Cinema City Enterprises

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Cinema City Enterprises Co.
IndustryEntertainment
Founded1979 (as Warriors Film Company)
FounderRaymond Wong
Karl Maka
Dean Shek
Defunct1991
FateRenamed to Mandarin Films
Headquarters,
ProductsMotion pictures

Cinema City Enterprises Ltd (In Chinese 新藝城企業有限公司) also known as Cinema Capital Entertainment and Cinema City Entertainment, formerly Cinema City and Films Co. was a company that specialized in Hong Kong Cinema. The company had a small catalogue of only 65 movies. Their library covers genres including drama, comedy, horror.[1]

The company was established in 1979 by actors Raymond Wong, Karl Maka and Dean Shek. The company was successful throughout the 80's, but went into financial trouble around the early 90's. Their last movie was "Blue Lightning" in 1991, produced shortly before the company shut down. They were known for producing films such as A Better Tomorrow.

History[]

In 1970, Warriors Film Company was founded by comedians Raymond Wong, Karl Maka, and Dean Shek. They then released their first two films, which were called Crazy Partner in 1979, and Crazy Crooks in 1980.[2] In 1980, Warriors Film Company was renamed to Cinema City. Tsui Hark and Raymond Chow made movies like All The Wrong Clues For The Right Solution and Beware of Pickpockets. In the 1980s, Cinema City was invested into by Golden Princess Amusement Co. Ltd. Because of this, they teamed up to eventually become the third biggest force in Hong Kong Cinema, competing with Shaw Brothers and Golden Harvest for nearly a decade.[3]

However, as Cinema City's productions slowed down, Golden Princess formed their own production company.[4] The studio ran into some financial troubles around the early '90s, and attempts to fully revive it were unsuccessful, leaving some spin-off companies like Cinema City Enterprises/Cinema Capital Entertainment and Cinema City Entertainment. Cinema City went defunct because of this in 1991. Only Raymond Wong remained to continue making movies as Mandarin Films Limited since 1992 (later Pegasus Motion Pictures and Mandarin Motion Pictures).[5]

List of films[]

1979[]

1980[]

1981[]

1982[]

1983[]

1984[]

1985[]

1986[]

1987[]

1988[]

1989[]

1990[]

1991[]

References[]

  1. ^ "CINEMA CITY & FILMS CO. : FILMOGRAPHY". hkcinemagic.com. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
  2. ^ "Cinema City (Hong Kong) - CLG Wiki". closinglogosgroup.miraheze.org. Retrieved 2021-03-06.
  3. ^ , Wikipedia, 2021-03-06, retrieved 2021-03-06
  4. ^ , Wikipedia, 2021-03-06, retrieved 2021-03-06
  5. ^ "Cinema City (Hong Kong) - CLG Wiki". closinglogosgroup.miraheze.org. Retrieved 2021-03-05.

External links[]

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