- American studios have stopped releasing new films in
Russia . - As a result, movie theaters have been rerunning old
Hollywood blockbusters and Chinese action films.
Nearly a decade after it was released, "The
Sweeping international sanctions, boycotts, and a corporate exodus are hitting Russia's consumer
The situation is so bad that the hottest movie in Russia in late May was the "The Wolf of Wall Street," according to The Wall Street Journal. The 2013 Martin Scorsese movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio was about excess and corruption on Wall Street.
Attendance at one chain of movie theaters in Russia has fallen 70% to 80% since the country invaded
"We will be lucky if we make it till autumn without shutting down," the manager of a popular movie theater told the Guardian. "People simply don't want to go to see 'The Wolf of Wall Street' for the fifth time."
Overall, Russia's economy appears to be holding up. The commodity powerhouse could still rake in $800 million a day from oil and gas alone this year, Bloomberg Economics reported this week. But reports also show Russian consumers are starting to face challenges in the economic landscape, and
President Vladimir Putin has acknowledged that 2022 will be a difficult year for Russia, but rejected the notion that all of the country's economic issues were linked to the war, which it calls a "special military operation," Reuters reported on May 25.
Putin has hiked the country's minimum wage and pensions by 10% to help counter soaring inflation amid hard-hitting sanctions over the
"The government is trying to soften the blow, but that's all they can do," Ivan Fedyakov, a chief executive at St. Petersburg-based consulting firm INFOLine, told the Journal. "They cannot reverse the situation, so we will inevitably see an economic slowdown, a reduction in consumer spending, and a general worsening of most economic indicators."
In April, the World Bank said the Russian economy is expected to contract 11.2% in 2022, marking its worst economic contraction in three decades since the collapse of the Soviet Union.