Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.

This study examines the theatrical film import choices of individual countries over nine country production sources, namely the US, Italy, France, UK, India, Russia, Germany, Japan and Hong Kong. An empirical model consisting of measures of cinema market scale, cultural distance, linguistic similar...

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Main Author: Sim, Clarice Chwei Lin.
Other Authors: Fu, Wayne Wei-Jen
Format: Final Year Project
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/1206
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-12062019-12-10T13:17:49Z Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources. Sim, Clarice Chwei Lin. Fu, Wayne Wei-Jen Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::Motion pictures and films This study examines the theatrical film import choices of individual countries over nine country production sources, namely the US, Italy, France, UK, India, Russia, Germany, Japan and Hong Kong. An empirical model consisting of measures of cinema market scale, cultural distance, linguistic similarity and geographic proximity is devised to explain the quantities of movies imported by countries over a range of export sources. Film import data of numerous countries, from 1970 to 1999, are drawn from the UNESCO statistical databank and subject to regression analysis. Various regression models are executed using different sets of film import data, which contain, respectively, the 1997 importer-country cross-section and a longitudinal set comprising 14 years’ importer-country cross-sections. The various regression analyses show that the frequency of film imports by an importing country from a production source significantly increases in the exporter’s domestic cinema economy and the importer’s affluence level. Likewise, a decrease in the cultural distance and the sharing of a common language between traders intensifies film import quantities, while locational adjacency reduces the level of film imports from an exporter. A time trend examination shows that global film flow has decreased in terms of the number of films over the years. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2008-09-10T07:15:24Z 2008-09-10T07:15:24Z 2007 2007 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/1206 Nanyang Technological University application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::Motion pictures and films
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::Motion pictures and films
Sim, Clarice Chwei Lin.
Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.
description This study examines the theatrical film import choices of individual countries over nine country production sources, namely the US, Italy, France, UK, India, Russia, Germany, Japan and Hong Kong. An empirical model consisting of measures of cinema market scale, cultural distance, linguistic similarity and geographic proximity is devised to explain the quantities of movies imported by countries over a range of export sources. Film import data of numerous countries, from 1970 to 1999, are drawn from the UNESCO statistical databank and subject to regression analysis. Various regression models are executed using different sets of film import data, which contain, respectively, the 1997 importer-country cross-section and a longitudinal set comprising 14 years’ importer-country cross-sections. The various regression analyses show that the frequency of film imports by an importing country from a production source significantly increases in the exporter’s domestic cinema economy and the importer’s affluence level. Likewise, a decrease in the cultural distance and the sharing of a common language between traders intensifies film import quantities, while locational adjacency reduces the level of film imports from an exporter. A time trend examination shows that global film flow has decreased in terms of the number of films over the years.
author2 Fu, Wayne Wei-Jen
author_facet Fu, Wayne Wei-Jen
Sim, Clarice Chwei Lin.
format Final Year Project
author Sim, Clarice Chwei Lin.
author_sort Sim, Clarice Chwei Lin.
title Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.
title_short Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.
title_full Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.
title_fullStr Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.
title_full_unstemmed Why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.
title_sort why do we watch what we watch? explaining film import choices of invidual countries among different production sources.
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/1206
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