TV industry celebrates year's successes, studies challenges
Updated: 2015-12-31 08:35
By Wang Kaihao
|
||||||||
Chinese actors Mei Ting and Chen Baoguo (above) are winners at this year's Flying Apsaras Awards.[Photo/CFP] |
As New Year's Day approaches, the country's TV industry is looking back on its small-screen achievements and regrets in the past year-showcased when the 30th Flying Apsaras Awards were bestowed in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on Monday.
Seventeen TV series stood out from 200 candidates, which entered the final round competing for the title "excellent TV series" in three categories: history, realistic theme and revolution theme.
The competition was launched in the early 1980s as the only state-level TV series award on the Chinese mainland organized by the government. The latest event reviewed productions since 2014.
The award-winners include historical drama, Nirvana in Fire, which has attracted millions of fans with its handsome actors and tantalizing storyline, and Deng Xiaoping at History's Crossroads, a biographic series reviewing the former Chinese leader's life.
China produced more than 15,000 episodes of TV series in 2015, perhaps a boom time for the industry.
"Today's TV series in China tend to have a solid foundation in reality and try to match the pulse of society," Gao Xiaohong, a media professor at Communication University of China, said at a TV innovation forum in Hangzhou on Sunday. She was referring to the general scenario of realistic dramas on last year's small screen.
"The producers are willing to reflect a complicated society through common people's happiness and sadness."
For example, she cites the award-winning The Ordinary World, which deals with individuals' destinies and love, and different social strata in a nostalgic tone.
As 2015 is the 70th anniversary honoring the victory in the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1937-45), the war has become a pillar of revolution-themed TV series this year.
"Those TV series reflect the war in wide spectrum, which serves a good educational function," says Meng Fanshu, a researcher with the Chinese National Academy of Arts.
"But, it is not a good idea to fill our screens with productions on that war," Meng says. "Some stories are basically not relevant to the war, but have the wartime as a background. That's not to mention some irrational exaggerations in details that disgust audiences.
"Many works are still superficial. We still lack enough productions with higher-level thinking," he says, lamenting the overwhelming tendency toward entertainment among such productions.
As for historical themes, Nirvana in Fire paves a new way for other followers in China, according to Jia Leilei, deputy director of the Chinese National Academy of Arts.
- Top planner targets 40% cut in PM2.5 for Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei cluster
- Yearender: Predictions for 2016 through 20 questions
- Asia's largest underground railway station opens in Shenzhen
- Shanghai bans drug-using actors, drivers
- Clamping down to clean up the air
- Yearender: Ten most talked-about newsmakers in 2015
- Over 1 million refugees have fled to Europe by sea in 2015: UN
- Turbulence injures multiple Air Canada passengers, diverts flight
- NASA releases stunning images of our planet from space station
- US-led air strikes kill IS leaders linked to Paris attacks
- DPRK senior party official Kim Yang Gon killed in car accident
- Former Israeli PM Olmert's jail term cut, cleared of main charge
- Yearender: China's proposals on world's biggest issues
- NASA reveals entire alphabet but F in satellite images
- Yearender: Five major sporting rivalries during 2015
- China counts down to the New Year
- Asia's largest underground railway station opens in Shenzhen
- Yearender: Predictions for 2016 through 20 questions
- World's first high-speed train line circling an island opens in Hainan
- 'Internet Plus' changes people's lifestyles in China
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
8 highlights about V-day Parade |
Glimpses of Tibet: Plateaus, people and faith |
Chinese entrepreneurs remain optimistic despite economic downfall |
50th anniversary of Tibet autonomous region |
Tianjin explosions: Deaths, destruction and bravery |
Cinemas enjoy strong first half |
Today's Top News
Shooting rampage at US social services agency leaves 14 dead
Chinese bargain hunters are changing the retail game
Chinese president arrives in Turkey for G20 summit
Islamic State claims responsibility for Paris attacks
Obama, Netanyahu at White House seek to mend US-Israel ties
China, not Canada, is top US trade partner
Tu first Chinese to win Nobel Prize in Medicine
Huntsman says Sino-US relationship needs common goals
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |