Looking to fill thousands of hours of broadcasting
time, China's television channels are an almost bottomless
market for new, high quality dramas.
Foreign producers, particularly from neighboring
countries, have found a market eager to embrace their programmes
at this week's Shanghai International Film Festival.
Dozens of companies, both local and foreign,
were present yesterday at a television and film market held
as part of the festival at the city's new exhibition centre
in Pudong.
The market, which ends today, sets up production
companies in a venue where they can sell their products
directly to Chinese television channels and distributors.
Dramas suitable for prime time were particularly hot commodities.
"If the product is good, they will
buy it," said Haewon Chin, Senior Marketing Manager
of the International Business Division at MBC Production,
a South Korean production company with dozens of titles.
MBC has been attending the film festival for a number of
years, helping satisfy the demand for South Korean drama
series.
"China has grown, but it is stable
now," said Chin. "We sell a lot of drama titles
to China."
"The faces are similar, the stories
are similar, there is more congeniality between China and
South Korea."
A very popular South Korean series, What
on Earth is Love, was sold to a Hunan television channel.
The show is already well-known in Hong Kong, said Chin.
With a growing number of television channels and the need
to fill the hours with programming, the need for new shows
is rising.
Last year China produced about 12,000 new
episodes, of which 5,000 went to fill prime time slots across
the country, according to published reports.
Despite the growing demand, the production
quality of Chinese-made products is still lacking, feeding
the growth of co-operative efforts.
Singapore producers, for example, worked
with Chinese channels in their first joint production last
year, said Shaw Soo Wei, of the Media Development Authority.
"Drama series is really what they want," said
Shaw. "Infotainment too. They like entertainment shows."
Singapore producers are also working closely
with Chinese to produce more documentaries.
As the number of joint productions increases,
the Chinese film and television industry may be able to
remove a stumbling block that is keeping it lagging behind.
Production quality on the mainland is years
behind that of neighboring countries like Singapore, South
Korea or Japan.
"At local production companies, the
quality and everything is not mature enough," said
Tim Kondo, manager of Animation International, a Japanese
company that focuses on animated series, adding that it
could take up to 10 years for the industry to catch up.
Animated products are popular both in Japan
and China. Kondo said his company, like others, is looking
to set up more co-productions to enter the Chinese market.
"The China market is opening,"
said Mandy Yip, assistant marketing manager at TVBI, the
distributing arm of Hong Kong's largest producer. "The
China market is like the market in the US. It has different
provinces, different needs and different tastes. "
The Shanghai International Film Festival
runs until June 19. It includes an international film competition,
a new talent competition, screenings of dozens of films
and a forum.
Source: China Daily