“Bumblebee,” the sixth installment of Paramount’s “Transformers” franchise, will rumble into Chinese theaters on Jan. 4, 2019. That is two weeks after its U.S. outing.
The prequel is set 20 years before 2007’s first “Transformers” film, and follows the story of a government agency chasing down autobot Bumblebee and the teenage girl who befriends him, played by Hailee Steinfeld. It is the first movie in the series not to be shot by director Michael Bay, who was nevertheless involved as producer.
The previous two “Transformers” films were bigger hits in China than they were in the U.S. Last year, “Transformers: The Last Knight” took in $229 million in China — $99 million more than in U.S. — and 2014’s “Transformers: The Age of Extinction” $320 million, outstripping its $245 million showing in the States.
The opening day windfall for “The Last Knight” was one of the best of all time in China. Nevertheless, the film did not ultimately bring in as much as had been projected overall, making it the first in the franchise to indicate a potential slowdown in the mainland’s appetite for Autobot action.
In the past two years, Chinese viewers’ enthusiasm for the “Transformers” series has “rapidly declined,” the Beijing News cited box office analyst Luo Tianwen as saying, adding that “director Michael Bay’s visual bombardment has left audiences with aesthetic fatigue.” As a spinoff, “Bumblebee” can likely expect less of a haul than a full “Transformers” franchise movie.