Global Times

LET THE GAMES BEGIN

Netflix releases first Indian series

-

Netflix’s first original Indian series premiered on Friday as the US streaming giant battles with Amazon Prime for a slice of the country’s fast growing on-demand video market.

Sacred Games, an adaptation of Vikram Chandra’s 2006 novel of the same name, stars Bollywood stalwarts Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Saif Ali Khan and Radhika Apte.

Analysts say the gritty underworld thriller sets a new benchmark for Indian-produced Internet shows as providers seek to capitalize on the country’s burgeoning number of smartphone users.

“Sacred Games is probably the most high-profile content that has been made. Others have not been on the same scale,” Girish Menon, who tracks media and entertainm­ent for KPMG, told AFP.

Revenues from India’s entertainm­ent streaming industry are expected to be $823 million by 2022, up from $297 million in 2017, according to a Pricewater­houseCoope­rs (PwC) report released this month.

Netflix, which is blocked in the Chinese mainland, is investing millions in the world’s second-most populous country to attract young consumers with access to cheap mobile data and an appetite for something different.

“India is seeing the biggest and fastest investment in content for any country we have launched in,” said Erik Barmack, vice-president of internatio­nal originals at Netflix.

Sacred Games is also a punt that high-quality Indian content will prove popular overseas and forms part of Netflix’s worldwide drive to produce programs in many different languages, including Spanish and German.

The eight-part series – filmed mainly in Hindi – centers on the attempts of police officer Sartaj Singh, played by Khan, to capture mafia boss Ganesh Gaitonde (Siddiqui).

‘Lust Stories’

Sacred Games is the first release of eight Indian series that Netflix has commission­ed.

In late June, the company announced it would adapt Salman Rushdie’s multiple-award winning novel Midnight’s Children. Selection Day, based on Aravind Adiga’s novel about cricket and corruption, is also in the works.

Sacred Games follows Hindi-language movie Love per Square Foot and Lust Stories, a collection of four short films, which both came out on Netflix this year.

Amazon has also released a host of original Indian content, including crime drama Breathe and several successful stand-up comedy shows.

Experts say producing high-quality programs in Hindi and regional Indian languages is essential if Netflix and Amazon are to make up ground on market leader Hotstar.

“One needs to have local content. It’s a given,” Frank D’Souza, a media and entertainm­ent analyst with PwC in Mumbai, told AFP.

Hotstar dominates India’s streaming landscape owing to its huge catalogue of entertainm­ent and movie channels owned by Star India, many of which are free to view.

It also streams live cricket and English Premier League soccer. A yearly subscripti­on for all content costs 999 rupees ($14.55), the same as an Amazon Prime membership.

Netflix’s India subscripti­ons start at 500 rupees a month, something that experts say currently restricts its appeal to well-off Indians.

“A challenge for Netflix is that their price points are significan­tly more expensive than anybody out there. That means their user size is very small at the moment,” said Menon.

Free from censorship

India’s mobile entertainm­ent market is a crowded one– other players include Eros Now, Jio TV and ALTBalaji. Turning a profit is difficult with many platforms offering the same stock of movies and TV shows.

Netflix and Amazon have signed deals with Bollywood megastars Shah Rukh Khan and Salman Khan respective­ly to secure the rights to their films, setting themselves apart from their competitor­s somewhat.

Industry watchers also expect the US duo to try to snap up subscriber­s by producing bolder content.

India’s over-the-top (OTT) media providers, as streaming sites are known, are not subject to the country’s notoriousl­y stuffy censor boards which regularly cut scenes from films at the cinema and on TV.

“The content that appears on television is very homogenous. It’s typically soap operas aimed at women. We can expect slightly edgier, differenti­ated new-age type content on OTT platforms,” said KPMG’s Menon.

Netflix, which has 125 million subscriber­s in 190 countries and regions, will be hoping that Sacred Games and its other Indian dramas will become global hits like blockbuste­r shows Narcos and Stranger Things.

“Netflix is trying to create original content which can travel across the

world,” Menon said.

 ?? Photo: IC ?? Bollywood celebritie­s Nawazuddin Siddique (right) and Radhika Apte attend a screening of India’s first original Netflix series Sacred Games.
Photo: IC Bollywood celebritie­s Nawazuddin Siddique (right) and Radhika Apte attend a screening of India’s first original Netflix series Sacred Games.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China