The two-time Oscar winner said executives in the world’s second economy used to rely on him as a bridge to Hollywood, but the newly-confident Chinese film industry no longer finds it necessary.
“It’s huge, it’s going to be bigger in a few years,” the 62-year-old told reporters on the red carpet at the glitzy BAFTA Britannia Awards in Beverly Hills.
“In a few years it’s probably going to be bigger [than the US] and then in the years to come a lot bigger.
“They’ve got many people and, most importantly, film has been lacking in the past in the culture, so it’s still fresh.”
PricewaterhouseCoopers projects China’s box office will rise from US$4.3 billion in 2014 to US$8.9 billion in 2019, outstripping the US.
Hollywood studios have been looking to capitalise on the burgeoning market through partnerships with Chinese companies.
Meanwhile, Beijing has ambitions to increase China’s “soft power”, unleashing a wave of Chinese money into Hollywood.
Real estate developer turned media conglomerate Wanda bought Jurassic World creator Legendary Entertainment for US$3.5 billion earlier this year.
Wanda, which snapped up US movie theatre chain AMC in 2012 for US$2.6 billion, announced last month it would invest in movies produced by Sony Pictures, its first deal with one of Hollywood’s so-called “Big Six” studios.
Lee was the first Asian ever to win an Oscar for directing in 2006 for gay cowboy movie Brokeback Mountain.
He went on to win again for 2012’s Life of Pi.
He was at the BAFTA LA ceremony, which celebrates the contribution of Hollywood talent and British entertainers, to receive the John Schlesinger Britannia Award for excellence in directing.
Source: South China Morning Post