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Under the accord, U.S. filmmakers will be given new opportunities to distribute their films outside China's state-run movie monopoly, will have better commercial terms for 3-D and other large-format films and will reap a bigger share of the profit for films that are distributed by Chinese companies. The market in question has been growing rapidly. Box office receipts last year topped $2 billion, U.S. officials said. Chris Dodd, the association's CEO, who visited Shanghai last June to press Hollywood's case, said Friday's agreement "will return a much better share of the box office revenues to U.S studios, revising a two-decade-old formula that kept those revenues woefully under normal commercial terms." He estimated that Chinese audiences would see 50 percent more U.S. films. Disney CEO Robert Iger added that the agreement is a "significant opportunity" in the world's most populous nation.
[Associated
Press;
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