Cineplex says business is back partly thanks to foreign-language films from around the world - Action News
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Entertainment

Cineplex says business is back partly thanks to foreign-language films from around the world

Canadas Cineplex theatres are embracing international films as the company seeks new ways to lure audiences back in the streaming era in the wake of the pandemic and Hollywood strikes. The theatre chain said last moth that international content captured more than 11 per cent of its box office this year to date.

Theatre chain continues to ramp up international offerings as it continues to recover from pandemic, strikes

International films help boost Cineplexs box office

7 days ago
Duration 2:01
In order to adapt to the changing movie-going audience, international films have become more important to Cineplexs bottom line.

Canada's Cineplex theatres are embracing foreign-language films as they come close to recapturing pre-pandemic audience numbers.

Cineplex said last month that international movies had accounted for 11.5per cent of its box-office revenue this year to date up from 10 per cent last year with the top three beingHindi-language action film Fighter and Punjabi-language comedies Jatt & Juliet 3 and Shinda Shinda No Papa.

Robert Cousins, senior vice-president of film for Cineplex, says the company is the largest chain in North America to play a wide range of international cinema,in at least seven different languages.

"We want our theatres to reflect the communities that they're in," he told CBCNews.

"If you're in Brampton, Ont., or you're in Surrey, B.C., you want to see films on screen that speak to you. Whether that is a Punjabi film, a Hindi film, a Korean film, whatever it is watching that film ties you to your community."

Foreign-language films were already a growing market before the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020, when Cineplex lost millions in revenueas theatres across the country shut down and reopened gradually to hesitant audiences.

A man stands in a movie theatre hallway.
Cineplex vice president of film Robert Cousins says the theatre chain screened more than 200 international films last year. (Eli Glasner/CBC)

Cousins says once they reopened, international films were the first to bounce back.

"That audience craved coming back to a communal experience and enjoying these films together," he said, noting that audiences for international films were also the fastest to return to theatres.

Cousins says Cineplex's summer numbers havebeen buoyed by international content, particularly at times when Hollywood's offerings have beenlacking, like during theHollywood strikes that halted film production for months.

Cineplexscreened217international films last year

Movie theatres have used various tacticsto lureaudiences in the last two years, including offering more IMAX screenings, live sporting events, bringing back old classicsand rolling out exclusive movie-themed merchandise like the curiousDune popcorn buckets.

Cineplex says business is now close to normal,with its June and July box office reachingmore than 90 per cent of pre-pandemic levels.

Cousins says the theatre chain screened 217 international titleslast year which he says equalled the number of domestic films on offer and is on track to top that number in 2024, a trend likely to continue given its success.

Foreign-language films currently playinginclude Korean comedy Pilot and Filipino romance Un/Happy for You.

Tilak Verma, who went to see Hindi action thriller Vedaaat Toronto's Scotiabank Theatre, says being able to watch Indian movies helps him feel connected to home when he's missing family.

"These are the things that connect us back," he said.

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Pradipti Seth says she tries to see every Bollywood movie that comes to theatres, when she would otherwise wait for them to hitNetflix or Amazon Prime.

"All the Cineplex here have most Hindi movies," she said.

International movies give 'sense of connection'

Toronto-based arts and life reporter Apparata Bhandari says she used to only find Hindi films at smaller community theatres, but now regularly watches Indian cinema at Cineplex's Yonge-Dundas location, and catches Korean movies at itsEmpress Walk location in North York.

"Being able to see a wide variety of audiences and being able to go and watch the cinema with them, it just makes you feel as if you're part of something bigger," she said.

A woman stands with popcorn in a movie theatre.
Toronto-based journalist Aparita Bhandari comes to Cineplex theatres for Hindi and Korean films. (Eli Glasner/CBC)

While the convenience of streaming services may have pulled some viewers away from theatres since the pandemic,it hasalso introduced foreign-language international content to new audiences, which Bhandarisays may also be driving trafficto these films when they hit theatres.

She encourages all moviegoers to take a chance on international cinema.

"It's not going to be always the best film, but you'll get something out of it," she said. "You'll get a sense of another place, another people, a sense of connection, a sense of going someplace that is not in your immediate surroundings. And cinema offers you so much."

With files from Eli Glasner and Prisca Tang