Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

A Pathaan flash in the Bollywood pan

Why suffering hindi cinema celebrated too early

A Pathaan flash in the Bollywood pan

BOLLYWOOD going through a terrible time at the box office in the last few years is not a secret.

It perhaps being the worst phase in its entire history meant that Pathaan becoming a big blockbuster hit came as a welcome relief. But did the film fraternity start celebrating too early? The Shah Rukh Khan starrer’s major global success made many believe that the bad times were over, and audiences would once again flock to see Hindi movies again.


Producers who had been dumping their films on streaming sites thought about the big screen again and those with major releases ready were seeing major rupee signs as they booked cinemas. Others started to ridicule the boycott movement that has done so much damage to Bollywood in recent years, by saying protestors couldn’t make any difference to the success of a movie.

Unfortunately for Bollywood, all the films that have been released in cinemas since Pathaan packed in audiences globally, have crashed at the box office and shown that it didn’t trigger any kind of tidal change. Major movies released since then like Shehzada, Selfiee, Tu Jhoothi Main Makkaar and Mrs Chatterjee Vs Norway have all badly failed, with some being colossal disasters. It has shown the bad times are not over, and Bollywood will be feeling pain for a long time to come. That is largely due to the industry not fixing mistakes that plummeted Hindi cinema into its current crisis.

Lead inset Selfiee at 150908 Akshay Kumar in Selfiee

One illustration of this is that movies released have been getting negative reviews. Interestingly, many of those that have released straight onto streaming since then, like Almost Pyaar with DJ Mohabbat and Lost have also garnered largely bad reviews.

There are still way too many remakes, ageing heroes, poor writing, bad directing, unoriginal music and ridiculous marketing techniques. Nepotism means those with family connections are still getting work ahead of real talent. The Hindi cinema industry needs to realise that one successful movie won’t rectify these errors. That is like expecting a coat of paint to fix a broken-down old house, with everything from the electric fixtures to walls, roof and windows being badly damaged.

The many streaming sites, regional cinema boom and smartness of Hollywood strategies in India means audiences are no longer willing to accept second best. There was a time, when they didn’t have such choices and would watch even the most terrible films. Now they would rather stay at home with a streaming site or turn their attention to Hollywood and the thriving regional industries like Telugu cinema.

Lead inset Kartik Aaryan in Shehzada Kartik Aaryan in Shehzada

That sense of optimism with producers post-Pathaan has been replaced with worry. Now those who have pumped in huge amounts of money are concerned they will add to the many flops Bollywood has had in the past few years. Although streaming sites like Netflix remain a toilet for bad Indian content, they are not willing to pay huge prices like before, which means that cinema collections have become even more important.

The next big test will be major Eid release Kisi Ka Bhai Kisi Ki Jaan because it is released on one of Hindi cinema’s most lucrative dates of the year. If that film fails, then it will be a stark reminder of how bad things really are. With a 57-year-old Salman Khan opposite a heroine in Pooja Hegde, who wasn’t even born when he became a star, combined with his terrible recent track record on Eid, it looks like another costly disaster.

Pathaan lead star Shah Rukh Khan has two more movies releasing this year, with Jawan and Dunki, but they aren’t enough to save the industry that has been haemorrhaging audiences in the last five years.

Bollywood badly needs new young talent, and filmmakers in tune with evolving tastes, not those who have clearly run out of ideas and are stuck in the past. They can learn from films that were on offer at the recent Oscars like Everything Everywhere All at Once, The Banshees of Inisherin, Women Talking and All Quiet on the Western Front, which showed variety and great writing. Only by learning will Bollywood recover, not by celebrating the success of one film.

More For You

Father’s Day

Father’s Day reflects a wide range of traditions shaped by history, culture and emotion

iStock

What Father’s Day means around the world: A celebration of presence over presents

Father’s Day is often seen as a time for cards, tools or a family lunch, but across the globe, it carries a much deeper significance. Beyond the commercial promotions, Father’s Day reflects a wide range of traditions shaped by history, culture and emotion. While some mark the occasion with grand gestures, others focus on quiet reflection, respect and the bonds that define fatherhood.

Thailand’s day of respect

In Thailand, Father’s Day is celebrated on 5 December, the birthday of the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej. The day is as much about honouring the nation’s former monarch as it is about celebrating fatherhood. Citizens wear yellow, the king’s birth colour, and present canna lilies to their fathers as a symbol of gratitude and respect. It’s a cultural blend of familial and national reverence.

Keep ReadingShow less
Victor Hugo hidden artworks

Drawings by Victor Hugo on display include Ecce Lex

Paris Musees

Victor Hugo’s hidden artworks reveal political depth and poetic mystery

The moment I walked into the Royal Academy to see Astonishing Things: The Drawings of Victor Hugo, I thought of Rabindranath Tagore.

Both men were giants of literature, but they were visual artists as well.

Keep ReadingShow less
Celebrating 50 Years of Mili: A Timeless Hindi Classic

The year 1975 was significant in Indian cinema for newly crowned superstar Amitabh Bachchan

Prime Video

Celebrating 50 years of Mili, an underrated classic of Hindi cinema

The year 1975 was significant in Indian cinema for newly crowned superstar Amitabh Bachchan, as he starred in the two biggest films of that year, and also his career, Deewaar and Sholay.

These blockbusters cemented his position at the top. In between their releases came Mili, Hrishikesh Mukherjee’s decidedly different tearjerker.

Keep ReadingShow less
London's Jaipur Literature Festival seeks to
‘build bridges between cultures’

William Dalrymple with his artist wife Olivia Fraser

London's Jaipur Literature Festival seeks to ‘build bridges between cultures’

EASTERN EYE is supporting this year’s Jaipur Literature Festival (JLF) at the British Library next Friday (13) to Sunday (15) as its media partner.

“We are happy to do so as we aim to be ‘the voice of British Asians’, as we say on our masthead,” said Shailesh Solanki, executive editor of the newspaper.

Keep ReadingShow less
The Aamir Khan Effect: Transformations That Stun and Inspire

Aamir Khan’s iconic transformation in Bollywood over the decades

Getty Images

Aamir Khan effect: Whiskers, wigs and big wow moments

Aamir Khan returns to the big screen this month in Sitare Zameen Par, a heart-warming Bollywood remake of the Spanish comedy-drama Campiones. He plays a disgraced basketball coach who takes on an unexpected challenge with a team of individuals with special needs.

Sporting a look unlike any from the past decade, the film – due out on 20 June – adds to the many transformations he has embraced over his career, from shifting hairstyles to dramatic facial hair.

Keep ReadingShow less