The Sunday Guardian

‘Some directors sell laughter and love, but I sell fear’

Director and producer Vikram Bhatt speaks to Swati Singh about his recent web series, his newly-launched online video content app, and his unforgetta­ble horror flicks.

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A. I had a great time on this film because of the cast and crew. I have always maintained that you never know how a film will pan at the box office, but the journey is important. Karan [ Kundra] and Zareen [Khan] were a delight to work with. Reliance is a great studio. My technician­s, my UK crew members, all were enthused and became like family. I have come out of the film richer than when I went into it, not in terms of money, but in terms of the people I had the chance to be with. Q. How do you look back at your 2016 film Raaz Reboot, which didn’t quite do well at the box office? A. I don’t look back. Q. Who are your favourite filmmakers? A. I don’t have any favourite filmmaker, but I have a lot of favourite works by various filmmakers—Mahesh Bhatt, Shekhar Kapur, Raj Kapoor, Mehboob Khan, Manmohan Desai, Vijay Bhatt (my grandfathe­r), Sanjay Bhansali, Yash Chopra... The list is endless. Q. Tell us about your web series, Tantra? A. Tantra is my research and developmen­t series—I always say that to myself and everyone at the office. In a new space like the web, there is no other way to do research but to make content and put it out there... I know that thrillers work, dramas work. I wanted to see how three episodes a week and a subject material with mass appeal worked. It has some interestin­g findings... which I shall not share [ laughs]. Q. Why this shift from movies to web series? A. There is no shift. The emphasis is on “also”. Just because you dabble in another platform does not mean that you give up the first one. I think that the cell phone has become the first screen of choice and has beaten the television. The crowd is on the phone these days and every entertaine­r wants to be where the crowd is—that is the nature of entertainm­ent. Q. How was your venture into digital space with the 2017 web launch of VB, which has so far produced and showcased more than four original shows? A. The move to digital space happened when I realised that everything was moving onto digital. Music was the first thing to move online, then came books— and we›ve seen a big chain of bookshops being wiped out— and then even retail went online in a major way. So it was only a matter of time before cinema went online. Now, when cinema and entertainm­ent have gone online, one has started seeing apps, which are subscripti­on- based apps, where you subscribe monthly and you get your dose of shows. However, the app we are launching is based on a very different concept. It’s actually a multiplex on your phone. So when you download the app, you don’t have to subscribe, you get various shows and each and every show has a ticket price of its own, very much like a multiplex theatre. So you the watch the show that you want, and only pay for that show, making it more accessible. Q. This app—what is called and when was launched? A. This platform was commercial­ly launched on the 27 January 2018, under LoneRanger Production, which coincided with my birthday. It is called “VB: Theatre on the Web”. it it Q. In your latest web series, Untouchabl­es, you are playing the role of a lawyer. What’s the show about? A. Untouchabl­es is a courtroom drama which revolves around a medical student, who works as an escort to finance her education. And lands up facing a murder trial when her wealthy client is killed. Her dad, a chauffeur, pleads with his employer, a 48-year-old washed-up lawyer, to return to court one last time to save his daughter, thereby justifying the ta- gline: “the only one who can save her life is the one the world has given up for dead.” Q. Are you planning to discontinu­e uploading original content on YouTube? A. No, I will always have content on YouTube. It’s like a “freemium model”. For instance, we will start with Untouchabl­es, a show that will premiere on the app and YouTube on the same day. It will appear week-on-week on YouTube, but on the app, it is for binge watching—you can watch all fifteen episodes in one go. On YouTube, the show will take 15 weeks. Q. Web content is not regulated today, but one day it might be. How could that impact content? A. There’s already a lot of self-censorship on the web. On digital, people come for a “particular sensation”. They don’t want a story mixed with sex. It could be an erotic story, but it has to be a story. Thanks to Jio, most of India has data. If they want to watch porn they can. I’m not going to watch a film or web series with half-clad women when I can see everything online for the same data, on the same phone. Today if somebody comes to my channel, it’s not for porn (unless I’m specifical­ly selling that), they come to watch drama, suspense or supernatur­al thrillers. A real content-maker would not fear online censorship. Q. Will Vikram Bhatt ever make a light-hearted comedy for the digital medium? A. There’s too much comedy on the web. There are whole channels doing romcoms, husband-wife situations and there’s no point being another one like that. We are all selling different wares. Also, on “VB on the Web”, there’s hardly any horror there. There’s Twisted Maya, Hadh and Spotlight, these are out- of- the- box. We’re going to have drama, supernatur­al and sci-fi on the app. Untouchabl­es is an emotional courtroom drama. We’ll also have Breaking News, which is about corruption in media.

“Just because you dabble in another platform does not mean that you give up the first one. I think that the cell phone has become the first screen of choice. The crowd is on the phone these days and every entertaine­r wants to be where the crowd is”

 ??  ?? Vikram Bhatt.
Vikram Bhatt.

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