China’s ‘The Battle at Lake Changjin’ was the highest-grossing film anywhere in the world over the past weekend, with $203 million, according to Variety.com.
That score was fractionally lower than the combined total earned by ‘No Time to Die‘ ($119 million in international markets) and by ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’ ($90.2 million in North America).
The film was the far-away winner in mainland China, where it was released on Thursday, a day ahead of the October 1, National Day holiday.
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Over four days on release, it earned $234 million, according to consultancy Artisan Gateway.
Additional data from local provider Ent Group showed that ‘Battle’ enjoyed a massive 157,000 screenings per day.
That put it ahead of ‘My Country, My Parents,’ which earned $70.6 million over the weekend proper and a Venom’-like $90.4 million total over four days.
Both films are examples of the patriotic triumphalism that has come to typify the Chinese box office since it re-opened, after the pandemic in July last year, and both capitalize on the sentiment stirred up around the annual celebrations of the country’s birth, some 72 years ago.
‘Changjin’ earned $12.9 million of its total from Imax giant screens, making it the third biggest Imax opening weekend of all time behind sci-fi title ‘The Wandering Earth’ and Chinese New Year comedy ‘Detective Chinatown 3’.
Made with a production budget reported to be over $200 million, the film has three of China’s top directors: Chen Kaige, Tsui Hark and Dante Lam.
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The post The Battle At Lake Changjin Breaks Record By Making $203 Million In China In Its First Weekend appeared first on Koimoi.
October 05, 2021 at 09:21AM
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