Arab News

India’s Ladakh region gets ‘world’s highest altitude movie theater’

- Sanjay Kumar New Delhi

An inflatable movie hall in India’s remote Himalayan region of Ladakh is proving to be the height of entertainm­ent for its bored residents by screening the latest films and providing much-needed respite in the “world’s highest altitude cinema theater.”

At 11,562 feet, the mobile facility can seat 120 people in the temperatur­e-controlled theater in Leh, the capital of Ladakh, which borders Chinese-controlled Tibet and lacks access to mainstream cinemas.

PictureTim­e Digiplex, the private company which installed the theater, said the initiative was an “attempt to bring cinema watching experience to remote areas” in the region.

“It is the world’s first mobile digital movie theater, basically built for new-release films,” Sushil Chaudhary, organizer of the theater and owner of PictureTim­e Digiplex, told Arab News.

The first film to be screened at the theater was Bollywood’s “Bell

Bottom”, starring Akshay Kumar, on Aug. 22, followed by “Sekool,” a Ladakh-based documentar­y depicting the life of the Changpa nomads in the area.

Chaudhary, who initiated the project in 2015 and later patented the idea for an inflatable theater, said the first mobile theater was installed during the 2016 Goa Film Festival.

It costs $65,000 to set up one roving theater, which Chaudhary funds through his company.

“Right now, we are setting up these theaters in the extremely remote areas of India. We have set up five units in Arunachal Pradesh (a northeaste­rn state bordering China) and plan to set up three more units in Ladakh,” Chaudhary said.

The idea, he explained, is “not just to take popular Bollywood movies” to remote areas but to screen “good, low budget movies and documentar­ies” which are not released across India, as well.

India, the world’s secondmost populous nation with 1.3 billion people, has a massive film industry that turns out about 1,000 films a year, more than a fifth of which are in the dominant Hindi language.

However, since the start of the pandemic last year and the subsequent closure of cinema halls, filmmakers have been making the transition to screen films on digital platforms such as Netflix and Amazon Prime to feed moviehungr­y audiences.

Chaudhary says he wants to provide an all-inclusive platform with mobile movie theaters.

“We want to become an even platform for all filmmakers,” he said, adding that the COVID-19 pandemic upended their plans for a commercial launch.

While each theater can seat 120 people, only 80 are allowed entry at the moment as part of social distancing measures and COVID-19 health protocols.

“Next, we plan to set up 100 screens in 100 days, and we will display new movies every day,” Chaudhary said.

“We identified three locations in each district, and the theater will move to the three locations every tenth day,” he added.

For this purpose, the mobile digital theater is mounted on a truck and driven to the next location, where it is dismantled and set up for its next set of viewers. The entire process takes between four to five hours.

The primary source of entertainm­ent for the residents of Ladakh is watching TV at home or in restaurant­s.

 ?? Supplied ?? At an altitude of more than 11,500 feet, the mobile theater can seat up to 120 people.
Supplied At an altitude of more than 11,500 feet, the mobile theater can seat up to 120 people.

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