A look at Bollywood’s hits and flops in 2016 shows that nobody knows what works
The rumours had been swirling around for the past few months, and they finally acquired the ring of truth over the past week. Disney India has lost its local head and its stomach for Hindi film production.
Siddharth Roy Kapur, the managing director of the entity that was formed after the Hollywood behemoth took over the UTV group of companies in 2011, has quit to start his own venture following the massive flops of Fitoor, starring his brother Aditya, and Mohenjo Daro. Disney isn’t leaving the business of entertainment – it is only going to stop throwing good money after bad.
It will continue to domestically distribute Hollywood superhero-based titles, animated productions and visuals effects-heavy dramas, but will stay away from Hindi films for an indefinite period.
Poorly mounted productions and underwhelming returns have also scarred Balaji Telefilms. The publicly listed company headed by television magnate Ekta Kapoor has finally realised that the movie business is an altogether different kettle of fish. Reeling from the inadequate reception of its last five films in 2016 (A Flying Jatt, Great Grand Masti, Udta Punjab, Azhar, Kya Kool Hain Hum 3), the company has said it will “rethink its business strategy” – code for crawling back into the confines of the drawing room.