China Box Office Up 50 Percent in First Quarter, Set to Pass US as Top Market in 2017
The country is on track to gross more than $10 billion this year thanks to rapid growth in theaters and success of homegrown hits like "Mermaid"
China box office revenues grew 50 percent during the first three months of this year, putting the country on track to overtake the U.S. as the top-grossing movie market in the world in 2017.
Revenues climbed from RMB9.66 billion in the first quarter of 2015 to RMB14.49 billion, or roughly $2.2 billion, according to The Guardian. At that pace, China would rake in more than $10 billion this year and close in on the $11 billion earned at the U.S. box office in 2015.
The increase is due in part to the rapid building of new theaters — more than 8,000 new ones were added last year, and another 8,000 are expected to open in 2016.
Analysts also credited the popularity of homegrown movie hits such as "The Mermaid" and "The Monkey King 2."
The top-grossing Hollywood title was Disney’s animated "Zootopia," which had accumulated $207 million as of March 31.
The revenue growth also came despite a 2.5 percent drop in ticket prices from the first quarter of last year. The average ticket price in China is about $5.36, significantly below the U.S. average of $8.38.