'Back to the Past' film breaks Hong Kong Chinese opening record

The historical sci-fi action film 'Back to the Past,' starring Louis Koo and Raymond Lam, earned HK$10.91 million on its opening day, setting a record for Chinese films in Hong Kong. This follows a dismal 2025 for the local box office, which fell to a 14-year low. The film ranks second overall, behind only 2019's 'Avengers: Endgame'.

The historical science fiction action film 'Back to the Past,' starring actors Louis Koo Tin-lok and Raymond Lam Fung, broke the opening-day record for a Chinese film in Hong Kong despite a gloomy box office in 2025. It grossed HK$10.91 million on its debut Wednesday, the highest first-day performance for local or Chinese films and number two on the all-time list behind 'Avengers: Endgame,' which recorded HK$20.9 million in 2019.

Local takings sank to a 14-year low of HK$1.13 billion (US$145.2 million) in 2025, down from the previous year amid a wave of cinema shutdowns, according to data from industry body Hong Kong Box Office Limited released on Friday. Last year's top performers, both local and foreign, were animated movies.

"As the film is still being screened, we hope the results will reach a new high," the box office company said.

The special effects-driven action adventure is based on the 2001 TVB drama series 'A Step into the Past,' which featured a similar cast including Koo and actresses such as Jessica Hester Hsuan and Sonija Kwok Sin-nei. The film and television drama are adapted from Huang Yi's novel, but the movie picks up where the TV adaptation left off about 20 years ago, set in the Qin dynasty.

This success signals a potential boost for Hong Kong's entertainment sector after a challenging period.

مقالات ذات صلة

Crowds celebrating outside a Seoul cinema as 'The King's Warden' hits 10 million admissions, first Korean film in two years.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

'The King's Warden' hits 10 million admissions, first in two years

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Korean historical film 'The King's Warden' has surpassed 10 million admissions just over a month after its release, marking the first such achievement for any film, domestic or foreign, in two years. Amid challenges from streaming platforms drawing audiences away from theaters, this milestone offers a rare boost to the Korean cinema industry. Director Jang Hang-jun expressed happiness and caution at the success.

Hong Kong cinemas earned HK$25.93 million (US$3.31 million) over the first four days of Easter—from Good Friday to Monday—doubling the HK$12.75 million from the same period in 2025, despite a resident exodus. The Immigration Department reported 2.13 million outbound trips and 1.81 million inbound trips during that time, for a net outflow of 319,173. Hong Kong Box Office Limited attributed the surge to critically acclaimed films drawing families.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The film Scare Out, directed by acclaimed Zhang Yimou and supported by China's intelligence services, has emerged as one of the most popular movies over Lunar New Year, grossing 483 million yuan in its first three days.

Chinese filmmaker Bi Gan is developing a new sci-fi drama titled Resurrection, with filming set to begin before the end of the year. The project reunites him with key collaborators from his previous works and stars Shu Qi and Jackson Yee. It follows his acclaimed features Kaili Blues and Long Day’s Journey into Night.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Racing comedy Pegasus 3 held the top spot at the China box office for the March 13-15 weekend, earning $10.9 million. Sony's animated GOAT debuted in fourth place with $3.1 million. Overall weekend grosses reached $33.5 million.

The Korean historical film 'The King's Warden' has surpassed 11 million viewers on its 33rd day of release, just two days after hitting 10 million. Distributor Showbox reported a cumulative 11.17 million admissions as of March 8, 2026, following its February 4 debut.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The historical film The King's Warden has surpassed 7 million cumulative admissions in the domestic box office. Data from the Korean Film Council showed it drew 7.01 million moviegoers as of Friday since its release on February 4. This exceeds its break-even point of about 2.6 million by more than double.

 

 

 

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