Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Delhi to get first inflatable cinema at Janpath

- Rishab Suri rishabh.suri@htlive.com

THIS CINEMA SETUP WITH INFLATABLE ROOFS AND WALLS, NEEDS A 100FT X100FT SPACE, AND TWO HOURS TO BE FULLY FUNCTIONAL

NEW DELHI: Delhiites can gear up for a cinematic experience like never before, as chief minister Arvind Kejriwal will inaugurate a ‘cinema on wheels’ on May 9 at Janpath. The ‘moving cinema’, as it is called now, will have it all: projector, a maximum of 200 seats, air-conditioni­ng system etc., but in the portable format — this means it can all be packed up after the show, in a truck.

Presented by actor-filmmaker Satish Kaushik, this cinema setup with inflatable roofs and walls, needs a 100ft x100ft space, and two hours to be fully functional.

Premiering in Delhi, the cinema on wheels will eventually move deeper into the hinterland­s. At the inaugurati­on in the Capital, film enthusiast­s can catch a screening of award-winning film, A Billion Colour Story (2016). “The picture quality is superb, with 5.1 channel surround sound. The material of the structure is rain- and fire-proof. There are also cameras installed inside to record how many seats are occupied,” says Kaushik, who is co-producer of the film.

Ticket prices will be decidedly low in order to make it affordable and accessible to everyone. Kaushik explains, “In India, multiplex ticket prices are high; therefore people are a bit hesitant. The ticket price for a newcomer’s film is the same as a Shah Rukh Khan or a Salman Khan film. Why would people pay, say Rs 400, for a newcomer’s film when they can watch a Shah Rukh Khan film at the same price? This moving cinema will solve that issue, too.”

A brainchild of engineer and tech entreprene­ur Sushil Chaudhary, who approached Kaushik with the idea, the technology solves the problem of exhibiting movies in tier 2, 3 and 4 cities, where cinema halls are scant. “Compare with a country like China, India has very few cinema screens, as we have real estate problems. Permission­s and infrastruc­ture are also needed. This (Moving cinema) will solve the problem,” says the filmmaker.

Regional films and those movies that don’t get a theatrical release will also be screened as Kaushik feels there’s a dearth of cinemas halls showing those films. “This moving cinema will be a good platform (for all of them),” he says. He adds that the moving cinema’s live-streaming facility makes it highly versatile.

“Not just films, this portable theatre can be used for educationa­l and government purposes also, when leaders and speakers want their speeches to reach the interior parts [of the country]. The person could be in Delhi, but people could watch it in Mumbai at the portable theatre,” he says.

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