BEIJING (Reuters) -China said on Thursday it would immediately restrict imports of Hollywood films in retaliation for President Donald Trumpโs escalation of U.S. tariffs on imported Chinese goods.
After three decades during which China annually imported 10 Hollywood movies, its National Film Administration said Trumpโs increase of tariffs on Chinese imports would further sour domestic demand for U.S. cinema in China after years of decline.
โWe will follow market rules, respect the audienceโs choices, and moderately reduce the number of American films imported,โ the NFA said on its website.
Chris Fenton, author of โFeeding the Dragon: Inside the Trillion Dollar Dilemma Facing Hollywood, the NBA, and American Businessโ, said the move was a โsuper high-profile way to make a statement of retaliation with almost zero downside for Chinaโ.
Hollywood films account for only 5% of the overall box office receipts in Chinaโs market. And worse for Hollywood, China taxes that small amount 50% before any revenues go back to the USA,โ Fenton told Reuters.
Hollywood studios receive only 25% of Chinaโs box office whereas other markets give studios double that, he said.
โSuch a high-profile punishment of Hollywood is an all-win motion of strength by Beijing that will surely be noticed by Washington,โ Fenton added.
In 1994, China began importing 10 American films each year through the internationally recognised revenue-sharing distribution model. Imports including โTitanicโ and โAvatarโ became box office smashes in the Chinese market, making actors such as Leonardo DiCaprio and directors such as James Cameron household names among Chinese film lovers across generations.
China is the worldโs second largest film market. However, in recent years, as local entertainment culture has bloomed, the enthusiasm of Chinese audiences for Hollywood movies has waned.
Since 2020, domestic films have consistently accounted for around 80% of annual box office revenue, up from around 60% previously.
On Chinaโs all-time box office list, only one imported film ranks in the top 20 โ โAvengers: Endgameโ, with revenue of 4.25 billion yuan ($579.83 million). The remaining films in the top 20 are all domestic productions.
($1 = 7.3297 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Beijing Newsroom; editing by Louise Heavens and Mark Heinrich)
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