Eastern Eye (UK)

Bollywood loses sheen as regional films make waves

‘JUST ONE-FIFTH OF RELEASES MET THEIR REVENUE TARGETS’

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INDIA’S Bollywood film industry, long part of the cultural fabric of the movie-mad country of 1.4 billion people, is facing its biggest-ever crisis as streaming services and non-Hindi language rivals steal its sparkle.

The south Asian giant churns out on average around 1,600 films each year, more than any other country, traditiona­lly headlined by glitzy Bollywood, with fans worshippin­g movie stars like gods and crowds thronging premieres. But now cinemas have fallen quiet, even in Bollywood’s nerve centre of Mumbai, with box-office receipts plunging since Covid curbs were lifted.

“This is the worst crisis ever faced,” veteran Mumbai theatre owner Manoj Desai told AFP. “Some screenings were cancelled as the public was not there”.

The usually bankable star Akshay Kumar had three back-to-back films tank. Fellow A-lister Aamir Khan, the face of some of India’s most successful films, failed to entice audiences with the Forrest Gump remake Laal Singh Chaddha.

Of the more than 50 Bollywood films released in the past year – fewer than normal because of the pandemic – just one-fifth have met or surpassed revenue targets, said media analyst Karan Taurani of Elara Capital. Pre-pandemic it was 50 per cent.

In contrast, several Telugu-language aka Tollywood movies – a south Indian competitor to Hindi-language Bollywood – have soared to the top.

Embarrassi­ngly, around half the box-office takings for Hindi-language films from January 2021 to August this year were dubbed southern offerings, said State Bank of India’s chief economic adviser Soumya Kanti Ghosh in a report. “Bollywood, after decades of storytelli­ng... seems to be at an inflection point unlike any other disruption it has faced before,” Ghosh wrote.

Bollywood, like other movie industries, has been hurt by streaming’s rise, which started before the pandemic but took off when millions of Indians were forced indoors.

Around half of India’s population has access to the internet and streaming services, including internatio­nal players such as Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney+ Hotstar with 96 million subscripti­ons, a government estimate showed.

Some films released during the Covid shutdown went straight to these platforms, while others hit small screens just weeks after debuting in theatres.

With streaming monthly subscripti­ons lower or comparable to the cost of one ticket – `100-`200 (£1£2.17) at single-screen cinemas and higher at multiplexe­s – price-sensitive audiences were avoiding theatres, analysts said.

Times have been so hard that INOX and PVR, two of India’s biggest multiplex operators, announced their merger in March to “create scale”. Subscriber­s were meanwhile exposed to local and global streaming content, including southern Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam and Kannada-language films that already had legions of devoted local fans.

“Regional cinema was not travelling beyond its language borders. But now suddenly everyone was watching Malayalam cinema or Maharashtr­ian cinema and then you realise that... there are filmmakers who are telling more interestin­g stories,” film critic Raja Sen said.

Critics also accused Bollywood of making niche or elitist films that do not resonate in a country where 70 per cent of the population lives outside cities.

Khan admitted during media interviews for Laal Singh Chaddha that Hindi filmmakers’ “choice of what is relevant to them is perhaps not so relevant to a larger audience”.

At the same time, Tollywood mega-smash hits Pushpa: The Rise and RRR highlighte­d the heroics of common people while treating audiences to larger-than-life visual spectacles with catchy song-anddance routines.

Such formulas have long been a Bollywood mainstay but film critics say the southern challenger­s were doing it bigger and better.

 ?? ?? NO TAKERS: A-lister Aamir Khan’s Forrest Gump remake Laal Singh Chaddha failed to woo audiences to the cinemas
NO TAKERS: A-lister Aamir Khan’s Forrest Gump remake Laal Singh Chaddha failed to woo audiences to the cinemas

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