The Korean Film Council (KOFIC) recently released official box office statistics for the first half of 2012, revealing that its 82.7 million admissions set a record for biannual ticket sales. This is a whopping 21% increase from 2011’s first half numbers. The previous record was just over 71 million admissions, which was set during the first half of 2006, the first year such statistics were officially kept.
Overall, this amounted to Korean films accounting for 53.5% of the total first half box office gross of KRW 639 billion (USD $561 million). US films came in second with 41.3% followed by European films with 3.6%, Japanese films 0.7% and Chinese films 0.3%. Of the same first half gross,
CJ E&M topped all distributors with 21.5%, followed by Sony Pictures Buena Vista International Korea (18.1%),
Lotte Entertainment (16%),
N.E.W. (14.1%) and
Showbox Mediaplex (9.4%).
KOFIC noted that middle-aged moviegoers have been particularly prevalent in 2012. That nearly all of the Korean films populating the top ten list thus far have older casts and/or nostalgic settings has been duly addressed by critics both domestic and international. <Nameless Gangster>, for example, is concerned with a period of government reform during the military rule of the 1980’s and 1990’s, and <Architecture 101> jumps back and forth between a couple’s college romance in early 1990’s and their surprise reunion in the present day.