The bar chart compares five countries in terms of the number of movies they produced in 2007, 2008, and 2009.
Overall, film production was heavily dominated by countries A and B, whereas countries C, D, and E manufactured significantly fewer movies. It is also notable that while country A remained the largest producer despite a late decline, country B and country C exhibited upward trends.
Among the high-output nations, country A initially led the chart, with its film production stabilizing at around 88 movies in both 2007 and 2008, before dropping moderately to 80 in 2009. Conversely, country B started lower at 50 films in 2007, experienced a marginal rise to 53 in 2008, and then experienced a dramatic surge to 70 by the end of the period, narrowing the gap with country A.
A completely different pattern was seen in the remaining three countries, where annual film counts never exceeded 20. Country C’s output grew steadily, doubling from just under 10 films in 2007 to roughly 20 in 2009, overtaking country D to become the third-largest producer. Meanwhile, country D’s production fluctuated, dipping from 15 films to 10 in 2008 before returning to its original level in 2009. In contrast to these shifts, country E’s movie production showed no change, stagnating at exactly 10 films across all three years.
