China’s Christmas Eve box office plunges to 13-year low

By Sophie Yu and Brenda Goh

BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s box office revenues for Christmas Eve plummeted to the lowest in at least 13 years, data from ticket booking platform Maoyan showed on Wednesday.

Zhang Yiwu, a literature professor at Peking University, attributed the decline to a confluence of factors, including an unimpressive selection of films and the rise of streaming services.

“The leading reason in my view is a lack of blockbuster films,” Zhang said.

Takings for Tuesday were 38.4 million yuan ($5.26 million), less than a quarter of last year’s 170.5 million yuan, and the lowest since Maoyan began keeping records in 2011, when revenues were 115.9 million yuan.

Christmas Eve is not a public holiday in China and the big dates on cinema schedules are the week-long Spring Festival next month and National Day holiday in October, but Christmas Eve sales are closely watched because this is the last sprint at the end of the year.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A person walks past movie posters at the Capital Cinema in Beijing, China February 21, 2024. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, China’s annual film box office was on an upward trajectory, peaking in 2019. However, the pandemic’s restrictions on gatherings led to a decline in box office, and the recovery has been weaker than insiders’ hopes in the past two years.

($1 = 7.2989 Chinese yuan renminbi)

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