China's online giants continue to flex their muscles at an ongoing film festival, Xu Fan reports from Shanghai.
IMAX Corporation, a Canadian company known for its giant-screen technology, and CMC Capital Partners, China's leading media and entertainment investment fund, launched the China Film Investment Fund on June 16.
An upcoming thriller adapted from China's most popular horror radio show of the late 1990s will hit the Chinese theaters on July 3.
Sony Music China has announced the launch of the albums of four mentors for the second season of popular reality TV show, Sing My Song, as well as an album of music from the contest's top 10 singer-songwriters.
Universal's "Jurassic World" is bringing in an estimated $204.6 million in its opening weekend, enjoying the biggest opening so far in 2015 and the second-best ever in North America, only behind "Marvel's The Avengers" in 2012.
A senior Chinese film official has warned of the possibility of domestic productions being overwhelmed by foreign blockbusters at the box office as cinemagoing booms in China.
A trade fair for domestic and foreign TV production companies to buy and sell shows has opened at Shanghai's annual TV Festival.
Popular short comedies will have their day as feature films, the latest in an online-to-cinema trend.
A well-known name in Western film circles, Chinese director Chen Kaige has now shot a martial arts movie for the first time in his 30-year filmmaking career.
The Third Wuzhen Theater Festival will run from Oct 15-24 at Wuzhen, in eastern China's Zhejiang province.
Chinese pianist Zhang Haochen is already touring the world at age 25, Zhang Kun reports in Shanghai.
San Cheng Ji or A Tale of Three Cities, a movie starring actor Sean Lau Ching-wan and actress Tang Wei, will hit mainland theaters this fall, and is being seen as a Chinese answer to Hollywood's American Civil War epic Gone with the Wind (1939).