Illustrated in two bar charts are the percentages of four kinds of movies released and their ticket sales in 1996 and 2000.
As can be inferred from the charts, drama and comedy were the most popular genres of films in both mentioned sectors. Besides, there were upward trajectories in the rate of consumption of drama, comedy and fantasy movies, while a contrast tendency emerged in romance over surveyed period.
A closer examination reveals that over 4 years, the rate of drama films production increased significantly from 25% to 35%, hitting the zenith of movies’ creation. Meanwhile, the 1:4 ratio was shown in the proportion of romantic and comedy films released in 1996, with the former staying unchanged at 5% and the latter ascending to 5% higher after 4 years. During the reported course of time, the percentage of publicized fantasy movies grew from 13% to more than 15%.
Regarding the remaining bar chart, standing at 20% in 1996, the rate of comedy tickets sold rose to 24%, reaching a peak 4 years later. Following comedy was drama movies, which possessed around 15% of the ticket consumption over a 4-year period. While the percentage of fantasy films ticket sales observed an upward inclination of 10%, a contrast propensity emerged in that of romance, which decreased from 10% to a quarter over the period.
