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China's emerging middle class is showing a newfound enthusiasm for cinema. Last year's blockbuster 3-D epic "Avatar," which also played on IMAX screens in China, drew enormous crowds willing to wait up to six hours in line for relatively pricey tickets. Hollywood's ability to make inroads in the Chinese market comes in spite of a quota system. The Chinese government shares revenue for only 20 foreign movie imports a year
-- a formula that effectively limits the country to 20 foreign films per year. Gelfond said the current limitations on foreign movies are unlikely to pose a problem since the movies usually screened by IMAX are Hollywood blockbusters that typically have no problem being allowed into China. In addition, the company intends to convert more Chinese films into IMAX format, he said. In the long run, Gelfond said he is optimistic that China will allow more foreign films into the marketplace. "As the cinema industry grows in China, and there's more screens and investment going on, my own personal belief is that more foreign films will be allowed into China, not only from the U.S. but elsewhere."
[Associated
Press;
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