Archive for November, 2006
Shah Rukh Khan: All play and no work ‘Chak De’
Nov 29th
Source: ‘Times Of India’ Image Source: krisbdream
Here are some exclusive photos of Shah Rukh Khan in “Chak De“
Popularity: 8% [?]
This was the best Sanjay Dutt could have hoped for
Nov 29th
Indo-Asian News Service
New Delhi, (IANS) A month before special judge P.D. Kode pronounced Bollywood’s aging macho star Sanjay Dutt guilty of possessing arms, the 47-year-old celebrity stoically maintained in a television interview that he would accept the court’s verdict and was mentally prepared for the worst.
“I will start crying,” he maintained if he was acquitted but will “face it” if the verdict went the other way around. “I have to”, Dutt said.
With Terrorism and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (TADA) court judge Kode delivering a mixed verdict Tuesday – finding him guilty of illegal possession of arms, but absolving him of the charges of the larger conspiracy in the 1993 Mumbai terror bombings that killed 257 people – Dutt must surely be a relieved person.
“After due reasoning during the trial, I did not find him to be a terrorist,” special judge P.D. Kode said.
This is the best Dutt could have bargained for, considering that a conviction under TADA would have virtually snuffed out his film career, sending him back to the cooler in Arthur Jail where he spent 18 long months in 1993-94.
In fact, it is a verdict that should gladden the hearts of the inhabitants of Imperial Heights – the Dutt residence at Pali Hill – who have been on tenterhooks ever since Kode started giving his verdicts in one of the most widely anticipated trials in the country’s history in September.
His ebullient co-star in the blockbuster “Lage Raho Munnabhai”, Arshad Warsi, succinctly summed the verdict.
Even his sister, Congress MP Priya Dutt, who took a while understanding the full impact of verdict, was visibly reassured.
“I am happy the court has not found him a terrorist. If my father (Sunil Dutt) was alive today, he would quietly be crying in a corner,” she said.
Dutt, who claims that he has not been able to work for the last three months and was unable to concentrate because of the verdict, will agree that his frequent visits to the Siddhivinayak temple have been half-answered.
With an estimated Rs.1.5 billion riding on him for movies that are still under production and many other productions on the anvil, Dutt, for the moment, can walk out a free man till Dec 19 when he is on the extended bail.
What do you think of this verdict? Comment below …
Popularity: 8% [?]
Bachchan family & Aishwarya Rai offer prayers in Varanasi … SRK to host KBC
Nov 29th
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Meanwhile SRK fans can rejoice. Shahrukh Khan, the Badshah of Bollywood, has taken over from Big B, the Shahenshah of Bollywood, to host the popular TV game show Kaun Banega Crorepati…
Do Abhishek and Aishwarya make the ultimate Bollywood power couple? Comment below …
Popularity: 8% [?]
Celebrity Interview: Aishwarya Rai
Nov 29th
By IndiaFM News Bureau
We hear you are playing a negative role in Dhoom 2, what was it like and what was the rationale behind taking on this role with negative shades.
Firstly all the talk on a lot of aspects of Dhoom and my character in the film. I guess assumptions are fine, because it definitely keeps the curiosity picking and the audience out there wondering, how much truth there is to it, so I am wondering whether at this point in time I should shed more light or let the audience go discover for themselves in the theatres. Speculation has been aplenty right from the time we starting filming, so it’s all a lot of assumptions. Slating or slotting the characters already I don’t think should be done, because I will not define my character as negative or positive for that matter because she’s a live wire in the film and with a character that’s just typically her, when you discover Sunehri you will find that she’s just a singular individual, it will take you a while to even figure her out and that was the idea in the way we agreed that I perform her, where you will not be able to slot her, she completely throws you. It was definitely exciting for me to discover and deliver Sunehri simply because in a given scene, while having relatively regular pieces of conversation within that its layered, in a single moment she’s striking a conversation, in a single moment she exudes excitement, almost hero worship to Mr A, in the next second she’s turning on an attitude and challenging him, almost reckoning to be an equal, so in that sense, just like Mr A takes the audience a while to figure out, so does Sunehri. So thereby when I say performing Sunehri was defined in my mind, this is what I mean by etching her out, that there were so many little little aspects that it felt very important in creating her in terms of content apart from of course the visual impact and that is something all the characters we all definitely focused on, as something we brought to the table as a team from director down to the stylist.
A couple of them, as would go with an action film and with safety first being the mantra always in every film set and that isn’t anything new, its common knowledge, within the film fraternity as well as the audience. But nevertheless a lot of the work was something that we as a team of actors and technicians did push ourselves for, to experience the adrenaline rush first person because that’s what makes it super exciting in terms of what you deliver and also in terms of what the audience gets to actually experience on screen when they see the artist/ actor in person, pushing themselves beyond the norm. The high point probably was actually at Orabi Gorge, where we had the jump, there’s this one moment where Hrithik’s character Aryan challenges Sunehri, (that’s me) in the film to jump, given the premise of the scene which when you see you will enjoy it, and she takes a beat and goes for it and so does he and you see a glimpse of that in the promos. That was a trip, it was an absolute high, and never in my life have I experienced just literally jumping off the edge, I had to actually do that, of course they looked after our safety, and there is a bungee that we are connected to in person as well, even in the moment on screen, but to actually do this literally just jumping straight foot first like off a diving board, was fantastic. Even when you are actually hauled up, just after a take, when you’ve spent it out there, it was, quite a moment for both Hrithik and me, because just next us, there was a trickle of a waterfall so we were actually seeing the water drops just literally going down in reality what visually we refer to as slow motion, literally the drops were going down forever.
This is your first film with Hrithik and Bipasha, how was the experience of working with them?
Superlative, I mean it really has been fantastic, fun just like the rest of the team, be it Abhishek, Uday, I think the fact that the 3 of them have known each other since childhood, they constantly share their anecdotes which just make you feel that you belong to those bunch of kids who went to those Birthday parties, or hung out in their schooling years, you just felt that you were part of the inner circle, because it was so wonderful to see them spontaneously and at the most unexpected moments, have a recollection and relive it, made you feel you were there as well and the brief moments that I got to share with Bipasha, I must say she’s a real cool girl, and I am glad we are a team on this film, all of us, because the camaraderie was genuine, the spirit was fab and the energy was about being team players, and that’s something that everybody brought to the table very professionally while on the job and aside it just kept the energy what it should be, on a film like this, very naturally. So we had a blast while making the film, solely zeroing on my specific co-star for the film, that is my pair that’s Hrithik, like he himself was saying that its great that he also had eased up a lot and he says that generally, not just from this film, we had a world tour and a commercial together and I guess both of us had been psyched by perception about being extremely professional, being very detailed, almost obsessive about our work, each of us had been told that about the other, but when we have worked together, I can safely say that, I think that’s a given. In any committed passionate professional would be that detailed for what they bring to the job, and I relate to that, so I don’t think there’s any need to make much ado about it. It’s fairly natural to work that hard or be that much of a perfectionist on the job.
What do you think of the music of Dhoom 2 as compared to Dhoom?
I would never make comparisons, because the fact is that Dhoom was a super success and it was a signature tune at that point in time, in every club, car, bikes, a raging success, and I am glad that Dhoom 2 was received with equal if not more responsive. It has been superlative again and very very positive, and I think it was very clever, to have the first promo go on air with KANK, it was very gratifying for the whole team to have received such a tremendous response, where the audience was already in Dhoom 2 while watching the movie! This is something we heard in first person, we all received it on text and as a team we were overjoyed. It was very very good to know that people were so looking forward to this film, with so much anticipation, we’ve had a blast making it, so we can’t wait to share it with our audiences.
Did you watch Dhoom and what did you think of the film?
It’s evident that because at that point it was definitely a cluster breaker. The identity is youth but I take it as just going by the success, they become family experiences that kids enjoy, parents go the entire family goes and they just have a good time, and you come away with an adrenaline rush. I sincerely believe that age is a state of the mind, even 20 years later I will say this. And everybody has been there done that or has aspired to be there do that and have all these experiences in person, if not, cinema is the perfect dream world, the closest thing to experiencing any moment in person. So it was good to know that Dhoom was well embraced, so when approached with the idea of Dhoom 2 touted as a sequel, but I always call it yet it is a brilliant idea, and Adi knew what he was doing when he came up with this idea, going by the response. We were very very happy to be on team, its really funny, how 20,000 ideas fly around within the team of course, about the next Dhoom and the next Dhoom, and the next Dhoom, so it obviously a very clever franchise. At the end of the day it’s a fab experience for the team as well as for the audiences. It’s like college will always be an experience everybody cherishes and the pulse and pace of this movie, is one that is universally enjoyed.
You have so many releases coming up, what makes Dhoom 2 special?
It’s definitely a first in my career and it’s interesting it’s happened in the 10th year of my film career. Of course that’s by choice, its not a moment if I may say so, a moment I have been waiting for to happen to me, in the sense that there have been offers to do roles in the western mode but I have been very choosy, very evident in the choice of films that I have done and made so far. This was a tough offer to resist, because I thought it was perfect, if this was what I wanted to bring on board, this was the perfect premise to do so. So in terms of playing an out and out westernized character, so obviously youth oriented and trendsetting, so obviously fashionable and fun, but at the same time racy, evidently hot and super cool, this was the perfect premise to do so, so yes I chose to project the way I never have before on this film, because I felt it seemed so natural and at ease and it went with the language of the film. If you do find Sunehri sexy at every given point, Sunehri just is, she isn’t someone who is working to turn it on in every frame, unless she needs to as a character, while interacting with another character. So I thought it was great where, wearing shorts or short skirts, dressing a certain way was just natural to the character, it wasn’t about trying to work it on celluloid. I don’t need to resort to tactics, to get attention, thank you very much, I have more than my fair share of it even in my saris! It’s not something I needed to explore for the sake of the apparent, it was a definite character created, and it’s just the language of the entire film and of all the characters. We have shot in Rio, where it was only natural to be dressed a certain way, we have shot in South Africa, yes also in Mumbai, but while interacting with the characters it’s all a natural progression of the celluloid theme. Hence the comfort level.
What was the best moment during the course of shooting the film?
The film as a whole, but like I say apart from the part of the absolute thrill of working on celluloid, I must confess, I thoroughly enjoyed the team, I enjoyed the gang, off-screen as well, because like I just shared with you earlier, that it was so nice that everybody was just being, it was the whole team. There were a lot of laughs, a lot of fun. There has been a lot of talk about the fitness regime, something that I only explored very honestly for a month to 5 weeks before we started the film, then it has only been my schedules throughout the last year, my different films I ‘ve been working on, I didn’t get a chance really focus on the fitness. So for all the talk in the media, this is the truth, it was just 4-5 weeks last year before we started. Then after making Guru, both Abhishek and me had to put on weight for Mani’s film, so we resumed the schedule, I suggested we take Deepika ( the fitness instructor) with us because we were doing the action part of the film, and whatever little bit we could do, which was barely 2 weeks, while filming, but the fun part was that everybody would be in the gym, I mean everybody not just the actors. And it was fun because while we would all try to get into a bit of a routine, I think we were just having so much fun hanging around, that we’d be just about that sincere and then the next plan to go out to dinner, which we would all do very happily and try and hold on to the myths that if I gorge now it will show 20 days later, so that we are on safe turf, it was like a college /road trip, I’d say this film, where while we were working in all sincerity but it was all so much fun, on set and after hours. I think that is by far the best memory the best is everything about D2 is fabulous while making it, but I think we’ve come away being really good friends, time and tide will be able to define the strength of the friendship but nevertheless it definitely went beyond being co-stars, and its something that I really cherish and hold dear to my heart.
How did you enjoy shooting on location in South Africa and a message for your fans there?
South Africa incidentally has a home turf kind of significance in my life, because yes, I did win my title in Sun City of Johannesburg, and I have been there a couple of times, not that often, but a couple of times, my work took me back there, to Cape Town to film Dil Ka Rishta extensively which was again a family experience, so my memories are very very warm, and people have been extremely loving and its something that a lot of my film fraternity really cherish and enjoy with the people of South Africa. Even the year I was giving up the title, when Amitji was on board the panel of the jury, at the pageant, it was overwhelming to see the strength with which our people had descended to Sun City and the applause that he was rendered just took the entire pageant’s breath away because it was so good to see, and such an awakening to the rest of the world to recognize, how passionate our people are about our cinema, and the members of our film fraternity, and the love that they are so generous with. Hence I personally share a very warm bond with our audience out there and I can just extend a heartfelt thank you, for their love and blessings and good wishes all through my career and it was great fun now coming back there and shooting for Dhoom 2, a fun experience for us and again with a lot of very fond memories, I am glad that every time I have come there and worked or filmed, or participated in a pageant, I have come away with super success and a lot of love and great memories, so I guess that’s a good sign.
Did you do any kind of special preparation for this role?
Like I said one was the visual was very imperative, as a pre- requisite, its something we as a team agreed we definitely would work on, as I do work on every film, here it zeroed in on the physical appearance in terms of fitness, and it was a body language and a body type that I hadn’t brought to celluloid before, and since I was going to dress a certain way, I needed to just be the person who wore those clothes, very naturally and not because it was an element of worked on excitement, I am glad that it has turned out exciting, that wasn’t the reason for the costume. People who have well toned bodies as we look around, naturally dress a certain way, when you’ve really worked on your midriff you see that they are happy to wear shorter tops, when you have worked on your legs, they naturally wear short skirts, not because they need to show their legs but they feel natural and comfortable in it. So that was a body type that I was determined to work on, and I was very glad to discover that the first time in my life that I have got down to working out, my body responds very quickly and its very reassuring to know that, so with a little bit of focused time and work it was good to know that we can achieve it, and bring that on board. In terms of the styling, working with Anaita, whom I worked with several times in my career specially in my modeling world, or in the fashion magazine assignments, we’ve worked many times before, so she knows me, my body type, my aesthetics, my comfort, and so we worked on it together very easily and she’s done a fantastic job, because that’s what again people right from on the set and now the audience have begun to identify. The clothing feels like me, it feels natural even if it means seeing me for the first time in the western mould. It doesn’t seem uncomfortable, it doesn’t seem unnatural, and that’s something Anaita knows about me, so we worked on it together and arrived at Sunehri. We decided that we would go with a different hand in terms of makeup and hair styling because that again would bring a newness to board, so I worked with Subbu who also I have known from my advertising, and modeling experience, though this was the first film we were working on together. So we did one day of a look shoot as in a test with my dear friend Farooque and once we arrived at Sunehri, there she was bang on ready to go on set. Obviously the final verdict is the nod from Adi, it was fun to arrive at her in terms of the visual. In terms of preparation to characterization, we were clear again as a team as I said before that we would create a character, while we knew that the visual would be the initial head turner, we needed to create someone who would be, specifically a character from this franchise. Also it has worked out really well, fortunately or coincidentally that currently I am having so many different releases, Umrao Jaan, Dhoom 2 and Guru, and ahead there’s Provoked and Last Legion, it’s great that not only visually we have arrived at a specific character, but also in terms of her mannerisms her personality is very very specific and can be identified as someone who belongs solely to this film.
What next? Can we expect to see you doing some more action films in the international front?
Well I started in fact just pre Dhoom 2 I made Last Legion, which was definitely action not contemporary though and I experienced sword fighting and I am a warrior in that film, so I completed that movie before I started Dhoom, so that would technically be my first experience in the action genre, but it wasn’t in the contemporary times, so I am glad that within the year, between last year and now, I have actually got through and tasted action spectrum in Roman times and contemporary biker times and its been a lot of fun, its been a huge adrenaline rush, exactly what I was looking forward to and like I tease I have tasted blood, I can’t wait to have more such experiences because they are really fulfilling and it’s a rush that can’t be explained, but it’s a definite high, that’s the most fantastic part of our job, because we get to experience which probably people just think or dream about, and irrespective of what point in time of your life, to what space you are physically in, where you are, it could from the ridiculous to the superlative in excitement, but the fact is we get to experience life through our film making and I think that’s a blessing.
Popularity: 9% [?]
Celebrity Interview: Hrithik Roshan
Nov 29th
By IndiaFM News Bureau
You saw him rock in Krrish and now be ready to watch him set the screen on fire once again in this year’s most exciting film Dhoom 2. Hrithik Roshan talks about his experiences on working on the most awaited film of the year.
Did you watch Dhoom and what did you think about the film?
Of course I have watched Dhoom and the success of Dhoom creates a very good platform that obviously motivates a sequel, but what really propelled me into doing the film, was the inherent script of Dhoom 2 itself. So that really was my calling card. It was exactly what I was looking for at that time and space. Because I was actually quite bored and stuck at that one end of the spectrum where I was doing this blatant good boy, good son, good brother, good lover kind of role. Though of course they are also quite enjoyable but it was time to take the big leap towards the other end of the spectrum. And what was waiting for me there was Mr A … Aryan, so I am really glad that I got the opportunity..
Did the negative shade to your role excite you?
Everyone’s been talking about your many disguises in the film, without giving anything away, how did it feel to get into so many disguises to con people?
The makeup experts that they brought in from London were truly people with a magic wand. They completely transformed me into other human beings and I cannot express how much fun and how exciting it was to live and be and project another completely different human being that particular day, or days of those shoots. I had the time of my life.
You are stepping into John Abraham’s character which was extremely popular, is that a challenge?
I think every film is a challenge, though Aryan’s character does fit the space of the villain that John’s role was in Dhoom, but its got nothing to do with it whatsoever, it’s a completely different world and I would say that if we’ve gone a notch higher with Dhoom 2, its not satisfying enough, it needs to be 10 notches higher for it to actually make a mark, and that’s what I am hoping for.
What are the kinds of stunts you have done in the film, and how did you prepare for it?
I have done everything in this film that anyone can aspire to do in an action film, be it sand boarding, snow boarding, sky diving, train walking, jumping off a cliff, bikes, cars, everything that you can think of. So I don’t think there’s anything left, I think Dhoom 2 has got it all.
I had no idea what was waiting for me once I was preparing to get into Dhoom 2 and what I realized was that what I had done for Krrish was nothing in comparison. It was asking a lot more of me, so yes of course there was 3 months of roller blading training which I think is the most difficult sport to pick up, and the most dangerous, cause if you fall, you most definitely break a bone. I have never given 3 months of my time, to any training, 3 months just for one sequence, then of course there was snow boarding for which I flew to Dubai and trained myself there in an indoor snow mountain that they have created very fantastically. Then there was walking on the train doing stunts, on and off the train, sand boarding, behind the train, I was actually hooked on to a rope that I was holding onto with my bare palm, with a train at a speed of 60 kms per hour and I was on a sand boarding just skimming behind it on this sand and a little falter here and there and what I would land on was the tracks and at that speed to land on and graze the tracks would spell nothing less than … yes, I have taken a few tumbles and scraped through near death experiences, but came out feeling most exhilarated and alive ever. So it’s been a great experience.
What was it like working with Aishwarya and Bipasha for the first time?
It was a pleasure to work with Aishwarya because she is one of the actresses who thinks about the entirety of the film and not concerned with just her close up or make up or what she is doing in isolation. So its great, to work with actors like that. Her talent is definitely much beyond her looks and her beauty. So it’s been inspiring, engrossing, exciting its been a whole lot of fun. Bipasha is just so casual to be with, you know she is just herself and she’s got no airs and is really easy to be with though I’ve got no scenes with her in the film, but there was a this schedule in Brazil, I think every film you know has this one particular schedule where that becomes memorable because that’s the one in which you all bond, so the Brazil trip while we were there for over a month in Rio, we all bonded. Because of a bit of problems Abhishek, Aishwarya, Bipasha, Uday and I had a lot of time together, so it was great, just walking on the beach, swimming in the ocean. Imagine, Abhishek, Aishwarya, Bipasha, Uday and myself in our costumes swimming in the seas of Rio with not a care in the world because nobody knew us there, was absolutely, phenomenally exhilarating, it was a whole load of fun.
What do you think of the music of Dhoom 2 and how does it compare to music of Dhoom?
As I said again, it’s definitely notches higher but how the audience takes it in is something we have to wait and see, personally I think its one of the greatest music albums in the year and it should definitely make a mark even visually its very stunning. The songs that I have done with Shiamak and Vaibhavi are both tracks that I am very proud of. I have not done many of those in my lifetime, though there is this whole myth of me being this dancing phenomena, but I have not had many dance tracks to my credit. But in this case, I have to and I am very happy with both of them.
You have a very different look in the film. Tell us a little about it.
I really want to say one thing about the look and that is that the true hero of this film is Anaita because what she has done for this film is truly representative of the kind of film Dhoom 2 needs to be. She has brought out the best of every character; especially with Aryan. I think she has outdone herself and for me, it’s been such an exciting leap to just be that grungy relaxed easy going but reflective, very calculating, dexterous agile kind of a person, and the clothes really have helped to bring out and project those aspects of Aryan. He is very proficient in what he does and he is an expert but he’s an individual, and lives like the way he wants to live. It’s almost like he puts 2-3 things together and because its coming out of an individual space, it looks stylish, coz he’s creating his individuality out there. I think that’s what style is about, when you wear and put things together that makes you feel more of yourself, I think that’s what creates an individual outlook and that’s what makes you stand apart from the crowd because it’s individual and not because you are following some kind of trend or fashion verdict. So that’s what Anaita has done and I just left myself completely to her and trusted her completely and what she has done to the film is absolutely outstanding.
You have been part of a successful sequel like Krrish, why do you think it worked and why do you think Dhoom 2 will work as a sequel?
I don’t think sequels work, or films of a certain kind work, I think what works is basically good films and bad films don’t. So if Dhoom 2 is a good sequel, if it’s a good film, which I think it is and not resting on the laurels of Dhoom, by itself it should be a film which should have been made even if there was no Dhoom, and I think that was what worked with Krrish because, it was not resting on the success of Koi Mil Gaya. It took on from there but became a completely different world by itself, and should have been made a film by itself even if there was no Koi Mil Gaya. So this is what sequels should be about, they should not rest on laurels of the previous hit, and that is what Dhoom 2 hopefully will do.
Last time you and Abhishek came together on screen you were friends. This time you are foes, which one is better and why?
We are always friends, Abhishek and I have grown up together and we wish the best for each other. Even working in this film with him, has definitely made me decide one thing, that once in every 2 years I definitely want to do a film with him, because working with him has been very fulfilling, as in he’s a good person and he radiates that, and I am a person who works without any egos and so is Abhishek. He gives his best when he is within a shot and he is all for the scene to work in its entirety and there is a lot of give and take. I love that, love working with actors who go beyond wanting to be the best, wanting to give the best so that the entirety of the scene comes out as the best. So he will think, as much for me as for himself and visa versa, so that is something that I enjoy doing, because it really creates a bond and you actually enjoy the process of putting the film together, which is what your life is actually made up of its those moments that you live for a year or two. How much time do you spend watching the success or the reaction to a films release, a day or two or three but what your life is actually about is the process of actually making these films, and what’s important is to enjoy those moments and I really think that working with Abhishek was one of the most fulfilling journeys of my career.
How was the experience of shooting in South Africa, do you have a message for your fans there?
I love South Africa, its been one of my favourite countries of the world. Also the people there I believe what makes a place beautiful is its people and that rings very true for South Africa. Whenever I went there they are very humble people and very helpful. They respect your space. I have been there on and off and always looked forward to going back to South Africa.
What according to you was the best moment during the shooting of this film?
That’s very hard to say, I don’t think its about one moment or two moments, there were so many, the point is to have a fulfilling day, every time you come back home you should feel fulfilled and that is something that I got out of Dhoom 2 a lot of. I think its one of the most enjoyable films that I have done and I know people say this for every film, but this truly is something that I have reflected on, and have been surprised by my own attachment to this film, because it was supposed to be the joyride and something that I wanted to do for fun because I was doing all these serious cinema films, I wanted to do just something just out of the world and completely let myself out there and have some fun, but it became something that I really got attached with and really discovered depth to it and really enjoyed myself projecting Aryan’s persona.
Uday and Abhishek are childhood friends so what was it like working with them?
Since I have already spoken about Abhishek, I will talk about Uday. Uday and me go back a really really long way. We have done everything together, name it, and the last thing that I thought we would be doing together is facing the camera, so we’ve had a laugh chatting about that fact. Right from the second standard he and I have been together in every single thing that we have done, if there was something that I learnt, he has learnt and if there was something that he was learning, I joined him, whether its karate, computer classes, college, school, tuition, sports everything. So doing a film with him was just an extension of that and really had a great time. He’s a great guy and I wish the best for him. Not many people realize the talent that Uday possesses but me being an actor, that I am and with as much experience and knowledge that I have I think Uday has tremendous potential and its just waiting to come out and prove to the world. It’s already proved a lot with Dhoom, but I think it’s going to go ballistic with Dhoom 2 because he’s done an outstanding job in this film.
What according to you can the audiences look forward to in Dhoom 2?
Its like the words of the song, ‘Dhoom again and come away with me on a rollercoaster ride, so strap yourselves up and get ready for the ride of your life, that’s what Dhoom 2 is about, its to the point, its fast, its exhilarating, it’ll keep you at the edge of your seat, you will not know what has hit you, its one of those popcorn thrillers, so come one, come all, and expect the world!
Popularity: 9% [?]
Future bleak for small-timers in Bollywood
Nov 29th
By Priyanka Khanna, Indo-Asian News Service
New Delhi, Nov 26 (IANS) The trend of mergers and acquisitions sweeping across various industries the world over is redefining business dynamics in the Hindi film trade as well, leaving small-time operators out of action.
While production studios are turning into conglomerates that can make, distribute, market and even exhibit films, the ever-increasing investment required for a movie venture and the paucity of saleable stars are squashing starry dreams of many.
This week by releasing “Dhoom II” on their terms and conditions, the famed and illustrious Yash Raj Films (YRF) movie studio has once again shown that it is all-powerful.
News reports say that YRF demanded a 50 percent share in the first week as against 48 percent, which is the norm. Many distributors who did not give in are left licking their wounds given the staggering box office opening that the film starring Hrithik Roshan, Aishwarya Rai and Abhishek Bachchan has garnered.
YRF had made similar demands for their previous release “Faana” as well. News reports quoted trade analyst Amod Mehra as saying: “It is unethical for any distributor to make outrageous demands. This matter should be dealt with collectively at the association level. Individual demands should not be entertained.”
And then there are some production houses going in for pacts with leading stars and directors for a series of films under their banner. Hrithik, recently, signed a Rs.350 million deal for three films with Adlabs and Akshay Kumar got into a contract with them for four films.
The Anil Ambani company has also signed up director Vipul Shah for eight films at Rs.200 crore and Ram Gopal Varma for 10 films at Rs.100 crore, including the “Sholay” remake and “Sarkar II”.
-*-
All saleable stars are simply out of dates. The situation is exasperating for new entrants and even corporate houses that have big funds and great scripts in hand aren’t getting any stars who have the time.
News reports say that the phenomenon is restricted to Shah Rukh Khan and Aishwarya Rai. “If you plan a film today you will have to wait till 2008 or late 2007 because all top actors are booked,” Vinod Mirani, film trade analyst, said in an interview.
With little time to spare, stars are quoting and getting unheard of prices. After Hrithik’s deal with Adlabs, Venus offering Rs.850 million to Akshay Kumar has made industry folks gasping.
Business-wise, a studio culture is the best bet. It makes movie making more structured and legitimised. And since the number of films will increase annually, it will improve the business average for many production houses.
But in an industry where favouritism is rampant, a handful of all- powerful studios could mean a stalemate in terms of creativity.
-*-
Waiting in the wings are big Hollywood studios that want a share of the action in the country’s bustling film industry, leaving even less for small-timers.
After investing heavily in the local language cinema, including in China, Hollywood studios are looking at India that has a vast network of theatres and production facilities.
Thus, Sony Pictures is co-producing “Sawariya” directed by well- known filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Paramount is keenly eyeing the Indian market and recently one of its top brass, Tom Freston, said his studio was determined to go global and had a lot to offer to India.
“We are restructuring Paramount to a global model. This will include an entry into Bollywood for co-production projects with Indian filmmakers,” said Tom.
Though Hollywood is the world’s most powerful film industry – boasting more than 90 percent of the European market as well as a large share in other movie-going regions – it has barely made a dent in India, with only about four percent of the market.
Industry players say that the box office share of Hollywood films vis-à-vis the local content has declined marginally from about eight percent in 2002-03 to five percent in 2004-05. Secondly, Hollywood studios have largely stuck to distributing films or dubbing them in regional languages to reach a wider audience.
Given this backdrop, Hollywood studios have been toying with the idea of co-producing films in India since 2002 when corporatisation of the Indian film industry came into play.
Twentieth Century Fox was the first to ink a deal with Varma to co- produce three Hindi films in India way back in 2002. The deal, however, fell through as the Hollywood company shut down its operations in India.
For Hollywood studios – with presence in film distribution in India – production is a natural extension. That is where the big moolah is.
Popularity: 8% [?]
James Bond swallows Hindi films!
Nov 29th
By Taran Adarsh, IndiaFM
It started with JURASSIC PARK [1993]. Later, TITANIC [1997], ANACONDA [1997], GODZILLA [1998], THE MUMMY [1999], SPIDER-MAN [2002], SPIDER-MAN 2 [2004], HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE [2005] and KING KONG [2005] posed a threat to Hindi films during their premiere release. In fact, almost every Hindi film in the orbit got eclipsed by their presence.
This week, something similar occurred when CASINO ROYALE, the new James Bond film, thrashed its oppositions in the Indian market.
Barring VIVAH, practically all Hindi films, including the three new releases [REHGUZAR, JANANI, UNNS], were affected by the stupendous start of the new Bond thriller. I haven’t come across a single person who has disliked the new Bond film. The international press as well as the Indian media has showered the film with glowing reviews. And the exuberant praise translated into superb collections all through the weekend.
Sony Pictures, the Hollywood studio that has distributed the Bond film worldwide, has sent a note to this writer about its business in India, which I want to share with the readers…
* Best opening weekend performance for a foreign film in India, surpassing SPIDER-MAN 2’s Rs. 7.8 crores at the box-office. A whopping 92% more!
* Largest opening day for any foreign film in India [Friday, Nov. 17] — Rs. 4.74 crores.
* Highest single-day collection ever for a foreign film in India — Rs. 5.2 crores on Sunday.
* Biggest / Widest ever release for any foreign film in India — 427 prints and 452 screens, shattering the previous record holder, SPIDER-MAN 2’s 327 screens and 304 prints.
* Fastest foreign film in India to cross Rs. 10 crore mark in just 3 days.
The Hollywood studios have realized that India is a strong market and dubbing a keenly-looked-forward-to film in Hindi, Tamil and Telugu versions makes wise business sense. In any case, the investment of the Hollywood studios is limited to the dubbing and promotion expenses and if the domestic buyers lap it up [the Indian distributors acquired CASINO ROYALE for fantastic prices], the studios end up making a cool profit at the end of the day.
In this case, James Bond ne naam bhi kamaya aur daam bhi. What else do you want?
THE ‘SUN’ SHINES AGAIN!
Rajshri and Yash Raj are two production/distribution houses that command tremendous respect in the industry thanks to their path- breaking strategies. With VIVAH, Rajshri has bounced back with renewed vigor. But did they ever falter post MAINE PYAR KIYA? HUM AAPKE HAIN KOUN continues to be one of the biggest money spinners of Hindi cinema. HUM SAATH-SAATH HAIN was a big hit too. MAIN PREM KI DIWANI HOON was written off, but do people know that Rajshri made a neat profit on this one too? Goes to prove yet again that what eventually matters are not hollow praises/star ratings in reviews, but the box-office collections. And Rajshri’s balance sheet continues to be rosy, very rosy!
Yes, HUM PYAR TUMHI SE KAR BAITHE and UUF KYA JAADOO MOHABBAT HAI…!, both directed by ‘outsiders’, didn’t work. So what? VIVAH, a low cost enterprise, should rake in whopping profits for the premier production house. The second week figures are as strong [at some places, better] than the first week. The film continues to be in great shape everywhere.
Suraj re, jalte rehna!
THIS WEEK IN 2005 [Weekend: November 18-20, 2005]
Friday, November 18 witnessed the clash of the Khan brothers. The aggressively-publicized Feroz-Fardeen Khan starrer EK KHILADI EK HASEENA and Akbar Khan’s lavish historical TAJ MAHAL opened on the same date worldwide, but it was a third film altogether — HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE — which opened to a far better response than the two Hindi films, eclipsing the business of the two Hindi films in many circuits. In fact, the collections of the dubbed Hindi version were also far better than those of all Hindi releases, new and old, at several stations.
Surprised, aren’t you? So was the film industry when they realized that HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE [rated as the best movie in the franchise thus far] had embarked on a 90% + start at many screens, while EK KHILADI EK HASEENA was off to a 25%-30% start and TAJ MAHAL was around 10%-15%.
THIS WEEK IN 2004 [Weekend: November 19-21, 2004]
With the industry witnessing no major release, the beneficiaries of an open week were VEER-ZAARA, AITRAAZ and MUGHAL-E-AZAM. Despite mixed reports, VEER-ZAARA continued to hold sway in the second week. The matinee shows were affected at some places, but the business, at most places, was in the range of 85% +, which is exceptional considering the number of prints in circulation and the exorbitant ticket rates.
MUGHAL-E-AZAM had emerged a success story as well, with the evergreen epic going from strength to strength. The number of prints in the second week had been increased, which also indicated the confidence its distributors had in this classic.
AITRAAZ continued its moderate march with 70% collections at multiplexes and according to at least two multiplexes, the weekend in the third week was expected to be strong as well. Moviegoers in metros, especially the youth, were patronizing the film.
Popularity: 10% [?]
Movie Review: Dhoom 2
Nov 29th
By Taran Adarsh, IndiaFM
Cut the crap… Cut the gyan… Let’s come to the point straightway: Is DHOOM 2 as big as its hype? Does it meet the monumental expectations? Or is it a gas balloon with a leak?
Yes, DHOOM 2 works big time and here’s why…
* Very rarely do you come across Hindi films that marry form and content so beautifully. DHOOM 2 is cool, but beneath the sheen there’s substance too.
* Mounted on an extravagant scale, the film is a visual delight. The film travels from one breath-taking locale to another in those 16 reels, often making your jaw drop to your knees thanks to the sweeping impact it makes.
* For any sequel to score high marks, it ought to be embellished with pulse-pounding moments. DHOOM 2 is a hi-octane thriller and the thrills, stunts and pace — vital for any thriller to strike a chord — are sure to keep you on the edge from Scene A to Z.
* Most importantly, DHOOM 2 delivers what it promises: Escapist cinema at its best!
Any hiccups? Not really, but the music could’ve been better. That’s about it!
In terms of business, DHOOM 2 is bound to create dhoom at the ticket window. It’s a box-office triumph all the way. Time for Yash Raj to pop champagne yet again!
Ali’s [Uday Chopra] dream of becoming a police officer has come true. He is now ACP Jai Dixit’s [Abhishek Bachchan] right hand man. Together, they are trying to keep a tight leash on the crime in India. Little do they know what they are going to be up against.
Enter Aryan — Mr. A [Hrithik Roshan]. A hi-tech international thief. After pulling off a series of impossible heists all over the world, his next target is Mumbai, India. The case is given to ACP Jai and Ali. Helping them put the pieces of the puzzle together is ACP Shonali Bose [Bipasha Basu], Jai’s college mate, now a police officer in her own right. For the last two years, Shonali has been tracking these amazing thefts and is now an expert on this thief, who no one has seen.
Once in Mumbai, Mr. A finds his match in Sunehri [Aishwarya Rai], a petty yet clever thief. She makes him an offer he finds very hard to refuse. A partnership! Aryan accepts. And so the game begins, a game of cat and mouse, a game of good v/s bad.
The cops — Jai, Shonali and Ali — are after the robbers — Aryan and Sunehri. From the deserts of Namibia to the backwaters of Goa, the mean streets of Mumbai and the ancient forts of Rajasthan and finally to Rio, Brazil.
DHOOM 2 is modeled on the lines of the chor-police sagas that Hindi films specialized in the 1970s and 1980s. In essence, it’s not a path- breaking/inventive story, but what takes the film to dizzy heights is the sequence of events that unravel at a feverish pace. Right from the start of the film [Hrithik's first heist in Namibia; the robbing of a crown from a moving train] to his next target [robbing a precious diamond from a museum in Mumbai] to the theft in Jamnagar [Hrithik and Ash come face to face for the first time], the film whets your appetite from the word ‘Go’.
If the first hour focuses on the cat-n-mouse game, the second hour changes tracks as it transforms into a love story. While the scenes between Uday and Bipasha [in a dual role] are cute, the ones between Hrithik and Ash build up slowly. The pace drops intermittently in this hour since the thrills are reserved for the penultimate reel, but a number of worthy sequences in this half conceal this tiny blemish.
Note the turning point in the tale — the revolver sequence between Hrithik and Ash and the lip-to-lip kiss that ensues; it’s an outstanding sequence from the writing, execution and performance point of view. The pre-climax — the robbery of man-made gold coins — as also the climax chase are breath-taking as well.
The end is distinctive and will have its share of advocates and adversaries. Yet, in all fairness, it’s one of the highpoints of the sequel. Any scope for the third installment? Oh yes, there is. Don’t be surprised if Abhishek and Uday embark on their third mission. As for the climax shot vis-à-vis John Abraham’s surprise appearance, it’s an unfounded rumor!
DHOOM 2 is director Sanjay Gadhvi’s finest effort so far. The execution of the subject is such, you just can’t help get transported to a world of make-believe. Gadhvi has handled a number of sequences with aplomb. The Hrithik-Ash sequence mentioned above is one of them. The dialogue between Hrithik and Abhishek — after they’ve known each other’s true identities — is another. The final scene of the enterprise [it would be unfair to reveal it here!] is yet another sequence that indicates that the director has done his homework well.
Pritam’s music is fair. Barring the ‘Krazy Kiya Re’ track and the title track [filmed on Hrithik], the score is outright mediocre. However, the saving grace is the vibrant and energetic picturization, which takes the songs to another level. The choreography of the title track by Shiamak Davar is outstanding. Vaibhavi Merchant’s choreography of ‘Krazy Kiya Re’ is admirable as well. Salim-Sulaiman’s background score is highly effective.
DHOOM 2 is peppered with good looking visual effects [Tata Elxsi], besides a stylish décor/look. The action sequences as also the stunts [Allan Amin] do complete justice to the genre and the Indian audiences are bound to gasp with disbelief. Cinematography [Nirav Shah, Vikas Shivraman] is impeccable. The camerawork can easily match international standards. Dialogues [Vijay Krishna Acharya] are wonderful. Costumes [Anaita Shroff Adajania] are upmarket. In fact, the styling of Hrithik and Ash [the tanned look et al] deserves distinction marks.
Hrithik’s casting as the antagonist can be accurately called a masterstroke. He’s the actual star of DHOOM 2, the real scene stealer. In fact, you can’t imagine any other actor enacting the cool robber with such precision. If there’s anyone who’s bound to benefit the maximum from DHOOM 2, it’s Hrithik. No two opinions on that!
Abhishek in DHOOM 2 is what Shashi Kapoor was in Amitabh Bachchan starrers. Important yes, but relegated to the backseat. Abhishek does a fine job nonetheless. Only thing, he needs to take care of his appearance and posture when he’s pitted against someone with a personality like Hrithik.
Aishwarya evolves into a different person in DHOOM 2. Her tanned makeup, her styling, her performance, it’s a different Ash here. It’s a complete departure from what Ash has done in the past. Does it work? Of course, she is in form!
Bipasha is just about okay as the cop, but is lively as the twin sister. Uday irritates at times, but handles a few scenes well. His portions with Bipasha’s twin sister in Rio are sure to bring a smile on your face. Rimi Sen is hardly there.
On the whole, DHOOM 2 is a winner all the way. At the box-office, the film has already embarked on an earth-shattering initial and with multiple shows being conducted at multiplexes [16/18] with inflated ticket rates, the film will set new records in days to come. For Yash Raj, who’ve not only produced but also distributed the film, DHOOM 2 should emerge as one of the biggest hits of their career. Blockbuster!
BollywoodEntertainment.com.au Rating: 3.5
Write your own review on Dhoom 2 the movie! Comment below …
Popularity: 9% [?]
Shah Rukh Khan comes Down Under
Nov 16th
Bollywood’s latest crowned DON. SRK is right now shooting and camping in Australia. “Shahrukh khan is in australia shooting for Yash Chopra’s Chak de which is being directed by Shimit Amin. The film is based on sports and that’s why the main part has been shot in Melbourne and Sydney,” says a unit member. The film marks the return of King Khan to the chopra camp after alleged differences which kept them away from each other. Must say for the Chopra and SRK, all’s well that ends well.

Popularity: 8% [?]
Riteish Deshmukh Makes a cool crore
Nov 16th
Guess who’s moved upto the Rs One Crore price bracket in the film industry? None other than Riteish Deshmukh who will soon be laughing all the way to the bank if he accepts producer Vashu Bhagnani’s offer to act in his new film. Vashu apparently has offered him one crore to act in the film. This is a straight jump from the earlier 55-lakh rupee bracket that Riteish was in. “Yes, producers are definitely intrested in singing Riteish for a much higher price. But Riteish wants to choose good scripts and directors and is still considering the offers. ” Raaj Kumar Tiwari, Riteish’s business manager. Source: ‘Times Of India’

Popularity: 8% [?]
Amitabh Bachchan to sing in Nishabd
Nov 16th
Amitabh Bachchan’s penchant for music is not new, but after singing the theme song Baabul, Bachchan will be again singing for Ram Gopal Varma’s Nishabd. Musician-turned-filmmaker Vishal Bharadwaj jas been brought into the project especially to compose a song for the Big B.






Popularity: 8% [?]
Akshay Kumar to dance with 20 Bollywood Actresses in ‘Hey Baby’
Nov 16th
Akshay Kumar has all the luck in the world. The actor will be soon seen grooving with 20 bollywood actresses in his forthcoming film, ‘Hey Baby’. The credit for it goes to debutante director Sajid Khan who has managed to rope in 20 leading ladies for a special appearance in the his film. Currently, the entire unit of the film is busy shooting for the song and dance sequence. Producer Sajid Nadiadwala conforms the news, saying, “Yes, we have managed to get an unbelievable number of actresses to play a camoe in a song sequence, bit I would not be able divulge any further details about the song.”

Popularity: 8% [?]
Amrita Arora and Usman’s two-year itch
Nov 16th
It was celebration time for Amrita Arora. Well, she and Usman completed two years of ‘being together’ this week, and luckily, her cricketer boyfriend is here in Mumbai for training. What better treat than that! But, it was Malaika who gave the lovely couple a surprise. She hosted a close family dinner for them at a suburban restaurant. Of course, Ammu and Usman had their private moment together later on in the evening. And what did usman gift his lovely gal? “He gave me a butterfly shaped diamond pendant, because he thinks I am like a butterfly, a free-spirit at heart,” she replied.


Popularity: 8% [?]
Wild chase for Shaahid and Amrita Rao
Nov 16th
This screen jodi is much in demand. There’s a wild goose chase for them too. Last week, when Amrita-Shaahid-Sooraj Barjatya were on a whirlwind tour to promote their new film, the trio was in for a big surprise. On their way back from a theatre in Faridadbad to airport, there was a gang if about ten bikers who were chasing their car. Apparently, the fast riders were trying to cut across and catch up with their car in every possible way. Finally they succeeded; they raced their bikes, zoomed ahead and ended with a screeching halt in front of their cars, “All they wanted was a very few seconds with us and our autographs. We were petrified seeing them speed like that, it was quite dangerous. But the jind of response we have got from the junta is overwhelming. Sooraj ji is surprised too because according to him when Hum Aapke Hai Kaun released he got similar mixed reviews in the first few weeks, then it went went on to become a record-breaking success,” says Amrita Rao.

Popularity: 8% [?]
Neha Dhupia likes Abhay Deol’s attitude
Nov 16th
She’s got the right attitude herself, so the actress Neha Dhupia should know what she’s talking about. The actress, who recently worked with newest Deol on the block, Abhay, is apparently quite impressed and convinced working with the ypung Deol. When we asked Neha how it was working with the youngest Deol, she replied, “It was excellent working with Abhay Deol. I don’t know the definition of a typical Deol, but I looked at him as a relative newcomer and I almost fit into the same category. It was fun working with the whole init that was very young, fresh and talented. I feel Abhay too is a very talented actor and he comes to the sets with some great attitude.” Now that’s quite a big compliment for Abhay.



Popularity: 8% [?]
Rani Mukherji’s small wonder!
Nov 14th
One doesn’t get to spot Rani Mukherji very often, but when you do get a chance to catch up with her, it’s sheer delight. She talks nineteen yo the dozen, spinning amusing stories about her films, friends and experiences. Of course, her favourite topic is her little niece Myeisha. Very animatedly she tells DT, “My schedule for the day is somewhat fixed. I wake up early; go for my workout play with the baby for a while, get ready and then I am off for my shoots. After work, I come home directly, play with her as long as she is awake. Then I have my dinner and hit the bed. That’s it. My life revolves around my shooting schedules and Myeisha’s daily routines,” says Rani Mukherji.

Popularity: 8% [?]
Amrita Rao: Don’t be a nag
Nov 14th
Amrita Rao, pretty damsel is unmarried, unattached and single, alright. That doesn’t mean she can’t hive us a tip or two about marriage, right? Well, after having done one comedy like Masti, and Vivah, we can pretty much trust her words of advice. The first tip of the day is, “Don’t nag your husband. Let him be. The more you nag him – the more you will be pushing him away from you.” Wonder if the gal will have same advice to give once she’s hitched.

Popularity: 8% [?]
Mallika Sherawat’s all negative
Nov 14th
Rhe vamp image is back in vogue. The sexy damsel Mallika Sherawat proved her mettle in Pyar Ke SIde Effects and is now all set to do something different in her future projects. The gal plays a negative character in Kamal Hasan’s forthcoming Tamil motion picture Dasavataram. And that’s not all. Relative new comer Sherlyn Chopra too has no qualms about donning the avtar of a ‘Bad Girl’ in vinod pande’s Red Swastik. After all these are ‘meaty’ roles – both, literally and figuratively speaking!


Popularity: 43% [?]
Bipasha Basu is against short-cuts
Nov 14th
Her fitness levels have to be seen to be believed, and all for good reason. For, actress Bipasha Basu is one fitness freak and that perfect 10 body is truly hard earned. “I feel that you have to be healthy internally,” says bipasha. “One fine day, I want to start my own place where I would recommend my own health routine, things that I follow. Because there’s no short-cut method that I have followed. But I strongly feel that you can loose weight by using short-cuts, but that doesn’t last for long. You have to take things gradually and in a healthy manner,” she adds.


Popularity: 8% [?]
Can Bollywood give a pan-India hit ?
Nov 14th
By Priyanka Khanna, Indo-Asian News Service
New Delhi, (IANS) In the battle for attracting niche audiences, the Hindi film industry has been so busy packaging good proposals that it is forgetting the art of weaving fables that appeal to all kinds of viewers.
With no film emerging out of Mumbai-based studios making it big across India in a long time, Bollywood filmmakers are not only trying to justify their strategy to cater to select sections of audiences but also giving up the dream all together.
In response to a debate thrown up by writer Anupama Chopra’s article in The New York Times titled “Can Bollywood Please All The People, All The Time?”, nearly all the filmmakers felt that making a film that works across India is nearly impossible.
The two major films that released Friday further emphasise the growing gulf.
On the one hand was “Vivah”, celebrating the Indian tradition of arranged marriages that is a family drama tailor-made to appeal to a select kind of audience.
And on the other hand was Sangeeth Sivan’s “Apna Sapna Money Money” with its eyes firmly set on college-going multiplex crowds.
“The universal Bollywood hit is becoming increasingly difficult to pull off. A decade ago, the Hindi film market was largely considered a homogenous monolith. What worked in one town was likely to work in another. But over the years the business has splintered dramatically, forcing industry pundits to create new labels for films,” Chopra says.
Typically, when an actor is approached by a filmmaker the first question asked is whether the offer is for a movie that aims at the sophisticated viewers mostly found in metropolitan areas like Mumbai and overseas or the masses who sit on the cheapest seats.
The explanation given is that since the start of the economic liberalisation in 1991 when India opened its markets, the disparities among the country’s many communities have increased, leading to a fragmentation in the film world.
One India is poised for economic superstardom; the other struggles – with an estimated 300 million people surviving on less than a dollar a day.
The irony, however, is that even as Hindi filmmakers aspire to follow on the footsteps of the more famed Hollywood-based counterparts they are forgetting that a good story told would appeal to everyone.
Hollywood films work pretty much across the globe. The best ones get dubbed or are remade in local languages only because they have the story right.
Hindi filmmakers are flush with funds and may not miss the financial benefits of the demise of the pan-Indian hit in the short run and single-screen theatres will replace Hindi films with Bhojpuri ones or other regional languages but the connoisseurs of good cinema will bemoan the death of the art of storytelling.
In a country where epics written thousands of years ago are still relevant, the decision of not pleasing everyone all the time will be regretted.
To become Hollywood, Bollywood would have to do better than gloat over praises by a British royal prince. Indian cinema must remind itself that no Indian film has picked up awards at international festivals, though this year has been financially the best ever.
A splintered market, with viable sub-segments, new themes, new talent, the irreversible ageing of yesterday’s stars and stories, has wrought a slow change at Bollywood.
Much of these efforts are aimed at de-risking the current business model. Right-sized theatres suddenly struck the apt equation between the demise of the pan-Indian film, a consequently fragmented market with niche stories to tell and screening economics.
With some more cleaning up on other fronts, including production schedules, the producer today sells his film not just to distributors but also broadcasters and the home video segment. The film additionally recovers a portion of its cost through the sale of music rights.
The changes in Bollywood were mainly driven by this sharper edge to marketing.
In a world where one out of six or seven people is an Indian, Bollywood is guaranteed eyeballs. The loyalty to native stories underlines the industry’s export record too. But the slew of remakes only goes to show that Bollywood is yet to invest at the storyboard stage.
Tales from within still cite scriptwriters waiting for weeks to see a director and dialogues being written on the sets. There is a lot of reel yet to run before the world’s biggest film industry becomes a hit.
Popularity: 8% [?]


