Mulan goes on as Hollywood tracks virus spread, Latest Movies News - The New Paper
Movies

Mulan goes on as Hollywood tracks virus spread

LOS ANGELES – The Walt Disney Co held a red carpet premiere for its action epic Mulan on Monday, pushing ahead with the movie’s rollout even though the coronavirus spread will keep the film out of China, the second-largest film market, indefinitely.

At the moment, film studios have decided the show must go on at movie theatres in most of the world. The major exception is James Bond thriller No Time To Die, which producers moved to November from April.

On Tuesday, Sony Pictures postponed to August the release of Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway, citing disruption in the movie market in Europe.

Hollywood studio executives are closely watching the spread of the coronavirus and the upcoming film calendar.

Summer blockbuster season is scheduled to kick off May 1 with Disney’s Marvel adventure Black Widow, followed by a new Fast And Furious spectacle from Comcast Corp’s Universal Pictures, a Top Gun sequel from ViacomCBS Inc’s Paramount Pictures, and other big-budget action flicks.

If the coronavirus keeps people at home or shuts more theatres, it would threaten box office receipts during Hollywood’s most lucrative season. Movie theatres are closed across China and Italy and in parts of France.

The situation puts movie studios in “uncharted waters”, said Jeff Goldstein, president of domestic distribution at AT&T Inc’s Warner Bros. studio.

Warner Bros. has not delayed any film openings, he said, “but we have an open mind (and) we will have to look at everything and see how it unfolds”.

The National Association of Theatre Owners said moviegoing remained healthy in most areas and cinemas will remain open “in line with local conditions”.

This past weekend, ticket sales in the US and Canada, the world’s biggest box office market, rose 1.2 per cent from a week earlier to US$100.7 million (S$140m), according to measurement firm Comscore.

“Right now, I haven’t seen any discernible impact at the (US and Canadian) box office,” said Comscore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

Mulan, a US$200 million live-action remake of Disney’s animated classic, has been expected to rank as one of the company’s biggest hits of the year.

It was tailored to appeal especially to the Chinese market. The story features a Chinese heroine and an all-Asian cast, and parts were filmed in China. The central character is played by Yifei Liu, a film and TV actress well-known in China.

It was unclear when Chinese movie theatres will re-open. The movie is set to be released in the US on March 27 and Singapore on March 26.

“My heart goes out to everybody in China and around the world that is affected,” Mulan director Niki Caro said on the red carpet on Monday.

“When we do have the opportunity to bring this movie back home to China, it’s going to be the most wonderful celebration.”

Mulan was made for “a global audience,” producer Chris Bender added at the premiere. “We want everybody to see it.”

Dergarabedian said Mulan will be an important test of moviegoing amid the coronavirus outbreak.
“This is a situation that is changing day by day,” he said. - REUTERS

Movies