Tag: The Kashmir Files

  • 6 Months, 5 Headlines: The Year So Far

     

     

     

    By Shailesh Kapoor

     

    Shailesh KapoorWe are halfway through the year today, which is good excuse for a mid-year review. Here’s my pick of the five media and entertainment events that headlined the first half of the year, in chronological order of sorts:

     

    Pathaan: An SRK reboot

    Six months into the year, there’s been only one genuine blockbuster in Hindi cinema in 2023: Shah Rukh Khan’s Pathaan. The actor made a mini comeback of sorts (his last major hit dates back to 2013 – Chennai Express). Pathaan went on to become the highest grossing Hindi film of all time, both in terms of its opening and its lifetime business. In the process, it also put to rest the presumptuous argument that movie-going will be replaced by OTT. (I wrote about Pathaan and SRK’s superstardom in January in this column).

     

    India Shining, at the Oscars

    India’s brush with the Oscars has been, at best, a case of so-near-yet-so-far. There hasn’t been much to shout about in recent years, except AR Rahman, Gulzar and Resul Pookutty winning Oscars for Slumdog Millionaire (2008). This year, we had not one but two winners, in Naatu Naatu (RRR) and The Elephant Whisperers, and a creditable nomination for All That Breathes. The RRR song even got a stage performance at the Oscars, and there seemed more Indian presence at the Oscars in 2023, than across all previous years put together!

     

    IPL: Bigger by the year

    A long but immensely successful season of IPL dominated viewership, both on linear television and online, in the first half of 2023. The IPL’s ability to grow stronger each year is an incredible one. The league has been one of my go-to topics in this column, and I wrote about it twice this year, at the start and the end of the season.

     

    JioCinema: Free for all

    The IPL was the also the scene of a disruption that not many saw coming, till a few weeks before it: JioCinema, the newly relaunched service from Viacom 18, decided to remove the paywall behind which the league has streamed all these years on Disney+ Hotstar. The platform has followed it up with an aggressive AVOD-led strategy, putting out big theatrical films and a major web-series (Asur 2) as free content. This has set the proverbial cat among the pigeons in the OTT industry in India. There’s unlikely to be a dull moment around, anytime soon.

     

    Cinema of the Right, by the right, for the Right

    While The Kashmir Files stood out as an aberration in 2022, this year saw two major films appropriate the Hindutva narrative. The Kerala Story seemed like a direct inspiration from the success of The Kashmir Files, and did equally well too, and is the second-highest grossing film in India this year so far (across languages), behind Pathaan. Adipurush went the mythology way, riding on the unconditional reverence for the Ramayan in large parts of India. The film opened at staggering levels, but soon went on to become a victim of the very idea it was trying to ride on. Irony, you had me at the vacant Hanuman seat.

     

    Shailesh Kapoor is Founder and CEO, Ormax Media. And is a long-standing columnist of MxMIndia and writes on Fridays. His views here are personal.

     

  • The Saffron Cinema Movement

     

     

    By Shailesh Kapoor

     

    Shailesh KapoorMarch 2022 saw the release of The Kashmir Files, a film whose box-office performance was unlike any other Hindi film before it. The film had no cast or credentials of note, but went on to gross almost Rs 300 crore at the Indian box-office, aided by inorganic methods, such as corporate bookings and political push. The film features in the list of Top 20 grossing Hindi films of all time. In this article, I wrote about how the film is an outlier, if there ever was one.

     

    In May this year, there was a sense of déjà vu with The Kerala Story, a similarly-titled film that relies on the same premise – religious polarisation to entice the Hindu majority to watch the film – to get audience attention. The political support to The Kerala Story was less overt, but the film has managed to do almost as well as The Kashmir Files, grossing about Rs 265 crore over its extended run at the cinemas in India.

     

    While the initial business of The Kashmir Files was inorganic, it is impossible to gross such huge numbers for films of this scale, unless they appeal to a wider audience base. Clearly, both The Kashmir Files and The Kerala Story managed to do that. Entertainment, which is often cited as the primary, if not the only, reason to watch movies, was not the driver though. The films were watched because they represent an ideology, which a large section of the audience, espouse. An ideology that is also reflective in their political choices: Both films have performed better in states where Hindutva is a core component of the political narrative.

     

    Today sees the release of the Ramayan-inspired pan-India film Adipurush. Unlike the other two films, this one is not communal in its content, as it does not have a community (read Muslims) being shown in a negative light. However, the resonance with the film’s theme is unmistakably religious and cultural. The film has songs titled Jai Shri Ram and Ram Siya Ram, both of which are trending on top of the music charts. Marketing of the film is relying on distinctly religious elements, such as a seat being left unoccupied in each cinema hall, for Lord Hanuman to watch the film!

     

    Headlined by Prabhas, who is the No 1 star in Telugu cinema, the film will be driven by his stardom in his core market (AP-Telangana), but by its thematic resonance in the Hindi markets. It is expected to gross Rs 90-100 cr across India on its first day alone, aided to the extent of 15-20% by corporate block bookings. Political support is certain to follow, and unless the content is too weak to sustain, Adipurush can be expected to be one of the Top 10 grossers of all time in Indian cinema.

     

    Last year’s major Hindi release Brahmastra also grossed big numbers, registered the best opening day for an original Hindi language film since the re-opening of theatres post the pandemic (Pathaan now holds that distinction). While Brahamstra has more ‘modern’ elements like a young lead starcast, superhero genre and visual effects, its core theme relies heavily on Hindu mythology too.

     

    Clearly, we are seeing a sort of trend emerging here. One could look at these films as being either ‘propaganda’-driven (The Kashmir Files or The Kerala Story), or propaganda-free content that relies on cultural and religious resonance (Adipurush). But together, they represent an emerging genre of cinema that digs into Hindu faith and mythology, and its political extension Hindutva, to appeal to its target audience.

     

    It’s almost certain that many such scripts are being penned even as you read this, and 2024-25 may see a lot more films of this nature being released. What started off as an outlier phenomenon has now gained mainstream significance. Whether it’s a good thing for our cinema, and for the society at large, is another topic for another day.

     

    The debate on whether cinema shapes society, or society influences cinema, is a complex one. But in the current times, Hindi cinema seems to be clearly witnessing the latter. The Saffron Cinema Movement is here. And it’s just a start!

     

    Shailesh Kapoor is Founder and CEO, Ormax Media. He writes on MxMIndia on Fridays. His views here are personal.