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Chinese audiences find 'Lost in Thailand'

2012-12-26 17:04 Xinhua     Web Editor: Gu Liping comment

At the end of the year, most filmmakers hope to rake in profits and praise, but it seems that few Chinese blockbusters have been able to escape cracks and flak this season.

The recent success of a low-budget comedy shows that Chinese audiences are not too demanding. They simply want to be entertained and, sometimes, have a nerve touched.

"Lost in Thailand," a conventional comedy about two rival Chinese businessmen and a simple-minded pancake maker, grossed more than 700 million yuan (111 million U.S. dollars) by Christmas Eve and has broken box offices records for domestic films since it premiered on Dec. 12.

The comedic hit cost just 30 million yuan to make, but has outshone, and out-earned, other blockbusters that bombed at the box office after costing millions to make.

After laughing through the 105-minute gut-buster, many moviegoers have hung around to watch behind-the-scenes clips included in the movie's closing credits.

The response is unusual for a low-budget affair, especially amid strong competition from blockbusters such Ang Lee's "Life of Pi" and Feng Xiaogang's "Back to 1942."

The comedy won rave reviews by giving Chinese audiences what they want: popular stars, funny dialogue, good timing and a prompt for self-reflection.

Moreover, religious and political fanatics are absent from the movie, making it a breeze to sit through, and it stars three of China's top comedians, Xu Zheng, Huang Bo and Wang Baoqiang. It is also Xu's directorial debut.

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