"/>
  • <button id="8uwc0"><input id="8uwc0"></input></button>
  • <button id="8uwc0"></button>
    <tfoot id="8uwc0"></tfoot>

    Spotlight: Hollywood exploring market with China's chart-topping metrics

    Source: Xinhua    2018-04-12 03:18:58

    By Julia Pierrepont III

    LOS ANGELES, April 11 (Xinhua) -- On the heels of China's box office coup in the first quarter of 2018, beating out U.S. grosses and catapulting it to the top of the global box office for the first time, Hollywood is exploring how to adapt to the changing landscape of a "world's largest market" that's not its own.

    A recent report by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) revealed that even in the face of mounting trade tensions between the United States and China, whose impact on the entertainment industry is still unclear, the importance of Chinese moviegoers to Hollywood's future is significant.

    "The Chinese film market is going to be the largest film market in short order," said MPAA Chairman, Charles Rivkin, a former U.S. assistant secretary of state.

    With some blockbuster Hollywood pics grossing more in China than in the United States and China grosses playing a bigger role in the success of American releases, "How to get a piece of the burgeoning Chinese market" is a paramount question of the day in the Tinseltown.

    Xian Li, a Hollywood studio executive, believes U.S.-China co-production is a way for indie productions to gain access to China's huge market, but like other American exporters, Hollywood should adapt to the changing market.

    "Hollywood studios are not really deep in the co-pro game. They can't adapt fast enough to a rapidly changing market" Li told Xinhua on Friday. "So it's a tremendous opportunity for smaller production companies to take advantage of the vacuum, develop those key relationships in China and grow with the industry there."

    "China audiences are changing. They are more sophisticated now, and more open to a diversity of movies, not just Hollywood blockbusters, but Indian, European, Thai, Japanese, etc. That increases the pressure on American filmmakers," she said.

    "They aren't just looking for blockbusters anymore, there's room for dramas, films that make you cry, films that satisfy the audience emotionally," she added.

    As one of those smaller companies jockeying for position in China's booming market, Leomark Studios, an Los Angeles-based production and distribution studio, is excited by the opportunities it sees before it.

    "We were just at the Hong Kong Film Festival and it was electric," Erik Lundmark, CEO of Leomark, told Xinhua on Saturday. "We'll definitely attend Beijing and Shanghai film festivals next."

    Both Lunkmark and his writer/producer wife are immigrants to the United States who have worked for years to build their boutique studio from scratch -- but found it rough going.

    "It's very difficult for newer companies to really break into Hollywood, but the China market is buzzing, and we feel there's a real future for us there," said Lundmark.

    But Li cautioned that it's not going to be easy, "finding that magical co-pro that works in both markets can be something of a unicorn."

    A less difficult winning strategy many are adopting is to cast more Chinese stars in Western movies, like Donnie Yen and Jiang Wen in Disney's "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story" or Chris Wu in Europa's "Valarian and the City of One Thousand Planets."

    Legendary Entertainment, now owned by China's Dalian Wanda Group, has adopted this hybrid approach for their popular Pacific Rim franchise, introducing more Chinese actors to the cast, including star Jing Tian. This prompted one ebullient, online fan to rave, "The fighting is great. Jing saved the world in the end. All hail China!"

    But, there may be an easier way to break into the China market.

    "Scripts," Li summed up. "Hollywood invented the film business and China has come an impressively long way in improving their production skills in a very short time, but their scripts aren't quite there yet. China needs Hollywood writers."

    Gavin Scott, writer of the Emmy-Award winning "Mists of Avalon" and veteran Hollywood screenwriter who has penned scripts for the likes of Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, is keen on stepping into the breach.

    He has traveled recently to China where he negotiated with two Chinese production companies to write Chinese feature films for the Chinese and international market. No stranger to mentoring other writers, Scott finds the prospect of collaborating with the Chinese an exciting one.

    "I think it's a great opportunity for writers from two great cultures to come together and collaborate to create the entertainment of the future," he told Xinhua in an interview.

    When asked about the challenges of creating "writer-for-hire" commercial cross-cultural fare, he was undaunted: "Both China and Hollywood have great cultural riches to draw on and if writers can find a way to combine them, the whole world will benefit."

    For Chinese filmmakers intent on learning Hollywood's winning script formulas who prefer a more high tech approach, they could also get a jump on the competition with a little help from cutting-edge AI.

    "We've cracked the code on human interaction and storytelling," said Stephen Greenfield, one of a team of AI software programmers and psychologists who have managed to create an astonishingly robust and nuanced AI program that can provide detailed suggestions for realistic storylines and plot points.

    "As fellow artists, our goal is to help writers improve and evolve their stories."

    Their breakthrough program, The Storytelling Cipher, apparently works so well that the U.S. law enforcement agencies have been using it to model and predict behavior of terrorist groups around the world.

    But Hollywood's future in the China market is likely to hold challenges as well.

    The LA Times reported that Jeff Towson, professor of investment at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management, said Hollywood's success in China is going to increasingly come under assault by rising Chinese competitors.

    "Foreign companies (like Hollywood studios) do well at the top of the market, typically because they start out having superior quality, technology or brand recognition," he said.

    "But over time, the Chinese competitors grow and steadily improve their quality. They reinvest, make acquisitions and begin to attack the top of the market," he predicted.

    Editor: yan
    Related News
    Xinhuanet

    Spotlight: Hollywood exploring market with China's chart-topping metrics

    Source: Xinhua 2018-04-12 03:18:58

    By Julia Pierrepont III

    LOS ANGELES, April 11 (Xinhua) -- On the heels of China's box office coup in the first quarter of 2018, beating out U.S. grosses and catapulting it to the top of the global box office for the first time, Hollywood is exploring how to adapt to the changing landscape of a "world's largest market" that's not its own.

    A recent report by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) revealed that even in the face of mounting trade tensions between the United States and China, whose impact on the entertainment industry is still unclear, the importance of Chinese moviegoers to Hollywood's future is significant.

    "The Chinese film market is going to be the largest film market in short order," said MPAA Chairman, Charles Rivkin, a former U.S. assistant secretary of state.

    With some blockbuster Hollywood pics grossing more in China than in the United States and China grosses playing a bigger role in the success of American releases, "How to get a piece of the burgeoning Chinese market" is a paramount question of the day in the Tinseltown.

    Xian Li, a Hollywood studio executive, believes U.S.-China co-production is a way for indie productions to gain access to China's huge market, but like other American exporters, Hollywood should adapt to the changing market.

    "Hollywood studios are not really deep in the co-pro game. They can't adapt fast enough to a rapidly changing market" Li told Xinhua on Friday. "So it's a tremendous opportunity for smaller production companies to take advantage of the vacuum, develop those key relationships in China and grow with the industry there."

    "China audiences are changing. They are more sophisticated now, and more open to a diversity of movies, not just Hollywood blockbusters, but Indian, European, Thai, Japanese, etc. That increases the pressure on American filmmakers," she said.

    "They aren't just looking for blockbusters anymore, there's room for dramas, films that make you cry, films that satisfy the audience emotionally," she added.

    As one of those smaller companies jockeying for position in China's booming market, Leomark Studios, an Los Angeles-based production and distribution studio, is excited by the opportunities it sees before it.

    "We were just at the Hong Kong Film Festival and it was electric," Erik Lundmark, CEO of Leomark, told Xinhua on Saturday. "We'll definitely attend Beijing and Shanghai film festivals next."

    Both Lunkmark and his writer/producer wife are immigrants to the United States who have worked for years to build their boutique studio from scratch -- but found it rough going.

    "It's very difficult for newer companies to really break into Hollywood, but the China market is buzzing, and we feel there's a real future for us there," said Lundmark.

    But Li cautioned that it's not going to be easy, "finding that magical co-pro that works in both markets can be something of a unicorn."

    A less difficult winning strategy many are adopting is to cast more Chinese stars in Western movies, like Donnie Yen and Jiang Wen in Disney's "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story" or Chris Wu in Europa's "Valarian and the City of One Thousand Planets."

    Legendary Entertainment, now owned by China's Dalian Wanda Group, has adopted this hybrid approach for their popular Pacific Rim franchise, introducing more Chinese actors to the cast, including star Jing Tian. This prompted one ebullient, online fan to rave, "The fighting is great. Jing saved the world in the end. All hail China!"

    But, there may be an easier way to break into the China market.

    "Scripts," Li summed up. "Hollywood invented the film business and China has come an impressively long way in improving their production skills in a very short time, but their scripts aren't quite there yet. China needs Hollywood writers."

    Gavin Scott, writer of the Emmy-Award winning "Mists of Avalon" and veteran Hollywood screenwriter who has penned scripts for the likes of Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, is keen on stepping into the breach.

    He has traveled recently to China where he negotiated with two Chinese production companies to write Chinese feature films for the Chinese and international market. No stranger to mentoring other writers, Scott finds the prospect of collaborating with the Chinese an exciting one.

    "I think it's a great opportunity for writers from two great cultures to come together and collaborate to create the entertainment of the future," he told Xinhua in an interview.

    When asked about the challenges of creating "writer-for-hire" commercial cross-cultural fare, he was undaunted: "Both China and Hollywood have great cultural riches to draw on and if writers can find a way to combine them, the whole world will benefit."

    For Chinese filmmakers intent on learning Hollywood's winning script formulas who prefer a more high tech approach, they could also get a jump on the competition with a little help from cutting-edge AI.

    "We've cracked the code on human interaction and storytelling," said Stephen Greenfield, one of a team of AI software programmers and psychologists who have managed to create an astonishingly robust and nuanced AI program that can provide detailed suggestions for realistic storylines and plot points.

    "As fellow artists, our goal is to help writers improve and evolve their stories."

    Their breakthrough program, The Storytelling Cipher, apparently works so well that the U.S. law enforcement agencies have been using it to model and predict behavior of terrorist groups around the world.

    But Hollywood's future in the China market is likely to hold challenges as well.

    The LA Times reported that Jeff Towson, professor of investment at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management, said Hollywood's success in China is going to increasingly come under assault by rising Chinese competitors.

    "Foreign companies (like Hollywood studios) do well at the top of the market, typically because they start out having superior quality, technology or brand recognition," he said.

    "But over time, the Chinese competitors grow and steadily improve their quality. They reinvest, make acquisitions and begin to attack the top of the market," he predicted.

    [Editor: huaxia]
    010020070750000000000000011105521371043301
    欧美日韩视频在线观看高清免费网站,日日摸日日碰夜夜爽97纠,欧美色吧视频在线观看,亚洲欧洲日产国码二区首页
  • <button id="8uwc0"><input id="8uwc0"></input></button>
  • <button id="8uwc0"></button>
    <tfoot id="8uwc0"></tfoot>
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产成人精品免费久久久久| 美女被cao免费看在线看网站| 精品人妻伦一二三区久久| 日本免费无遮挡吸乳视频电影| 在线观看片免费人成视频播放 | 久草福利资源在线观看| wwwxxx亚洲| 色偷偷狠狠色综合网| 极端deepthroatvideo肠交| 在线观看片免费人成视频播放| 人人看人人添人人谢| 一级毛片直接看| 青青草原亚洲视频| 最近日本中文字幕免费完整| 国产草草影院ccyycom| 亚洲熟妇色自偷自拍另类| www.天天干| 特级毛片a级毛片在线播放www| 成人午夜一区二区三区视频| 国产呻吟久久久久久久92| 久久国产午夜一区二区福利| 男女同房猛烈无遮挡动态图| 欧美野外疯狂做受xxxx高潮 | 四虎国产永久免费久久| 一本久久精品一区二区| 美女美女高清毛片视频| 少妇高潮惨叫喷水在线观看 | 亚洲人成网站在线观看播放| 99ri国产在线| 欧美日韩三级在线观看| 国产超碰人人模人人爽人人添| 亚洲图片欧美另类| 91精品国产乱码久久久久久| 波多野结衣中文字幕电影播放| 好紧的小嫩木耳白浆| 亚洲精品中文字幕乱码三区 | 精品国产一区二区三区AV性色| 无码一区二区三区| 国产一区二区三区电影| 久久99精品久久久久久园产越南| 门国产乱子视频观看|