Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

FILMS SET TO PRODUCE MOVIES IN INDIA

- Lata Jha

NEWDELHI: Lionsgate Films, one of the most prominent Hollywood studios, will soon start producing films in India, two people familiar with the developmen­t said.

The North American company—which has already set up an office in Mumbai—has a management team in place that will be announced in a few weeks, along with details of upcoming projects and strategies, the people mentioned above said on the condition of anonymity. Lionsgate Films is a unit of Lions Gate Entertainm­ent Corporatio­n that reported revenue of $3.2 billion in the year to March 31, 2017.

Internatio­nally, the studio is known for blockbuste­rs such as dystopian science fiction adventure series The Hunger Games, romantic drama fantasy The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 2 (2012), science fiction disaster film The Day After Tomorrow (2004), Oscar-winning romantic musical La La Land (2016) and science fiction action movie series The Divergent.

While its primary focus remains distributi­on, over time, Lionsgate has ventured into production too, backing projects such as romantic musical Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004), romantic comedy The Prince and Me (2004) and British-ItalianSou­th African historical drama Hotel Rwanda (2004).

Lionsgate’s India debut comes at a time when many Hollywood studios are either slowing down their Bollywood operations or completely shutting shop.

Last year, Walt Disney Co. India decided to pull the plug on its Hindi movie production business shortly after its big-budget release Mohenjo Daro fizzled out at the box office. Made at a cost of ₹115 crore, the historical epic only collected ₹58 crore in lifetime box office collection­s. Disney’s last Hindi release Jagga Jasoos, that hit screens last month, also only managed ₹53.29 crore. Industry experts say studios such as Viacom18 Motion Pictures and Fox Star Studios are also being selective in green-lighting projects after burning their fingers with over-priced outings.

“Different people have different models. When firms shut down, it’s a reflection of their own strategy... Not a reflection of the market,” said a studio executive familiar with the developmen­t on the condition of anonymity.

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