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  Entertainment   Bollywood  20 Dec 2019  A year of disasters

A year of disasters

AGENCIES
Published : Dec 20, 2019, 12:05 am IST
Updated : Dec 20, 2019, 5:54 am IST

Many films this year have not even recovered their publicity and release costs, let alone made a profit.

Made In China
 Made In China

Many films this year haven’t even recovered their publicity and release costs, including Emraan Hashmi’s latest release The Body. The film, also starring Rishi Kapoor, collected around Rs 50 lakh on its first day in spite of being a big-budget film directed by a well-known Malayalam filmmaker like Jeethu Joseph.

The Body is not expected to touch the Rs 10 crore mark in its lifetime collections.  Meanwhile, the Nawazuddin Siddiqui-Athiya Shetty starrer Motichoor Chaknachoor managed to rake in just over two crore at the box office.

If one recalls, Athiya’s debut film Hero with Sooraj Pancholi had made over `30 crore, but if you look at the final collections of Sooraj’s second film, Satellite Shankar, it was even less than a crore and is one of the biggest disasters of the year. The low-profile promotional activities of Satellite Shankar was perhaps due to the lack of belief in the theatrical expectations from filmmakers.

“Most star-driven or star-backed films today have a production budget of over `20 crore going up to `60 crore, including the marketing and distribution costs. Hence the producers need to collect around 70-80 per cent of the film’s budget from their share, which stands at around 40 per cent of the net collections. So, if a film collects `10 crore at the turnstiles, the producer makes `4 crore. Most of the time, their digital and satellite rights are what save them from being a total disaster. But that was not the case with many films this year,” says a trade analyst.

Films that clashed with other movies also met the same fate. For instance, Rajkummar Rao had actors such as Paresh Rawal and Boman Irani with him apart from Mouni Roy, in Made In China, and yet the film broke apart just like how the Chinese products fall apart quickly. When there is a star like Saif Ali Khan, a film is not expected to tank as badly as Lal Kaptaan did. The film made around two crore. South director Deva Katta’s Bollywood debut — a remake of his own south hit Prasthanam with Sanjay Dutt, Ali Fazal, Jackie Shroff and Manisha Koirala — made less than five crore.

Sunny Deol directed his son’s (high-budget) debut film Pal Pal Dil Ke Paas, but it did not cross `10 crore. Sonam Kapoor Ahuja played a lucky charm to the Indian cricket team in The Zoya Factor, but wasn’t lucky at the BO with a total collection of `3.12 crore. Sonakshi Sinha tried her hand at another lead role in Khandaani Shafakhana, and the film’s business was `3.83 crore.

The Prints and Advertising (P&A) costs have risen significantly, moving from `5 crore to `25 crore, from small to big-budget films.

“In the case of many films this year, forget the production cost, they have not even recovered the marketing cost. Medium budget films spend around `7-8 crore for their P&A,” says a senior trade analyst.

Well, the list only gets longer by the day. Emraan Hashmi’s Why Cheat India, Sushant Singh Rajput’s Sonchiriya, Kriti Sanon and Diljit Dosanjh starrer Arjun Patiala, Meezan Jaffery and Sharmin Segal’s debut film Malaal, Salman Khan’s production venture Notebook and Tigmanshu Dhulia’s long-awaited Milan Talkies also met with the same fate.
— Sanskriti Media

Tags: emraan hashmi, rishi kapoor