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Akshay Kumar’s BellBottom has spelled cheer, say cinema hall owners

- Sugandha Rawal sugandha.rawal@hindustant­imes.com

Considerin­g the theatres are still running in limited capacity, or even shut in some places, the release of Akshay Kumar’s BellBottom was a huge risk. However, the gamble has paid off well, with the film spinning the box-office wheel in the right direction, paving the path for big screen revival.

As the first big Hindi film to release theatrical­ly after the pandemic slump, it has brought hope and confidence among theatre owners. “This step by Akshay Kumar, (producers) Vashu and Jackky Bhagnani will be seen as a groundbrea­king one. It helped revive the cinema exhibition business. The film is holding strong in the second week,” shares Kamal Gianchanda­ni, CEO of PVR Pictures and president of the Multiplex Associatio­n of India (MAI).

Theatre owners were eagerly waiting for the magic of the big screen to be back. “We’re glad that Akshay kicked off this recovery process. We hope that the momentum built by the fantastic response to BellBottom would mark the onset of our revival,” asserts Rajender Singh Jyala, chief programmin­g officer, INOX Leisure Ltd.

Co-starring Vaani Kapoor, Lara Dutta Bhupathi and Huma S Qureshi, the Ranjit M Tewari directoria­l, produced by Pooja Entertainm­ent, released on August 19. BellBottom is inching close to ₹30 crore in India, with business growing overseas as well, especially in the UK and North America.

Trade expert Joginder Tuteja hails the team for their decision to look at the larger picture of course correction, instead of profits. “The film comes with a potential to cross ₹150 crore, and the producers knew that they wouldn’t be able to reach that mark with all the restrictio­ns. Yet, they took the risk,” he says.

BellBottom’s growing collection­s are likely to encourage other production houses and exhibitors as well. “When good content comes to a cinema hall, collection­s follow. The film’s second Sunday collection was the same as the first Sunday. It instills confidence in the exhibition sector,” says Devang Sampat, CEO, Cinepolis.

The success of the film is also trickling down to single screens, too. Raj Kumar Mehrotra, general manager at Delhi’s Delite Cinema, shares, “The film had packed shows this weekend. All the safety precaution­s are being followed.” Officials from Rajmandir Cinema, Jaipur, thanked the team on Twitter for choosing a big-screen release.

In South India, trade guru Sreedhar Pillai from Chennai tells us, “The film had houseful shows in the first week itself. Akshay Kumar ne bahut confidence se apni film theatres ko di. It’s a great beginning.”

Now, theatre owners in Maharashtr­a are waiting for the green signal to bring life back into cinema halls. “Looking at this success story, we want theatres to open in our state as well,” says Arvind Chaphalkar from Pune’s City Pride multiplexe­s. Manoj Desai, executive director of Mumbai’s G7 Multiplex (Gaiety Galaxy) and Maratha Mandir Cinema, adds, “Hum bol bol ke thak chuke hain. We hope we’re allowed to open with 50% capacity.”

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