HONG KONG - Already a global hit, James Cameron's "Avatar" raced to a $4.8 million first day in populous China, with a publicist predicting the sci-fi blockbuster will set a new Chinese box office record.
"Avatar" raked in 33.03 million Chinese yuan ($4.8 million) on Monday, in a 3-D, 2-D and IMAX joint release, Weng Li, spokesman for state-run film importer China Film Group told The Associated Press in a phone interview on Wednesday.
Weng called the result a strong showing but wasn't sure if it was a first-day record. The modern benchmark for a hit in China is 100 million yuan ($14.6 million), and "Avatar" is on track to easily pass that mark in several days.
But the publicist said the story of aliens on a foreign planet fending off American colonizers is set for even greater box office heights, predicting it will break the all-time box office record recently set by another Hollywood production, "2012." That disaster film had made 460 million yuan ($67.3 million) as of Dec. 23.
Weng said "Avatar" could make 500 million yuan ($73.2 million).
"I think it has very good momentum. I think it should break the '2012' record," he said.
The strong results on Monday came despite heavy snowfall Sunday in the Chinese capital Beijing, a major movie market.
Cameron is already a box office darling in China, with his last movie "Titanic" pulling in a then-unprecedented 360 million yuan in 1998 — a record that stood until last year, when it was broken by "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" and "2012." The Hollywood director also promoted "Avatar" in person in Beijing last month.