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Cinema in rural area continues to pack in audiences

Xinhua | Updated: 2023-02-07 09:02
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On Jan 22, the second day of the seven-day Spring Festival holiday, 65-year-old Guo Cuimei decided to celebrate the holiday by going to the cinema.

Guo went to a local public-welfare cinema to watch The Taking of Tiger Mountain, an action blockbuster directed by Hark Tsui. At 9 am, the theater was already full of local residents.

For Guo and her fellow residents of Xihe township in Shandong province, watching films has been a traditional pastime for decades.

"When I was little, the county authority dispatched projectionists to show us films," Guo recalls. "We had to walk long distances to watch them, but we never felt tired," she says. To this day, she can still clearly recount the plot of classic Chinese films such as Heroic Sons and Daughters.

"Watching films for rural residents is not just an entertainment, but a way of socializing," says Li Fengzhu, the manager of a film company in Zibo, Shandong province. However, outdoor film screenings depend a lot on the weather and are, therefore, usually scheduled on warmer days.

To address this problem, Xihe township in 2015 launched a project to convert an abandoned local brick factory into a public welfare cinema. It began operation late that year and is the first indoor rural public welfare cinema in the province.

During the 2016 Spring Festival holiday, Li showed the historical film The Hundred Regiments Offensive to the residents. "The theater was so crowded that some of the residents who arrived late couldn't get in," says Li, adding that the theater had to give an additional screening in the afternoon.

Today, film shows at the theater usually take place during public holidays or winter and summer holidays. After each screening, projectionists collect audience feedback and preferences, so as to decide what to show next time.

"Local residents favor films about rural life, comedies, war films, and dramas," says Li.

The cinema also occasionally shows films that publicize general knowledge. Once, a film about the proper use of natural gas was well-received by residents and was required to be screened again.

"Decades of experience showed that watching films is still a widely popular entertainment in rural areas," says Yan Dongsheng, a researcher at the Shandong provincial department of publicity.

"It also brings people closer together, and enables them to enhance relationships by sharing stories and ideas," Yan adds.

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