Bollywood set to take on Hollywood
Cannes Film Festival underscored Bollywood's intentions to become a intl player. Two deals that stuck out involved big Indian producers. BO Weekly I In pics: Cannes Fest
"We (Bollywood) are at the inflexion point - where Hollywood was in the 1930s and 1940s. In five years there will be a lot of marriages that will shape the industry for the next 50 years," Kishore Lulla, chief of Eros International, the AIM-listed filmmaker told The Sunday Times.
Lulla expected a spate of consolidation that would boil India's 25 film producers - many of them regional players working in Tamil or Telugu - into five main Bollywood players.
The report said India's cinema scene, where 4 billion tickets are sold annually, has always been big business. Since the government relaxed rules on banks and investors lending money to filmmakers, expansion has taken off both at home and abroad.
According to Price Waterhouse Coopers, the leading audit firm, domestic Indian film revenue would almost double from Rs 96 billion (1.14 billion pounds) in 2007 to Rs 176 billion in 2012. In Britain, Bollywod accounted for just under 2 per cent of box-office takings last year - 3 million pounds.
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"It's a rising trend," Mark Batey, chief executive of the Film Distributors' Association, said. "Bollywood is a niche, but a significant niche. Over time, we are seeing wider releases and more of them."
That figure was driven by 1.3 m pounds grossed by 'Om Shanti Om,' a 1970s spoof that did not take itself too seriously.
"Bollywood was just pure song-and-dance movies and family values," said Lulla. "Now, if you look at it, there is arthouse coming, there are thrillers, action movies. There will be sex, definitely. People want something new everytime. You can't keep giving them the same old thing," he said.
The report said the Cannes Film Festival underscored Bollywood's intentions to become a world player. Two deals that stuck out involved the biggest Indian producers.
Eros chose a different route, instead cementing a distribution joint venture with Lionsgate, an independent studio, that will get more Indian movies seen in America and Lionsgate's DVDs into the Indian market.
It is not Lulla's first tie-up with Hollywood. While on holiday with his family in Los Angeles last August, he met Michael Lynton, the chairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment. "We hit it off and we thought we would do something together," Lulla said.
The pair are working on three film scripts, with two due to go into production shortly. Sony already has formed in the Bollywood genre, releasing 'Saawariya' last year.
At the same time, Warner Brothers is also working on its first Indian production, called 'Made in China'.
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