1don MSN
China Box Office: Lunar New Year Sales Fall 38 Percent From 2025 as ‘Pegasus 3' Leads Soft Holiday
Car-racing sequel 'Pegasus 3' earned $369.3 million over its first six days, while Zhang Yimou's 'Scare Out' opened to $110.7 ...
Sony Pictures head Tom Rothman has come clean about why Spider-Man: No Way Home was banned in China. In a new interview with Puck’s Matt Belloni on The Town podcast, Rothman confirmed Puck’s 2021 ...
Another major Chinese movie sequel is lapping the Hollywood competition at the box office after a strong opening.
China has one of the biggest box offices in the world, so it only makes sense that there is also a bombing industry for Chinese language films. While many Chinese language movies come from the ...
With the upcoming release of Boonie Bears: Every Year Has a Bear, the sustained focus on Spring Festival slots signals that China’s children’s films are steadily building brand value and industry ...
A look at how the Chinese New Year weekend box office is shaping up, led by 'Pegasus 3' at $425M. Goat also crossed $100M at ...
An English dub of “Ne Zha 2,” the Chinese animated movie that shattered box office records and has grossed more than $2 billion to date, mostly in China, opens in American theaters this weekend as ...
Hosted on MSN
China Film Pavilion Highlights Chinese Cinematic Achievements at 46th American Film Market
Under the guidance of the China Film Administration, China Film Co-Production Corporation set up the China Film Pavilion at the 46th American Film Market, which took place in Los Angeles from November ...
A24’s Oscar-nominated drama “Marty Supreme,” starring four-time Academy Award nominee Timothée Chalamet, will receive a theatrical release in China through China Film Group with promotional support ...
Chinese and Greater China cinema have a significant presence at the 2026 Berlin Film Festival and European Film Market, with ...
A film based on the Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 moves audiences across China. BEIJING, Aug.12, 2010 -- "23 seconds. 32 years" is the mysterious tagline printed on movie posters across China. Adapted ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results