Friday, November 29, 2013

Why Do Bad Films Make Good Money?

By Anant Mathur (November 29, 2013)

Many times people have asked me why is it that bad movies make 100s of crores and good movies will maybe earn 10-20 crores? Well, the simple answer is marketing. But there's more to it than that...

With most top earning actors only doing one or two films a year fans look forward to their next big budget release. Fans are what drive ticket sales and they come in hordes to see their favourite star on the big screen - "First day, first show."

Knowing this, producers and distributors go to great lengths to release a big budget film on at least 2500 to 3000 screens. They know the film is no good and will only be able to earn money in the first week or two, so, they release it on as many screens as possible to earn money back before people realize the film is no good and stop coming. Most filmmakers even pay well known critics to get their films 4 or 4.5 stars out of 5 in reviews (filmmakers have admitted to that).

The problem is... the way film production works today is not based on the strength of the script. Films today are produced based on the talent attached to it, the bigger the stars the more money the producer is able to get, script be damned. The more they get the more they pocket. Since the distributor is not given any paperwork by the producer, he is unable to check how much the film actually cost to make - he is at the mercy of the producer and gives the producer whatever exuberant amount he asks for without ever seeing one frame of the film - only based on star cast and other talent attached to the film like director, producer and music director.

For example, there's no way that the film Once Upon a Time in Mumbai Dobaara! cost 85-100 crores to make when Krrish 3 cost Rs. 115 crores. Krrish 3 has a lot of visual effects and action sequences which will make one believe that the cost could be 115 crores, but, unless Akshay Kumar charged Rs. 60 crores as his salary there's no reason for
OUATIMD to cost so much especially since the first film (Once Upon a Time in Mumbai) had a budget of 28 crores and it had a bigger star cast. Of course, OUATIMD wasn't able to recover its cost. 

Part of the problem was that OUATIMD didn't get as wide a release as the producer and distributor had wanted. Most of the Cinema Halls were still playing Chennai Express and were unable to accommodate screens for OUATIMD since Chennai Express was such a success. Instead of 2500 screen, OUATIMD was released on 1600 screens that too on smaller screens (less seating) and with some screens shared with Chennai Express. OUATIMD only managed to earn 60.11 crore before the audience gave up on it. With these mega budgets it has become extremely difficult for films to earn their money back, especially with producers only being interested in filling their own pockets.

Gone are the days when Hum Aapke Hain Kaun and Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge were made for Rs. 4 Crores. HAHK had a very limited release, initially it was released with only 26 prints, as word of mouth grew in it's favour so did the number of screens. HAHK eventually went on the earn over 100 crores - that's 92 crores in profit and a return on investment of 2300% (that's right ...two thousand three hundred percent... I thought I would type it out in case you thought you mis-read it). HAHK is considered one of the greatest blockbusters ever in Hindi cinema. Name one movie today that can give such ROI - today distributors are lucky if films make their money back, a ROI of 1% is considered a bonus. Nowadays we have films which are not even 1% as good and cost at least 20 time more.

Here's an idea... Next time you want to see your favourite star wait for a week or two before you go see a new release you will soon see how fast the film flops. If its genuinely good then after the first day or two word of mouth will increase it's audience, especially with so much social media around.



© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Déjà Vu Moments...

By Anant Mathur (October 14, 2013) 

This has probably happened to you at some point while watching a film - you suddenly say "I knew that was going to happen." It just means you're smarter than the writer of that film, I don't mean intellectually; simply that your level of understanding the story is greater than his/her ability of writing it. Predicting a scene just means that you've watched or read so much over the years that you're able to figure out what's going to happen before it actually does - sort of like history repeating itself or a déjà vu moment.

What once worked in a Shakespeare play might not work anymore because the audience can predict what's gonna happen. This has nothing to do with the ability of the writer but our ability of understanding the story. I've been schooled in writing/making films so I know the ins and outs and all the gimmicks that go along with developing a screenplay. The trouble is the audience is also learning all this and getting smarter as years pass (especially with the help of "Making of" featurettes available on DVDs and BluRays).

Very rarely do I find the movie going experience entertaining any more - unless it's a classic I'm watching (for the umpteenth time) chances are I won't like it. Personally, films that I enjoy the most now are ones that entertain in a new way. What I mean by this is... because so many stories have been told over the year it's very difficult to find something original, I mean how many times can we watch a boy meets girl or rich girl poor boy story. No, what I expect now is not an original story but one that's presented in a new way or with a twist on the original.

The trouble is 99% of film makers believe wholeheartedly that they know what the audience wants and thus they keep churning out the same old lame stuff; and then they wonder why their films fail. To these film makers signing a big star guarantees a big opening and recovery of the cost in the first week - the story be damned! But soon they'll realize that this no longer works, films are getting expensive and the first week is not enough to recover the cost. Films have to last for several weeks and must have a good story otherwise why would people pay their hard earned money to go to the movie theater when they can download it within a few days from some pirate website or watch it on TV in a couple of months for free?

The future is very bleak for films even gimmicks like 3D can't save the film industry when there are better stories elsewhere. If films were free people wouldn't care how bad the stories were - this is why TV soaps are so popular - they're inexpensive to watch - you don't have to shell out Rs. 200 per person to watch them. The problem being ignored is that most screenwriters are learning the same style of writing that existed 30, 40 or 50 years ago. If you're a scientist or a medical doctor you're not going to learn methods that were taught 50 years ago, you'll learn the most modern methods. Unfortunately, in Bollywood, there is no real body that exists for teaching how to write screenplays.

Screenplays evolve with the story, a style that works for one story won't necessarily work for another. Writers need to learn that boy meets girl doesn't work because it's predictable the audience already knows they will live happily ever after; what happens in-between doesn't really matter - unless you can present it in a new way - who cares. Until writers learn this and stop being brainwashed into writing the three acts style, films will be predictable and boring and we will witness many more déjà vu moments...


© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

2013 Fall Season!

By Anant Mathur (September 19, 2013)

Fall... It's that incredible time of the year when the leaves start to change colour and the summer heat dies down, just before the winter cool sets in. It also signals the premiere of new television shows and the return of previous audience favourites. Next week, the new 2013-2014 season begins! So, here's a list of NEW shows I feel show promise for the upcoming television season:

The Michael J. Fox Show (NBC)
Genre: Comedy
Starring: Michael J. Fox, Betsy Brandt, Conor Romero, Juliette Goglia,Jack Gore
Plot: After being diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, Mike Henry had to give up his career as a news anchor and focus on his health and his family. Five years later, Mike decides to get back to work and struggles between family and career.


We Are Men (CBS)
Genre: Comedy 
Starring: Kal Penn, Chris Smith, Jerry O'Connell, Tony Shalhoub
Plot: After Carter is left at the altar by his soon to be wife, he moves into a short-term rental complex, where he bonds a friendship with three divorced older men.


Almost Human (FOX)
Genre: Drama, Science Fiction
Starring: Karl Urban, Minka Kelly, Lili Taylor, Mackenzie Crook   
Plot: The series is set 35 years into the future when humans in the Los Angeles Police Department are paired up with life-like androids, as a detective who has a dislike for robots ends up being teamed up with one with emotional feelings.


Intelligence (CBS)
Genre: Action, Adventure, Espionage, Science Fiction
Starring: Josh Holloway, Marg Helgenberger, Meghan Ory, Michael Rady
Plot: The series follows a high-tech intelligence operative who is the first of his kind to have a microchip implanted in his brain. Endowed with this technology and ability, he is able to access and detect anything and anyone, but at the expense of taking risks or breaking protocol in order to protect national security, prompting his superior to assign him a Secret Service agent to make sure he does not get out of line, or, for that matter, into enemy hands.


Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (ABC)
Genre: Action/Adventure, Drama, Science fiction
Starring: Clark Gregg, Ming-Na Wen, Brett Dalton, Chloe Bennet, Elizabeth Henstridge
Plot: Agent Phil Coulson puts together a small team of S.H.I.E.L.D. agents to handle strange new cases. Each case will test the team in cooperation and ingenuity as they try to work together figuring out newly emerging superhuman individuals in the world.


Once Upon a Time in Wonderland (ABC)
Genre: Fantasy, Drama, Adventure, Mystery
Starring: Sophie Lowe, Michael Socha, Peter Gadiot, Emma Rigby
Plot: In Victorian England, the young and beautiful Alice tells a tale of a strange new land that exists called Wonderland….one that has her family and doctors convinced she is mad. When the Knave of Hearts and the White Rabbit arrive to save her from a doomed fate, the trio tumble down the rabbit hole for the adventure of a lifetime to rescue Alice’s lost love, Cyrus.


MID-SEASON REPLACEMENTS
 

Chicago PD (NBC)
Genre: Drama
Starring: Jason Beghe, Jon Seda, Melissa Sagemiller, Tania Raymonde
Plot: The Dick Wolf-produced spinoff of "Chicago Fire" will also be shot in Chicago. The show revolves around the fictional District 21 of the CPD, and focuses on uniformed cops who patrol the beat and deal with street crimes, and the Intelligence Unit that targets organized crime, drug trafficking and high-profile murders.


Mind Games (ABC) 
Genre: Drama
Starring: Steve Zahn, Christian Slater, Megalyn Echikunwoke, Cedric Sanders
Plot: Centers on the complicated relationship between two brothers, Clark Clark, a bipolar genius in human psychology, and Ross, a slick ex-con, who solve their clients' problems using the real science of human motivation and manipulation.



Us & Them (Fox)
Genre: Comedy
Starring: Jason Ritter, Alexis Bledel, Dustin Ybarra, Ashlie Atkinson
Plot: After a six-month-long online romance, Gavin, who lives in New York, and Stacey, who lives in Pennsylvania, decide to meet in person. Their crazy family and friends constantly interfere in their budding relationship, which becomes more of a challenge than living in different states.


© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Second Quarter Analysis of 2013...

By Anant Mathur (July 14, 2013)

IPL6 was in full swing during the second quarter of 2013, but that didn't stop Bollywood from releasing low and medium budget films. Not surprising, the first big budget film of the second quarter Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani was released in the first weekend of June, shortly after the end of IPL6, and amazingly the film recovered its cost in the first week itself. But, it was 2 small budget films which proved to be most profitable in the second quarter - Aashiqui 2 was made at a cost Rs. 9 Cr. and Fukrey had a modest budget of 5 Cr. 

Since the first weekend of April 2013 approximately 44 Hindi films were released in the Second Quarter of 2013. Out of these 44 films 40 were flops, 1 was average (because it was barely able to recover its cost) and only 3 (Aashiqui 2, Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, Fukrey) can be considered hits. Out of the 3 Hits two were able to make a profit because they were made for a miniscule budget and managed huge profits for their distributors. Aashiqui 2 made for Rs. 9 Cr. gave over 271% return on investment (ROI) and Fukrey which was made for a micro budget of Rs. 5 Cr. but delivered a ROI of over 200%.

4 of the 44 films had a budget which equaled or exceeded Rs. 30 Cr. Out of these 4 films only
Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, made at a budget of Rs. 50 Cr., managed a profit of Rs. 34.34 Cr. and an approximate ROI of 69%. Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani had the largest budget of all the releases in the second quarter of 2013 and was able recover its cost for the distributor by earning a colossal Rs. 185.33 Cr. in nett collections. Distributor's share of Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani was approximately Rs. 84.34 Cr. giving them a box office profit of Rs. 34.34 Cr.
 
The biggest flop of the lot was Yamla Pagla Deewana 2 - with a budget of Rs. 40 Cr. - it only managed Rs. 28.95 Cr. in nett collections providing a loss of Rs. 25.23 Cr. for its distributor.
 
BELOW IS A LIST OF THE BIG BUDGET RELEASES OF THE SECOND QUARTER OF 2013 AND HOW THEY PERFORMED AT THE BOX OFFICE:

Chashme Baddoor (Budget 25 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 41.68 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 19.64 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 5.36 cr.

Commando - A One Man Army (Budget 15 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 21.48 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 10.35 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 4.65 cr.

Nautanki Saala! (Budget 16 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 21.70 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 10.38 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 5.62 cr.

Ek Thi Daayan (Budget 24 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 25.44 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 12.51 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 11.49 cr.

Aashiqui 2 (Budget 9 Cr.)
VERDICT: BLOCKBUSTER
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 78.37 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 33.43 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S PROFIT = Rs. 24.43 cr.

Shootout At Wadala (Budget 26 Cr.)
VERDICT: AVERAGE
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 54.69 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 25.93 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 0.07 cr.

Go Goa Gone (Budget 16 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 25.16 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 11.98r.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 4.02 cr.

Aurangzeb (Budget 20 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 22.34 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 10.84 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 9.16 cr.

Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani (Budget 50 Cr.)
VERDICT: BLOCKBUSTER
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 185.33 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 84.34 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S PROFIT = Rs. 34.34 cr.

Yamla Pagla Deewana 2 (Budget 40 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 28.95 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 14.77 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 25.23 cr.

Fukrey (Budget 5 Cr.)
VERDICT: HIT
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 32.77 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 15.02 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 14.98 cr.

Raanjhanaa (Budget 35 Cr.)
VERDICT: FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 58.94 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 26.82 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 8.18 cr.

Ghanchakkar (Budget 30 Cr.)
VERDICT:  FLOP
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 28.07 cr.*
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 14.04 cr.*
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 15.96 cr.*


*Based on First week collections only.



© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Writer: Unlocked!

By Anant Mathur (June 14, 2013)

Many times I hear people in the industry describing writers as people who lock themselves in a room and then come up with a screenplay a short time later. Although this is a part of the screenwriting process it's not completely accurate. The process of writing begins in the writers mind - he is usually not locked in a room. 

When writing, most writers first think about the story idea and try to come up with scenes to go with it - there are times when a story idea just isn't strong enough for a screenplay. For example, if I can come up with a number of scenes in my head then I begin to write, but until then it all stays in my head. Usually during this thought provoking time I'm out watching, enjoying, experiencing and not thinking about the story; but it is in my subconscious. 

A screenwriter is only as good as the experiences he's had. I've said it many times... in order to create believable character you must know how people interact and behave with each other. How they walk, how they talk, their body language is all as important as the dialogue they recite - more so in certain situations. For example, I can tell what part of the world a person is from just by the way a person walks. A man walks differently than a woman, people of different ethnic backgrounds react to situations differently and even walk differently. A person might be calm in a tense situation while another may explode or lose their cool in the same situation. Unless you watch people or experience life you won't know these things much less write about them or create believable character; no matter how good a writer you are.

For instance, I go to coffee shops or restaurants or food courts or might be traveling when suddenly I'm struck with an idea for an amazing scene - that's when I grab a napkin or use the back of a receipt, a plate, a cup or any kind of writing device I can find to write down the brilliant idea. This kind of thing happens for a while - several hours, days or weeks later I may have come up with enough scenes to write the first draft.

The first draft is extremely important because this is where you figure out how long your screenplay is going to be and what you need to do in order to make it shorter or longer. If you come up with 40-50 scenes but they're not long enough to create a 2hr movie you need to add something to make it longer without losing your idea or making it boring and dragging the story along. That addition might be another character, a sub-plot or (for a Bollywood musical) an item number.

It is after the first draft is written that writers usually lock themselves in a room because now is the time to concentrate and make sure everything works. Making sure that the scenes link properly, you have left anything put, tying up loose ends - all this is done at this time. From there on further drafts may be required to get to the final brilliant screenplay. Between drafts at some point you might discover that a scene work better in the middle or the end rather than the beginning or vice versa.  

Remember only a fool tries to sell their first draft - no matter how good you think your first draft is - you can always improve it! I give myself a break between drafts. You'll be surprise how disappointing certain scenes become after the writer thinks about them for a few days.

© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Best & Worst Of The 2012-2013 TV Season

By Anant Mathur (May 29, 2013)

Every year I look forward to the new American TV season and wonder which shows I will still be watching over the next few years. After a pretty good 2011-2012 season, which launched several good shows, the expectation for the 2012-2013 were raised once again. With the 2012-2013 season coming to an end, we can now separate the winners from the losers. Sadly, unlike last season, this year there were more losers than winners.  

Arrow was the surprise hit of the year, no one had any expectations from this comic book adaptation, but to everyone`s surprise it turned out one great episode after another until season end. Chicago Fire had a horrible pilot episode which looked like a poor rehash of the blockbuster film Backdraft - it waas sure to be cancelled - but I`m glad that I stuck with it because from episode 2 onwards Chicago Fire did a 180 degree turn for the better and there was no looking back. Zero Hour looked like a sure fire hit, but got cancelled after 3 episodes, proving how difficult it is to predict which show(s) will be loved the audience. Out of all the shows which debut in 2012-2013, below are the ones I watched 'till the end of the season (or 'till the show got cancelled) and feel are the best or worst of the year:


Best Concept of the year: 
1) Zero Hour (ABC) - Sadly it got cancelled
2) Arrow (CW)
3) Revolution (NBC)

Honorable Mention:
4) Chicago Fire (NBC)


 

Best New comedy (surprisingly none of the new sitcoms earned a second season):
1) Go On (NBC)
2) Guys With Kids (NBC)
3) How To Live With Your Parents For The Rest Of Your Life (ABC)


Worst New Shows of the year, so glad these got cancelled:
1) The New Normal (NBC)
2) Ben And Kate (FOX)
3) Do No Harm (NBC)


How did this get on television:
1) Family Tools
(ABC)
2) Animal Practice (NBC)
3) Hannibal (NBC)
 


Shows with Promise but didn't get picked up or renewed by the network:
1) 
Vegas (CBS)
2)
Zero Hour (ABC)
3) Deception (NBC)


Why is this still on (surprisingly these low rated shows earned a second season):
1) Nashville (ABC)
2) The Neighbors (ABC)
3) The Carrie Diaries (CW)


A Good Concept gone horribly wrong:
1)
1600 Penn (NBC)
2)
Last Resort (ABC)
3)
Red Widow (ABC)


The Worst Actor of the year:
1) Nat Faxon (Ben and Kate)
2) Andrew Rannells (The New Normal)


The Worst Actress of the year:
1) Georgia King (The New Normal)
2) Joanna García (Animal Practice)
 


Most Entertaining NEW Villain/Villainess on Television: 
1) Jason Beghe (Hank Voight, Chicago Fire)
2) Goran Visnjic (Nicholae Schiller, Red Widow)

3) Katherine LaNasa (Sophia Bowers, Deception)

Honorable Mention: 

4) Giancarlo Esposito (Major Tom Neville, Revolution)
5) Michael Chiklis (Vincent Savino, Vegas)

 

Best Actress in a New Comedy: 

1) Erinn Hayes (Sheila, Guys With Kids)
2) Sarah Chalke (
Polly, How to Live with Your Parents For the Rest of Your Life)


Best Actor in a New Comedy: 

1) Matthew Perry (Go On)
2) Zach Cregger (Nick Theyer, Guys With Kids)


Best Actress in a Drama Series: 

1) Monica Raymund (Gabriela Dawson, Chicago Fire)
2
) Tracy Spiridakos (Charlotte "Charlie" Matheson, Revolution)
2) Kristin Kreuk (Catherine Chandler, Beauty and the Beast)


Best Actor in a Drama Series: 

1) Stephen Amell (Oliver Queen, Arrow) 
2) Billy Burke (Miles Matheson, Revolution)
3) Jesse Spencer (Lieutenant Matthew Casey
, Chicago Fire)


Best New Shows of the year:
1) Arrow (CW)
2) Revolution (NBC)
3) Chicago Fire (NBC)






DISCLAIMER:
Please remember these are TV show that I watched based on my personal preferences and this post should not be misinterpreted as official results or facts regarding TV shows released in the 2012-2013 season.


© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, May 27, 2013

2013 IPL CHAMPS!

By Anant Mathur (May 27, 2013)

Congratulations, to the Mumbai Indians for winning the 2013 IPL tournament.

 

© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

First Quarter Analysis of 2013...

By Anant Mathur (April 10, 2013)

Since the first weekend of January 2013 approximately 42 Hindi films have released in the first Quarter of 2013. Out of these 42 films 37 were flops, 4 were average (because they were barely able to recover their cost) and only 1 (Saheb Biwi Aur Gangster Returns) can be considered a hit because it was made for a miniscule budget of Rs. 7 crore and made a profit of approximately Rs. 3.6 crores for its distributor. 

9 of the 42 films had a budget which equaled or exceeded Rs. 30 crores - out of these 9 only one (Special 26) managed a very tiny profit of Rs. 0.53 crores. Race 2 had the largest budget (Rs. 60 crores) of all the releases in the first quarter of 2013 and thus failed to recover its cost for the distributor even though it earned a colossal Rs. 96.34 crores in nett collections. Distributor's share of Race 2 was approximately Rs. 44.66 crores giving them a box office loss of Rs. 15.34 crores.

 
The biggest flop of the lot was DAVID - with a budget of Rs. 50 crores - it only managed Rs. 3.37 crores in nett collections providing a loss of Rs. 48.32 crores for its distributor. DAVID is directed by a fairly new director (Bejoy Nambiar) and has a cast of actors (Vikram, Tabu, Neil Nitin Mukesh, Vinay Virmani, Lara Dutta, Isha Sharvani, Monica Dogra) none of whom have had a movie earn Rs. 50 crores in nett collections for its distributor. Your guess is as good as mine as to why anyone would risk Rs. 50 crores on stars like these when PLAYERS and BLUE, which had much bigger box office stars, couldn't cross Rs. 30 crores in nett collection?

Three films which had budgets of less than Rs. 15 crores (ABCD - AnyBody Can Dance, Jolly LLB, Mere Dad Ki Maruti) managed to recover their cost and sadly were the only bright spots in a remarkably dull first quarter. With IPL 2013 taking over for the next two months, the outcome of the first half of 2013 looks extremely grim.

 
BELOW IS A LIST OF THE BIG BUDGET RELEASES OF THE FIRST QUARTER OF 2013 AND HOW THEY PERFORMED AT THE BOX OFFICE:

Matru Ki Bijlee Ka Mandola (Budget Rs. 33 cr)
VERDICT: Flop

TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 38.06 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 18.41 cr. 
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 14.59 cr.

Mumbai Mirror (Budget Rs. 35 cr)

VERDICT: Flop 
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 1.84 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 0.895 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 34.105 cr.

Race 2 (Budget Rs. 60 cr)
VERDICT: Flop 

TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 96.34 cr. 
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 44.66 cr. 
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS = Rs. 15.34 cr.

David (Budget Rs. 50 cr)

VERDICT: Flop
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 3.37 cr. 
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 1.68 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS: Rs. 48.32 cr.

Special 26 (Budget Rs. 30 cr)

VERDICT: Average
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 66.79 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 30.53 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S PROFIT: Rs. 0.53 cr.

Kai Po Che (Budget Rs. 30 cr)

VERDICT: Flop
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 48.40 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 21.97 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS: Rs. 8.03 cr.

Zila Ghaziabad (Budget Rs. 36 cr) 

VERDICT: Flop 
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 15.73 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 7.66 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS: Rs. 28.34 cr.

The Attacks Of 26/11 (Budget Rs. 30 cr)

VERDICT: Flop 
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS = Rs. 13.60 cr.
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 6.46 cr.

DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS: Rs. 23.54 cr.

Himmatwala (Budget Rs. 40 cr) 

VERDICT: Flop 
TOTAL NETT COLLECTIONS =  Rs. 40.53 cr.*
DISTRIBUTOR'S SHARE = Rs. 20.27 cr.*
DISTRIBUTOR'S LOSS: Rs. 19.73 cr.*

*Based on First week collections only.



© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Tip # 10: Characters

By Anant Mathur (March 25, 2013)

When creating characters for your story you should think of yourself as Dr. Frankenstein. Just as Frankenstein brought a creature to life from the sum of various body parts, you too are giving life to a character that doesn't exist. And, in order to do that, you're taking different parts from your own imagination and experiences to create a being that your audience can believe is "Alive!".

Sometimes writers get so lost in the creation of the story that they forget that the characteristics they've implanted their character with won't allow them to do certain things. The psychological elements are usually missing altogether in most Bollywood films. For example, if you take a character like Chulbul Pandey from Dabangg, there are certain nuances and body language which the character resonates. Chulbul would never behave the way Prem from Hum Aapke Hain Kaun..! would, but that doesn't mean he can't have his own love story, it just has to be in his own style and must follow his mental state.

Having said that, this doesn't mean your character(s) can't do things which are out of character, but a situation has to present itself and it must be brilliantly written. For example, If the spouse of a lead characters were to die or be killed, there are different paths the character could take if it's a male who has suffered the loss; and if it's a female who has lost her husband her mental state would be entirely different.

I always recommend to new writers that they take Psychology courses or at the very least read a few books on the subject. It helps you as a writer to understand how a persons mind would react in any situation depending on their mood, situation and surroundings. For example, if your character is in a situation where he's being bullied, there are several scenarios that can come into play, depending on the type of character he is, he could 1) do nothing or 2) turn it into a humorous situation or 3) fight back, etc. it's important to know which one because it will define him to your audience. And if you choose the wrong scenario the audience will feel cheated and your character will become a farce.

It's not easy to write a brilliant story or screenplay but it does make it easier when you have a solid understanding of all the parts that make up your character(s). If you write ignorantly you risk facing the same fate as Dr. Frankenstein, in your case the monster will be your story or screenplay. But, if you can write brilliantly you will touch the height of success Dr. Frankenstein only dreamed of... 

© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Presumed Guilty...

By Anant Mathur (March 10, 2013)

In most civilized nations on this planet the law states that a person is innocent until proven guilty. But for the last little while the media has been jumping on stories in such a way that it seems that a person is automatically guilty until his lawyers can prove otherwise. Don't get me wrong I'm not making an excuse for the guilty; I am just pointing out how the media misleads viewers into thinking only in one direction... theirs. It's sad that today we live in a world where people have stopped using their brains and believe every little thing they hear on TV or read online or in social media. 

If the media reports that Lindsay Lohan stole a bag of milk, everyone automatically assumes that she did it because that's how the media is projecting it. Where's the proof? What ever happened to a fair trial and innocent until proven guilty?

Media does not even believe in looking at evidence, all it believes in is getting the headline. If someone is suspected of something they spin it as if he/she belongs in jail. My personal favourite is when the media says a source has told them, who's this source, their imaginary friend. You can almost always bet there's no source when the media says a source has told them anything. It's no different than a Radio Jockey having their friends posing as listeners and calling-in to request a song. The best way to judge any case that's in the media is to read quotes. The media can't mis-quote people, so anything that is being quoted is true and everything else is likely untrue.


Evidence is not merely what a witness says. If a neighbor says he saw or heard a couple fighting, where's the proof. The neighbor could have a grudge against them and be lying - all that will come out when he's cross-examined by the defense counsel - but the media won't tell you that, to them the suspect is not a suspect, he/she is guilty until they proves their innocence. A person cannot be found guilty just because someone says they did it, there has to be motive and proof of murder. Witness testimony is not proof. Also, being a witness is different than being an eyewitness. An eyewitness is someone who was present when and where the crime was committed a witness doesn't have to be present at the crime scene. A guy saying he heard gunshots at 3 am is not evidence - first of all what was he doing awake at 3 am. And how do we know he didn't dream it or that it wasn't a car backfiring. If the police find incriminating letters/texts/e-mails or threatening phone calls... that's evidence.

The one thing the media can't tolerate is when a case doesn't go the way they predicted. Take the O.J. Simpson trial for instance. The media was dead sure he was guilty and would go to jail and couldn't believe it when the verdict was not guilty. I'm not saying that O.J. was innocent but the court needs solid proof before it can convict someone. If there's reasonable doubt, the defendant cannot be found guilty. A persons guilt or innocence is based on evidence and not on personal prejudices. Lots of guilty persons go free because of a lack of evidence and sometimes the innocent are sent to prison, it all depends on how incriminating the evidence is.


On Feb. 14, 2013, tragic events transpired at the home of the hugely admired, world-famous athlete Oscar Pistorius where he claims he accidentally shot and killed his girlfriend. Dubbed the Blade Runner, for his prosthetic legs, Pistorius faces a charge of premeditated murder in the Valentine's Day shooting.

Pistorius says he mistook his girlfriend for an intruder and shot her out of fear, while prosecutors say he planned the killing and attacked her as she cowered behind a locked bathroom door. The prosecution should have never charged Pistorius with pre-meditated murder; it's difficult to prove a murder is pre-meditated when it is a pre-meditated murder. In Pistorius' case it's near impossible.

From what I know of South Africa, break-ins are quite common and most people, even the well off, own guns. Many of the people in rural areas shoot first and ask questions after. Living in a gated community is no guarantee against intruders as security guards are often in on the crimes.


If it hasn't happened to you, you can't possibly imagine what it's like when someone breaks into your house. How violated you feel and how you keep wondering why me? It completely changes your mindset, every time you hear a sound you jump. If there are guns in the house you would probably grab one before you went to check what it was. Now imagine that this is how your life is
every day. Each moment you fear that someone could break into your house again and hurt you.


Personally, I'm against guns, but the only way for guns to be out of everyone's life is if the government bans the manufacturing of them. There are so many things that can be used as weapons in a house in case of an intruder, you don't need a gun. Guns kill and usually they kill the innocent!

I'm not condoning Oscar Pistorius' actions, he killed someone regardless of whether he thought it was an intruder or not. I can certainly understand his mindset if there was an intruder, but to try him for pre-meditated murder is unheard of. If anything the prosecution should've tried for Culpable Homicide (the unlawful negligent killing of a human being). 


Forensics will play a big part in the Oscar Pistorius case. Chances are until the case is finally heard; it won't be known what exactly happened. We can speculate all we want but since we don't know what happened our own prejudices are what's dictating how we react every time we hear the name Oscar Pistorius. 

© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Oscar Facts!

By Anant Mathur (February 22, 2013) 


The 85th Annual Academy Awards, popularly known as the Oscars, take place this Sunday (Feb. 24, 2012). Most of us were not around when the first Oscar ceremony took place, so here are some fact and moments you may or may not know from the first Oscars till now.

-First oscar ceremony was on May 16, 1929. 1927 & 1928 films were nominated. The first pic to win was wings (1927). Wings was the most expansive film up to that time.


-In 1942, Walt Disney was awarded 3 Oscars. One for inventing Mickey Mouse; another for creating Snow White, the first feature length animated film (this came with seven little Oscars); but the third, The Irving G Thalberg Award, proved too much for the animation great and he spent most of the speech misty-eyed.

-Since the Academy Awards ceremonies began in 1929, 73 different people have hosted or co-hosted the event. Some have hosted multiple times, but none holds a candle to Bob Hope. The actor/comedian hosted the Oscars a record 18 different times, beginning in 1940.

-My generation most popular host was Billy Crystal who has hosted 8 times

-In 1942, Citizen Kane was beaten to Best Picture by How Green Was My Valley.


-When presenting the award for Best Visual Effects, in 2006, Ben Stiller arrived on stage clad in green unitard so that he might be digitally erased by the power of visual effects and have the award present itself.

-The first ceremony was televised in 1953. 

-Only three films (It Happened One Night, One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest and Silence Of The Lambs) have won all five major Oscars (Picture, Director, Actor, Actress, Screenplay).  

-In 1943, when accepting Best Actress for Mrs Miniver, Greer Garson rambled on with thanks for over six minutes, reputedly the longest acceptance speech in Oscar history.

-In 2002, the audience had to wait over 4 hours and 17 minutes for A Beautiful Mind to be crowned Best Picture.

-The almost unthinkable happened in 1958 when the telecast actually ran short, forcing host Jerry Lewis to fill for twenty minutes.

-Marlon Brando won Best Actor for The Godfather in 1973, staying away from the ceremony himself, he sent a native American named Sacheen Littlefeather to announce that he could not accept the award due to the film industry's poor treatment of native Americans.

-Shirley Temple was given an Honorary Juvenile Award in 1934 "in grateful recognition for her contribution to screen entertainment". She was six.

-At the 1940 ceremony, Hattie McDaniel became the first black actor nominated and the first to win. It would be another 23 years before a black actor, Sidney Poitier, won in either of the leading categories and 62 years before Halle Berry won Best Actress.

-In 1992, Jack Palance won Best Supporting Actor for his role in City Slickers. After taking to the stage to accept his award and joking that he could "crap bigger" than co-star and host Billy Crystal, Palance dropped to the floor and did a series of one-handed press-ups. He was 73!  

-For the first and only time in Oscar history, two people won the award best supporting actress award in 1968 (Barbra Streisand and Katharine Hepburn).

-Sidney Poitier was the first black actor to win the award for a leading role when he won for Lilies of the Field at the 1963 Oscar ceremony.

-Martin Scorsese had been nominated in the directing category five times and lost every one. So, in 2007, when he was nominated a sixth time for The Departed, Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola arrived on stage to present the award.

-After six nominations, Alfred Hitchcock never won a competitive Oscar. In 1967, the honorary Irving G. Thalberg award was bestow upon one of cinema's greatest. His entire acceptance speech amounted to a simple, "Thank you". 

-In 1972, Charlie Chaplin received the longest ovation in Oscar history, lasting over five minutes. 

-The greatest boxers of the movie world and the real world met on stage at the 1976 ceremony. As Sylvester Stallone, aka Rocky Balboa, prepared to present an award, Muhammad Ali snuck up behind him.

© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Tip # 33: Writing

By Anant Mathur (February 4, 2013) 

Often I'm told by people that they're fed up of the run-of-the-mill stories they see in films and on television. My first response is that I agree with them but then as we converse further I explain why this exists today.

The film and television medium are not anything new; they've been around for many decades and generations. Hundreds of thousands of stories have been told over the years and as the audience watches more and more, they develop a better understanding of how stories are constructed and are able to figure out scenes and plot points before they are revealed to them; this makes the story dull and boring for them. The reason this happens is because over the years the people who first started in film and television have created formulas for writing for the big and small screens.

Today, we live in a world where filmmakers and television artist are trained from some school or the other, a place where they have learned these formulas. The problem is that these formulas don't work anymore. As mentioned earlier, people today have watched enough television and films to figure out the end of a story within the first 2 minutes. I can usually figure out the whole story from a trailer - that's how dull stories are today.


Love stories have been done to death, especially in India, and now whenever someone goes to see a love story they know that the couple is going to end up together even before they get into the theater, how the story gets there is irrelevant. 

Same is true for a murder mystery, you already know one of the characters has done it and chances are you'll know much before you're told who the killer is and won't enjoy the rest of the story. Gone are the days when you could stretch a storyline till the cows came home. Now people get bored. The audience is a little forgiving towards television programs because they don't cost all that much to watch, but films are expensive and if they disappoint they really turn an audience off.

So how do you write a story that keeps the interest of the audience? Glad you asked. For starters you can't just have one problem in your story. For example, you can't have a love story where the only issue is that the parents don't like the guy or girl and you spend the whole time trying to convince the parents that the guy or girl is the right choice. As a writer you need to give them more than one problem to deal with. One problem is solved and another one has to be solved then another two or three, each problem may only last 5, 10 or 15 minutes but it should keep the viewer glued to the screen. Similarly in a mystery, it's the opposite, you can't keep throwing twist after twist after twist into your story, it makes your story unreliable and very frustrating for the viewer to follow. The best mysteries are the ones which have one amazing twist at the end and the killer isn't one of the characters you've been following for the last 2-3 hrs. 

When films were first made there were no formulas or styles, people just told stories the best way they knew how. Today, filmmakers get so wrapped up in formulas, style and the technical aspects that they forget about telling a good story. Going to film school is not about learning the technical aspects of filmmaking - which you can learn while on the job. Film school is about learning how to tell a brilliant story that people will enjoy for generations. If you can't make a classic what's the point of being in this field? Stop thinking about it as a business/cash cow and start thinking about it as an opportunity, an opportunity to tell your audience a story they haven't seen before. Tell your story the way you think it should be told, forget formulas and style, each story should be a unique experience and not a factory product.

© Anant Mathur. All Rights Reserved.