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Harry Potter 4K remaster hits Shanghai Film Festival as cinemas reopen in China

  • After six months of closure, cinemas finally reopen in China with Hollywood films Coco and The Pursuit of Happyness
  • Showings for older films at the Shanghai International Film Festival quickly sold out

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Staff members spray disinfectant at a theatre on May 12 as it prepares to reopen in Yantai, a city in China's eastern Shandong province. Photo: AFP

After being closed for half a year because of the Covid-19 pandemic, China’s cinemas are finally reopening. The nation’s moviegoers are overjoyed despite the fact that they’ll mostly just be able to watch films that first released years ago.

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Among the anticipated re-releases are all eight Harry Potter films. Theatres in Shanghai will be showing the films remastered in 4K for the Shanghai International Film Festival, which starts July 25.

Each instalment is getting two showings, but it seems that’s not enough. Tickets sold out instantly, causing many people to complain on social media. Some said they’d be willing to pay more than the original price to get a ticket.

“Looking for a ticket of any time for Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, [will] accept price raised within 500 yuan (US$71),” one user wrote on Weibo, ending the post with crying emojis.

Tickets for most other films also sold out quickly, the film festival’s ticketing platform Taopiaopiao shows. The festival includes a line-up of films by Italian director Federico Fellini and French New Wave director Claude Chabrol, among a variety of other international and domestic films.

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(South China Morning Post is owned by Alibaba, which operates Taopiaopiao.)

Tickets to film festivals in China have always been difficult to get. But grabbing tickets could be especially difficult this year given government restrictions on reopening theatres. The China Film Administration is requiring cinemas to cap capacity at 30 per cent, and the number of screenings is now half the normal volume. On top of that, theatres have also been told to avoid selling snacks and drinks “in general,” which could be a big financial blow if strictly followed.

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