Movies

China Box Office: ‘Better Days’ Steps Out as World’s Top-Grossing Film

Edgy Chinese youth drama “Better Days” battled through two tangles with Chinese censors to come out on top this weekend as the highest grossing film in the world with a $81.5 million three-day debut, according to data from consultancy Artisan Gateway. Local language melodrama and star power with a dash of grit can go a long way.

Globally, it bested the worldwide haul of Disney’s “Maleficent: Mistress of Evil” by a few million dollars and Warner Bros.’s “Joker” by about $20 million, according to Comscore.

In China, “Better Days” obliterated all other titles, earning ten times more than “Maleficent,” its closest competitor, which grossed $8.6 million this weekend. In just three days, “Better Days” has not just doubled the total China gross of the Angelina Jolie-starring title, but in fact out-earned the Disney flick’s entire $65 million North American haul so far.

The drama was certainly helped along by the fact that its two of its biggest contenders set to debut alongside it had their Friday openings cancelled, with Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” suspended pending further cuts and Chinese director Li Shaohong’s Communist-themed war epic “Liberation” indefinitely pushed back, reportedly for post-production reasons.

Just days ago, it remained unclear whether or not the Chinese teen drama would even see the light of day. Authorities have yanked it from beneath its audience’s eager noses twice already this year: first from its intended debut at the Berlin Film Festival in February; and again from its planned theatrical release in late June.

Though vague “post-production reasons” and “pre-release estimates” were cited as reasons at the time, censors apparently also took issue with the film’s violence. China has no film rating system, and has in recent years upped its policing of content involving or intended for minors, amidst a broader crackdown on topics deemed contrary to “core socialist values.”

The film only confirmed that it would actually hit screens last Tuesday, just three days before its debut — leaving almost no time for much promotion or presales. Though unusual, such rush jobs are becoming more frequent with content awaiting last-minute go-aheads from the authorities, with marketing teams consoling themselves by embracing the idea that it’s politically safest to keep a low profile.

“Better Days” is directed by Hong Kong’s Derek Kwok-cheung Tsang, and tells the story of a brutally bullied but straight-laced high schooler who gets entangled with a young crook and embroiled in a murder, despite being determined to focus on her all-important college entry exams. Popular, sunny actress Zhou Dongyu spends most of its 135-minute run-time having her face bloodied or dripping snot from weeping so hard. Jackson Yee — the superstar idol from TFBoys, here in his first acting role — fares rather worse. Zhou, 27, is nearly a decade Yee’s senior.

But in China, audiences are particular suckers for content that pulls at the heartstrings, and most viewers gave the film top marks and numerous crying emojis for packing an emotional punch. It currently boasts a 9.6 out of 10 user rating on the Maoyan ticketing platform and a respectable 8.4 out of 10 on the more urban youth-oriented Douban website.

At the Beijing gala opening Friday night, Tsang referenced the film’s travails only obliquely. “It truly wasn’t easy to be able to show this film to you tonight,” he said, flanked on either side of the stage by Yee’s two dozen suit-and-tie-sporting bodyguards.

Chinese actor Zhang Yi (“Operation Red Sea”) stood up and said: “No matter what this film went through before, you can now be braver going forward.”Another celebrity friend of the production team cryptically urged those present not to over-sensationalize their social media postings about the film “so that more people will be able to see it.”

The film about brutal schoolyard bullying concludes with a montage list of all the central government’s recent policies intended to limit such occurrences.

Meanwhile, two holdover patriotic titles made to celebrate China’s National Day anniversary held onto their slice of the box office after almost a month in theaters. Bona Film Group’s “The Captain” was the weekend’s third highest earner with $7.4 million, according to Artisan Gateway, while “My People, My  Country” came in fifth with $4.5 million. They are now their country’s ninth and tenth highest-grossing films of all time, behind last summer’s “Dying to Survive.”

Sandwiched between in fourth place was the Hong Kong courtroom drama “Guilt By Design,” written and co-directed by Lai Siu Kwan, Sze Pak Lam and Yongtai Liu, and starring Nick Cheung (“Unbeatable,” “Beast Stalker”). It grossed $7.3 million innits opening three days.

Trailing behind them all was Ang Lee’s “Gemini Man,” which only opened in mid-October but has already sunk from view. It has grossed $31 million (RMB219 million) in China so far.

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