China-made animated feature "Monkey King: The Hero is Back" had raked in 620 million yuan (US 99.8 million) as of 4 pm Saturday, snatching the throne of the highest grossing animated film in Chinese cinemas formerly held by "Kung Fu Panda 2."
Picture a weird town where every resident lives a double life. During the day, they are common people; when night falls, they turn into killing machines.
Zi Yue, or It Says, is the Chinese rock band that once impressed many fans with its poetic lyrics and diverse tunes. But in the past few years, Qiu Ye, the founder, has not only been producing soundtracks for movies, he's has also been involved with acting.
The Cloisonne Promotion contest, the third round of final competition of the 14th Chinese Bridge Competition for Foreign College Students, was held in Beijing on July 22, 2015.
Weekly takings reach 1.76b yuan as 5.1 million flock to cinemas to see made-in-China movies.
The Monkey King rescues the Chinese animated world? It may sound crazy, but that notion has dominated the country's movie-review forums in recent weeks.
Surprise hits at the box office don't ease all concerns about the overall quality of China's animated films, Xu Fan reports.
A variety program on Chinese TV still wins audience approval nearly two decades after its debut, Wang Kaihao reports.
China Central Television's Channel 4 premiered a reality TV show on Saturday in a bid to appeal to a broader audience.
Chinese folk band Xiao Juan and Residents from the Valley will hold concert on Chinese Valentine's Day,sing it out the five statuses of love.
Along with the box office success of the domestic romance Tiny Times 4, its theme song "Time Boils the Rain" has also showed overwhelming oomph among fans of the series.
Amid the rising boom of South Korean filmmakers tapping the Chinese market, the two countries' coproduction list has added a new blockbuster.