HOLLYWOOD -- Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment is preparing to challenge China's video pirates head on.
Studio
is launching a new Chinese releasing operation in the Middle Kingdom
through an exclusive arrangement with the country's largest legal video
distributor, Zoke Culture Group.
The distribution agreement
between Fox and Zoke is an important symbol of the stake both China and
the U.S. have in seeing intellectual property rights vigorously
enforced in China, according to U.S. commerce secretary Carlos
Gutierrez, who was present at the signing ceremony.
Operations will kick off with "Garfield: A Tale of Two Kitties," "Ice Age: The Meltdown" and "X-Men: The Last Stand."
Ongoing
slate will include a mix of library titles; the handful of movies that
have been recently released through China's revenue-sharing quota
system; and other recent pics.
Initial roster will be an annual 20-40 titles, building to hundreds once operation achieves cruising speed.
TCFHE said it also will enter into local production arrangements to supplement the imported lineup.
"All
the titles we release will have to go through the censorship process in
the usual way," said Mike Dunn, TCFHE worldwide prexy. "We have been
building that relationship for years, but the big difference between
this market and the theatrical releases is that there is no annual
limit."
To counter China's massive piracy problem, company said
it is committed to shortening release windows and lowering the cost of
legitimate product.
"Garfield 2" has brought in a boffo $7.3 million (RMB57.5 million) since it was released Aug 11.
Consumer
price for movies will be $1.50-$1.87 in the popular VCD format and
$2.25-$3.75 for DVDs. That is still higher than much pirate product,
which often retails for $1 or less, but venture is counting on quality
of replication and wide availability as significant weapons in the
fight against knockoffs.
"With Zoke we are accessing a network
that allows us to compete effectively. Lower-price products will always
exist, like own-brand goods in a supermarket," Dunn said.
Zoke is
a Guangdong-based conglom with 20,000 retail outlets and interests in
entertainment distribution, talent management and electronic consumer
goods production. In the music sector it reps Time Warner Music and
Universal Music.
"The partnership allows us to meet growing
consumer demand for international entertainment content," Zoke
chairman-prexy Guo Zilong said.
Dunn said movies will get home
entertainment release in China "as quickly as we can," typically three
months after theatrical release. Windows plans are complicated by
releases of movies in other territories outside China and uncertainty
over which movies will be selected by China Film Group and the Film
Bureau for theatrical exhibition within China. Dunn promised the
windows policy will be both "experimental" and "aggressive."
Moves
to bolster movie production in China will be managed through Fortune
Star, an offshoot of News Corp.'s Star TV operation based in Hong Kong.
"This
is not strictly a theatrical initiative. We expect movies to enjoy a
theatrical release in China (before going on to video), but elsewhere
they are intended for home entertainment," Dunn said.
Warner Bros
is currently the only other studio with its own home entertainment
division in China, having established joint venture Warner CAV in
February 2005. Under a deal announced in September of that year, unit
also handles U's titles in China.
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