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China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business

Tougher government censorship has blocked potential hits and forced filmmakers to stick to formulas that aren’t winning audiences.

China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business
A worker pauses by cinema posters advertising Chinese and English language films in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Niva Whyman/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- As trade tariffs and tweets by President Donald Trump hammer some of China’s biggest companies, the country’s movie business is taking a hit -- from its own government.

Tougher government censorship has blocked potential hits and compelled filmmakers to stick with safe formulas that aren’t winning audiences, while a tax evasion crackdown has made some investors reluctant to back films, crimping output even further.

In the year after Chinese President Xi Jinping put the Communist Party’s propaganda office in charge of regulating films, China’s box-office totals are headed for their first annual decline in at least a decade. Further hurting the industry, potential summer hits that might have come to the rescue have been canceled, with no explanation.

China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business

The chill has spread to some of China’s most globally recognized filmmakers, bankable names that cinema operators have relied on for hits.

In February, director Zhang Yimou’s “One Second” was withdrawn from the Berlin Film Festival and has since been subject to a series of government-ordered re-cuts, the Hollywood Reporter reported last month. Three of Zhang’s films were nominated for Academy Awards. He won top honors in Berlin for “Red Sorghum” and directed China box-office hits including “Hero” and “House of Flying Daggers.”

China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business

Another prospective summer winner, Guan Hu’s “The Eight Hundred,” was withdrawn before a planned July 5 premiere. The film was anticipated to be a crowd-puller and a critical success that could help restore momentum for local fare.

“‘The Eight Hundred’ was going to be a big film,” said TJ Green, chief executive officer of Apex International Cinemas, which builds and runs cinemas through a strategic alliance with the state-owned China Film Group. “It’s definitely a disappointment and this summer’s revenues have definitely been affected.”

Steep Drop

Amid the dearth of hits, China’s box-office sales fell 3.6% in the first half of this year, led by declines for films debuting outside the February Chinese New Year and this year’s May 1-4 Labor Day holiday, according to data from Maoyan Movie and Box Office Mojo.

Only 68 movies are scheduled to launch between July and August in China, down from 77 in the same period last year, according to Maoyan, signaling that a summer recovery may be elusive.

Shares of Wanda Film Holding Co. and China Film Co. have tumbled about 30% since mid-April on mainland stock exchanges. Huayi Brothers Media Corp. has slumped more than 20%.

With the U.S.-China trade tensions in the backdrop, the department overseeing films in China is widening the window for overseas pictures as a way to help cinema owners fill seats.

China’s cinema market is the world’s second-largest and one of the most heavily regulated. Prime movie-going periods like big national holidays and summer are usually reserved for local fare. But when attendance dips, regulators tend to approve Hollywood blockbusters even in these periods to help cinema owners pull in viewers.

China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business

For instance, “Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw,” a spinoff of a Universal Pictures’ car-chase franchise that has been a huge hit in China, has been approved for summer release.

“Usually it’s a blackout for foreign films in summer, but they realized we need it,” Green said.

As for the July 5 release that had been planned for “The Eight Hundred,” a film called “The White Storm 2: Drug Lords” has been bumped up to that date from the previously planned July 19 release.

Every film must be cleared by the government to appear in China and an informal cap has been imposed of about 34 foreign films a year on a revenue-sharing basis. Studios have lobbied China to raise that number and to sweeten the revenue-sharing arrangement under which they take in about 25% of box-office sales, significantly less than in North America and other markets.

At the same time, this makes foreign blockbusters especially attractive as a way to boost cinema revenue in China.

Local Revival?

The summer-season approval for Hobbs & Shaw also suggests that the success of local blockbusters and comedies in 2017 and 2018 have failed to sustain a trend away from Hollywood fare to fill seats. A Chinese science-fiction hit “The Wandering Earth,” is still 2019’s best-selling film with about $691 million, though it was followed closely by the Walt Disney Co.-owned Marvel’s “Avengers: Endgame” at $614 million, Box Office Mojo data show. In the previous year, the top four films were all Chinese, led by action film “Operation Red Sea” and the comedy “Detective Chinatown 2.”

China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business

A drop in Chinese film production over the past year was the biggest contributor to the box-office decline, said Lindsay Conner, a partner at Manatt, Phelps & Phillips LLP’s entertainment consultancy. “This was largely due to the tax issues that faced a number of Chinese companies and talent over the past year, and financial limitations on production capacity that resulted,” Conner said.

China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business

Chinese authorities cracked down on tax evasion last year, a sweep that led Fan Bingbing, one of China’s best-known actors, to fall out of public view for months. She re-emerged with an apology published on social media and an agreement to repay more than $100 million in tax and penalties. The scandal, and the government’s limits on pay for performers, spooked investors and slowed production at studios that had been spooling out films to meet demand that more than quintupled since 2010 to 56.6 billion yuan ($8.2 billion) last year.

The decline erodes China’s status as a growth engine for Hollywood movies as U.S. film fans are increasingly watching online rather than at the cinema. That, and a dearth of hits this year, has led U.S. studios to rely on China’s box-office to pick up the slack even more.

China Is Stifling Its Own Movie Business

Still, some industry insiders are optimistic. Green of Apex, for example, said he was looking to increase investment in building and operating cinemas in the country, adding that cinema acquisitions were of particular interest. In the long run, demand will drive growth, he said.

Ying Zhu, author of “Two Billion Eyes: The Story of China Central Television” and a professor at City University of New York, said China’s cinema market will rebound, though tax-evasion scandals, censorship and trade tension with the U.S. have created a “capital winter,” winnowing investment.

Projections for China’s ticket revenue to overtake the U.S. as the world’s largest next year are also fading, even though China has already surpassed the U.S. in number of screens.

“The summer season will trail last year quite a bit,” said Tommie Curran, executive producer at Bricklayer Productions and former director of production at Wanda Studios Qingdao.

Censorship isn’t only leading to a decline in Chinese films that are approved, it’s prompting filmmakers to rely heavily on formula-driven movies that may lack appeal, Curran said. The year will probably end flat or a “small percentage” down from 2018.

“A case of too-much-of-the-same isn’t encouraging current cinema-goers,” Curran said. “That won’t draw in a new audience.”

--With assistance from Lucas Shaw.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sheryl Tian Tong Lee in Hong Kong at slee1905@bloomberg.net;Jinshan Hong in Hong Kong at jhong214@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sam Nagarajan at samnagarajan@bloomberg.net, Dave McCombs, Jodi Schneider

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.