'Interstellar' rules China's box office
Updated: 2014-12-03 10:05
(Xinhua)
|
||||||||
Poster of the film "Interstellar." [File photo] |
"Interstellar" continued to lead China's box office by taking 144 million yuan ($23.4 million) in the week ending Nov 30.
The money brought the total ticket sales of the sci-fi epic by director Christopher Nolan to 671 million yuan in the world's second-largest film market, China Film News reported on Tuesday.
Domestic rom-com "Women Who Flirt" was a respectable No. 2 which pulled in about 82 million yuan in its opening weekend.
"Rise of the Legend", a film about China's martial artist and folk hero Wong Fei-hung, came in third with 76 million yuan in the week. Its total ticket sales stood at 157.9 million yuan.
Not far behind was Dream Works Animation's "Penguins of Madagascar", which earned 51 million yuan for the week and whose total box office hit 199 million yuan by Nov. 30.
Rounding out the top five list was "Fury", starring Brad Pitt, which made 48.2 million yuan. Its total ticket sales reached 93.2 million yuan by the end of the week.
Related:
- A buck to the Year of the Goat
- China-US Internet Forum in DC
- Shanghai native creates mini car by hand
- 2014 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show
- World AIDS Day marked around the world
- Chinatown told through photos of peoples' rooms
- Mutual governance of cyberspace called for
- China has glitter for dealer of diamonds
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Using the present to preserve the past |
Balloon goes up after idea for an ad fails |
China's faltering steps on family foster care |
PLA targets corruption |
Taiwan chief administrator resigns after defeat in elections |
Winners of expat blogging contest |
Today's Top News
Mutual governance of cyberspace called for
China has glitter for dealer of diamonds
A buck to the Year of the Goat
Hollywood could be saying hooray for more Chinese capital
China may take global lead in IT by its sheer size
HK protest leaders turn themselves in
Alibaba shrugs off retailers' tax cry
Database to track fugitives overseas
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |