38一下 today: China Box Office: ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ Debuts Third as ‘Moments We Shared’ Leads Weekend #Entertainment #China #Beauty #Pretty

2024年7月1日 星期一

China Box Office: ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ Debuts Third as ‘Moments We Shared’ Leads Weekend #Entertainment #China #Beauty #Pretty



China Box Office: 'A Quiet Place: Day One' Debuts Third as 'Moments We Shared' Leads Weekend


(Variety) The question of when the summer box office season is going to kick into high gear remains unanswered in mainland China – just as it had until recently in plenty of other markets.

Over the latest weekend, Chinese-produced feelgood movie "Moments We Shared" headed the box office chart for a second weekend, but with a significantly weaker performance.

It earned $14.1 million (RMB100 million) between Friday and Sunday, according to data from consultancy firm Artisan Gateway. That compared with $19.9 million a week earlier, when it only played for two days, instead of the usual three. After nine days in cinemas, it has a cumulative of $50.6 million.

The weekend's highest opener was "Customs Frontline," a clumsy action-thriller from Hong Kong's Herman Yau and starring Nicholas Tse and martial arts ace Brahim Chab (aka Brahim Achabbakhe). It earned $10.4 million in its opening three days.

"A Quiet Place: Day One" was a close third. It earned $10.1 million.

Released a week earlier, "Inside Out 2" dropped only 15% week-on-week, but slipped from second place to fourth. After ten days in Chinese cinemas, it has a running total of $24.4 million.

"Life Hotel," a comedy-drama from the Huayi Brothers stable, opened in fifth place with $2.5 million. It charts the surprising course taken by a former street thug after his release from jail. Including previews, the film had a cumulative of $6.5 million at the end of Sunday.

The nationwide weekend box office was worth an aggregate $51.6 million, a fraction ahead of the previous session's $49 million haul, but lacking the expected summer punch.

China's box office, which a few months ago was continuing to show year-on-year growth, is now 9% behind that of 2023.

And in the bragging stakes, China has now lost out to the North American (aka 'domestic') market. The year-to-date total in China is $3.37 billion according to Artisan Gateway. At Comscore, the North American running total was reported as $3.61 million through this weekend, though that figure also remains significantly behind the same point in 2023.

Source: Variety by Patrick Frater  Jul 1, 2024 1:43am PT