Fanning the flames of a burning hot market for movies
Updated: 2014-12-04 07:13
By Xu Fan(China Daily USA)
|
|||||||||
The billowing publicity surrounding a forthcoming romantic comedy reaffirms the role fans can play in blowing away the box office.
Miss Granny - a remake of a South Korean blockbuster by the same English title about a 70-year-old who becomes 20 again after getting her photo taken at a magic studio - stars Taiwan actress Kuai Ya-Lei. But its real appeal comes from Beijing singer Lu Han.
The 24-year-old heartthrob set a record on Monday when the film's theme song, Our Tomorrow, got more than 1 million clicks within 47 minutes after it was posted on the Web portal QQ.
Actress Yang Zishan (below right) and singer Lu Han (above) at a news conference for the movie Miss Granny. Photos Provided to China Daily |
The crush of fans outside the hall of Monday's news conference led to physical altercations with security. Staffers claimed some offered 3,500 yuan ($570) to get in.
Security was tight, since a fan had stolen entrance tickets reserved for journalists from the reception desk at a November news conference.
Taiwan filmmaker Teste Chen joked at that conference that he's nearly gone deaf from so many young colleagues screaming to him that Lu should play the grandson.
Miss Granny is Lu's first silver-screen foray.
He shot to fame for singing and dancing with the Korean boy band EXO. He filed a lawsuit on Oct 10 to terminate his contract with SM Entertainment, Korea's largest talent agency.
The release date for the film, a Sino-Korean coproduction, will be pushed up a week to Jan 8 from its original schedule to accommodate the start of many young fans' winter vacations.
Miss Granny is just China's latest fan film.
Adoration of South Korean actor Rain propelled the commercial success of November's For Love or Money, adapted from Hong Kong author Amy Siu-Haan Cheung's best-seller.
Despite mediocre reviews of the plotline, some fans say they've watched the film several times in cinemas.
Critic Zheng Ye says films tailored for fans have proliferated as a means for low-budget flicks to earn top dollar.
"People born in the 1990s are usually the most loyal fans," he says.
"They're familiar with social media marketing. People who aren't fans follow them to the cinema after the movie becomes an Internet sensation."
Experts point to such low-budget flicks as Mysterious Island and My Kingdom as classic cases.
Insiders forecast the upcoming Tiny Times 4 (based on books by idolized author Guo Jingming) and Somewhere Only We Know (directed by actress-director Xu Jinglei) will continue to demonstrate the trend in the coming months.
xufan@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily USA 12/04/2014 page7)
- Last artistic flourish in neighborhood to be demolished
- Parents 'see' through the eyes of their child
- Carpenter carves armored vehicle from wood
- Reclusive old men in the Qinling Mountains
- Greetings from Tibet
- A buck to the Year of the Goat
- China-US Internet Forum in DC
- Shanghai native creates mini car by hand
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Using the present to preserve the past |
Balloon goes up after idea for an ad fails |
China's faltering steps on family foster care |
PLA targets corruption |
Taiwan chief administrator resigns after defeat in elections |
Winners of expat blogging contest |
Today's Top News
Obama upbeat on future of US-China ties
Opening minds through film
Meet an original Bambi artist, 104
Gay dating app in China gains funding
US startup a good fit for China electronics player
93% of Chinese govt websites have security loopholes: report
2014 likely to be warmest year
Blending of cultures benefits world
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |