Los Angeles Times

Even Bollywood has to tone it down

As India struggles with COVID- 19, its movie industry tries to safely keep shooting. Lavish dance scenes may go.

- BY TISH SANGHERA Sanghera is a special correspond­ent.

MUMBAI, India — Bollywood director Shakun Batra originally envisioned the beaches of Sri Lanka as the location for his latest f ilm, a relationsh­ip drama for one of India’s biggest studios.

But with the COVID- 19 pandemic making internatio­nal travel nearly impossible, he had to quickly choose somewhere else.

“All I could think was, it’s like you’re a sportsman and the rules of the game have changed,” Batra said by phone from Goa, a coastal Indian state south of Mumbai, which he had settled on as a backup location.

After months of lockdown and uncertaint­y, the world’s biggest movie industry is f inally running again. But with the pandemic still raging, Bollywood casts and crews are still f iguring out how to work — and how to pull off the sumptuous locations and dance sequences it’s known for — without getting many people sick.

Shooting is taking place against the backdrop of a COVID- 19 outbreak that India has struggled to control, with more than 9 million recorded infections, second most after the U. S. Scientists estimate that hundreds of thousands of new infections are going undetected every week due to a widespread inability to observe social distancing.

“It’s tough because you have to hold on to that same creative vision, but react to a whole new set of conditions,” Batra said.

After picking new locations for his still- untitled f ilm, due out in April from Dharma Production­s, he had to contend with another issue: a series of COVID- 19 cases on set. Batra declined to go into details, citing privacy concerns, but said the infections slowed down shooting because people had to be quarantine­d and the sets shut down and sanitized.

Movie sets have instituted a variety of precaution­s.

Among the most elaborate are sprinkler systems that douse costumes in disinfecta­nt and unproven sterilizat­ion rooms that apply ultraviole­t light to camera kits and crew members.

Directors are shooting with skeleton crews, makeup artists are working without assistants, and stars have been asked to leave their entourages at home. Multiple production­s denied a Times reporter’s request to attend filming.

The production team of “Dostana 2,” the sequel to a 2008 romantic comedy blockbuste­r, was trying to f igure out how to make a wedding sequence — one of the signature scenes of Bollywood f ilms — look lavish with just 50 dancers instead of 300.

“Those big numbers that have hundreds of backup dancers — they’re definitely in jeopardy,” said the f ilm’s assistant director, Jehan Handa.

“In Bollywood, the number of people you have in a song is associated with its budget — if you can afford hundreds of dancers and all their costumes, then it comes across as a very, big important song. Anything less, and it can look a bit cheap.”

Actors and crew members are tested for the coronaviru­s and undergo daily temperatur­e checks, but testing is spotty after that — and every shoot carries risk.

“You have to stay close to each other when f ilming, otherwise it won’t look real,” said actress Neha Sharma. “Inevitably you feel quite vulnerable. I guess all we can do is have some faith.”

In May, the state government of Maharashtr­a, which includes the f ilm hub Mumbai, released guidelines requiring crews to operate at one- third their usual size and members to remain six feet apart and wear masks and gloves at all times. Those appearing on camera are exempt, but the state said “no extravagan­t scenes” should be filmed until the pandemic threat subsides.

Still, safety levels vary widely from set to set. Some crews are put up in five- star hotels, quarantine for a week before f ilming and are ordered to wear full- body protective gear throughout 12 hours or more of shooting a day.

Others take far fewer precaution­s, and that’s been blamed for a series of COVID- 19 outbreaks on sets. After cases were reported among the cast and crew of Hindi TV soap operas this fall, the production­s endured numerous shutdowns and skyrocketi­ng costs.

“The fact of the matter is people need to work regardless if they feel safe — you can’t afford not to,” said one member of a production team who requested anonymity to protect his job. “In the Bollywood hierarchy, only stars and directors have the clout to stop shooting or start up again. I’ve heard of some actors saying, ‘ I don’t have symptoms, let’s carry on.’”

Though India is a center of visual- effects outsourcin­g for Hollywood — and recent hits such as “Padmaavat” and “Baahubali” have featured elaborate digital scenes — the process is too expensive to be an option for most Indian producers.

“The West can allocate $ 10 million just to special effects — that’s pretty much the whole budget for some f ilms” in India, said producer Konark Gowariker.

Usually a f ilm’s biggest source of revenue is its theatrical release. But restrictio­ns on theaters — only some states have reopened them, and most are allowed to operate at only half- capacity — have dissuaded production companies from investing in big- budget movies.

More f ilms are being released directly to streaming platforms such as Netf lix and Amazon’s Prime Video, with big- screen legends including Amitabh Bachchan — who recovered from COVID- 19 in August — making their straight- to- digital debuts.

The industry’s hope is that theaters will rebound, and that Indians’ fascinatio­n with movie stars will make it worth the wait.

“In America, people watch a f ilm once, maybe twice,” Gowariker said. “In India, if people like a f ilm they go five times. If they like the actor but the film’ s bad, they might go three times.”

In the meantime, the restrictio­ns could result in smaller- scale family dramas with simpler sets, the sort of films that until now have only been made by India’s few independen­t directors.

“Now we’ll see mainstream producers give this the green light because it’s safe and COVID- friendly,” said Rohan Narula, a Mumbai- based screenwrit­er.

After the pandemic exposed India’s rampant social inequaliti­es — with millions of migrant laborers left destitute and forced to walk home when a nationwide lockdown was declared in March—some film makers believe audiences may have less appetite for the all- singing, all- dancing, high- glam fare that Bollywood typically churns out.

“Star value has really taken a hit, whereas the ordinary guy and his value has risen exponentia­lly,” Handa said. “They were the ones out there during the pandemic, who didn’t have the luxury of staying home.”

‘ You have to stay close to each other when filming, otherwise it won’t look real. Inevitably you feel quite vulnerable.’

— NEHA SHARMA, actress

 ?? Rajanish Kakade Associated Press ?? ARTISTS in Mumbai paint a get- well- soon tribute to Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan and family after his COVID- 19 diagnosis.
Rajanish Kakade Associated Press ARTISTS in Mumbai paint a get- well- soon tribute to Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan and family after his COVID- 19 diagnosis.

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