Hollywood has effectively milked the Chinese theatrical market for all that it was worth; audiences in the Middle Kingdom mainly watch local movies these days. Hollywood movies can still break through on occasion, but this is getting rarer by the year. There was a solid, decade-long period, however, during which American films would often gross more in China than in North America. Warcraft, for instance, made more than $225 million in China alone; the film’s total global haul stood at around $430 million. Furious 7, the highest-grossing installment of the Fast & Furious franchise, made nearly $400 million in China. The one movie that benefited greatly from a thriving Chinese market was Guillermo del Toro‘s first big-budget feature, Pacific Rim.
The film barely crawled past the $100 million mark domestically, but it was able to generate $111 million in the Middle Kingdom. In fact, its strong performance in China was what compelled Legendary Pictures to push ahead with a sequel. However, the production outfit switched distribution deals between the two movies, moving from Warner Bros. for the first film to Universal for Pacific Rim Uprising. Del Toro chose not to return for the sequel, even though he had dossiers of data on the world he’d created. The directorial duties were handed over, instead, to Steven S. DeKnight, who was a key creative force behind the popular television series Spartacus and Daredevil.
Here’s When You Can Watch ‘Pacific Rim: Uprising’ on HBO Max
Pacific Rim Uprising featured an all-new cast that included John Boyega, Cailee Spaeny, Scott Eastwood, and Adria Arjona. The movie also featured Chinese actors Jing Tian and Zhang Jin. The move made sense, and the sequel managed to gross $100 million in China. But it underperformed virtually everywhere else, grossing just $60 million domestically and around $291 million worldwide against a reported budget of more than $150 million. The movie now holds a 42% score on the aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, “Pacific Rim: Uprising won’t win any points for subtlety or originality, but it delivers enough of the rock ’em-sock ’em robots-vs.-kaiju thrills that fans of the original will be looking for.” The movie will be made available to stream domestically on HBO Max from July 17. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
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March 23, 2018
- Runtime
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111 minutes
- Director
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Steven S. DeKnight
- Writers
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Emily Carmichael, Kira Snyder, Steven S. DeKnight, T.S. Nowlin, Travis Beacham
- Producers
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Guillermo del Toro, Jon Jashni, Mary Parent, Cale Boyter, Thomas Tull, Femi Oguns


















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