood titles again get locked out.

    Each year, China allows just 34 non-Chinese films into its booming movie market on a revenue-sharing basis, and the latest slate of coming releases shows that quota is now reached for 2015.

    The most notable missing title from the list is Disney’s “Star Wars Episode VII – The Force Awakens,” which will have to wait well after its North American bow Dec. 18 for a China release sometime in 2016 (IMdB lists Jan. 29 as the films China release date, but Disney has declined to comment).

    As has been all too evident in the past, China’s film scheduling is always subject to change. But it appears the regulators’ usual strategy of scheduling high-profile Hollywood titles head-to-head to diminish foreign dominance on home turf, while giving local films the best release windows, remains fully in effect for the remainder of the year.

    “The Hunger Games: Mockingly — Part 2” was undoubtedly the lucky winner of the Chinese film release sweepstakes, having scored a rare day-and-day debut. Opening Nov. 20 in the United States, China and Japan — the world’s three largest film markets — the Lionsgate film should also get a box-office boost as the first installment in the young-adult franchise to screen in 3-D, which remains the format of choice and a key box office driver in China.

    China watchers and box-office wonks will also be paying close attention to the China bow of “The Martian” on Nov. 25 to see whether the film’s Chinese story elements — which Stephen Colbert recently made light of — resonate with the Chinese masses.(SD-Agencies)

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