China starts Lunar New Year with record box office receipts

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China shot straight out of the box office gate with a new record as Spring Festival or Chinese Lunar New year was celebrated on Friday.

China's box office takings on Spring Festival, which fell on Feb. 12 this year, topped 1.7 billion yuan (about 264 million U.S. dollars), according to figures released by the China Film Administration.

The figure surpassed the 1.4 billion yuan generated on Spring Festival two years ago, achieving a new Chinese daily box office milestone.

The weeklong Spring Festival holiday, usually a busy moviegoing period in China, started on Feb. 11.

As the first such moviegoing period following the COVID-19 outbreak, the holiday is of great importance to China's film industry and will be seen as a further mark of recovery in the box office market, one of the world's largest.

"Detective Chinatown 3" led China's box office on Spring Festival, raking in 1 billion yuan.

The latest installment in Wanda Pictures' well-received "Detective Chinatown" comedy film franchise, joining six other domestic titles for release on Friday, accounted for about 60 percent of the market's total earnings for the day.

A sequel to the 2018 comedy hit "Detective Chinatown 2," which generated nearly 3.4 billion yuan at China's box office, "Detective Chinatown 3" was originally set to be released during the same holiday a year ago but was postponed due to COVID-19.

With its total earnings exceeding 1.6 billion yuan as of Saturday, "Detective Chinatown 3" has been forecast by film data platform Maoyan to top 6 billion yuan at China's box office.

The film's director, Chen Sicheng, told Xinhua that the "Detective Chinatown" franchise has the ambition to become an indigenous Chinese detective film series, attributing its market success so far to audiences' support for domestic productions.

The other six films that opened on the same day are heartwarming comedy "Hi, Mom," fantasy thriller "A Writer's Odyssey," mobile game turned fantasy film "The Yinyang Master," comedy-drama "Endgame," animated fantasy "New Gods: Nezha Reborn," and "Boonie Bears: The Wild Life," which is the latest installment in the domestic animated comedy franchise.

"Hi, Mom" took the second place on Friday's box office chart, grossing 289 million yuan and contributed about 17 percent to the total takings.

Fantasy thriller "A Writer's Odyssey" ranked third, generating a revenue of about 136 million yuan or 8 percent of the market's daily total. It was followed by "The Yinyang Master" and "Boonie Bears: The Wild Life."

While moviegoing is increasingly becoming part of the Chinese people's Spring Festival celebrations, regular epidemic control measures, including temperature checking and disinfection, have been in place in cinemas.

Many people found it difficult to buy a movie ticket in their cities during the holiday as cinemas were fully booked for many of the timing slots.

"Never have movie theaters been such a hit in a Spring Festival holiday," said Chen Ke, a young Beijinger in the city's Chaoyang District.

China's box office continues to see robust growth in 2021 after record-high earnings on New Year's Day. The total box office revenue so far in 2021 has exceeded 6.5 billion yuan. 

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