The first weekend of box-office take after the reopening of cinemas on July 13 appears to show that audiences are returning to cinemas.
The zombie movie Train To Busan: Peninsula steamrolled its way to a weekend box-office record for a South Korean movie in Singapore, taking $962,000 from Thursday to Sunday.
The movie, about a team of survivors fighting their way out of the zombie-overrun Korean peninsula, has pushed the first movie in the franchise, Train To Busan (2016), with its first weekend earnings of $611,000, to second place.
Period action film The Battleship Island (2017) is now third at $460,000.
The stellar performance of Peninsula, which opened on 97 screens, comes despite new hygiene measures such as the limit of 50 persons per screening and a 1m social distance between groups.
Such measures have limited seating to about 25 per cent of the usual capacity.
Cinema operators to whom The Straits Times spoke were also carrying out more intensive disinfection routines between screenings, in turn leading to fewer screenings.
The resurgence in traffic bodes well for Hollywood blockbusters, which have been held back from release until next month and beyond.
Cinemas have been closed since March 27 in a bid to curb the spread of the coronavirus, but there were signs before then that filmgoers were staying away for fear of infection.
A spokesman for Shaw Theatres, which has seven outlets currently in operation, says they "did better than anticipated" over the opening weekend.
Peninsula performed well for them, as did the biographical film Escape From Pretoria.
"We believe patrRead More – Source
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