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Bollywood keeps it short and simple

Directors today are cutting the length of their films to keep it short and substantial, writes Diganta Guha.

Updated on: Feb 24, 2007 12:07 PM IST
None | By , Kolkata
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"Crisp and fast. That’s the formula these day," says director Madhur Bhandarkar.
We aren’t talking about the recipe for fries at McDonalds. We are talking about films, and those which are currently being served by Bollywood in particular.

Whether it’s a one-hero, big-budget project like Namastey London or a multi-starrer ike Honeymoon Travels Pvt Ltd, the effort now is to package it into a more compact size.

HT Image
HT Image

Getting to the point
Indian audiences aren’t insisting on lavish, lengthy productions any more. A Bollywood film doesn’t have to mean a three-hour break from reality. It has to be short and substantial.

“It is like one-day cricket,” says Vidhu Vinod Chopra, who surprised many with his multi-starrer Eklavya-The Royal Guard, which was just a couple of hours long. The audience now-a-days does not have much patience, explain filmmakers. “It’s the remote control age now. The audience is so informed that you don’t have to explain. Make it crisp and fast and the film works,” says filmmaker Madhur Bhandarkar, whose Traffic Signal was 2 hours, 3 minutes precisely.

Nikhil Advani, who recently released a longish Salaam-e-Ishq (with six stories and a cluster of stars it was 3.35 hours long), found that audiences were complaining about it being too lengthy. The film was chopped to a more watchable 3.11 hours.

Better for business
The change is partially thanks to films targeting largely the multiplexes. Trade expert Taran Adarsh explains, “If the reports are good, the initial response is much higher. And with more shows per day — the average being 12-16 shows a day — the returns are greater.”

It is because of this that most small films have done such great business, be it Khosla Ka Ghosla or Pyaar Ke Side/Effects, among others. “Distributors aim at making profits and that with more shows the chance of better collections is strong,” admits Khosla… director Dibakar Banerji.

Whether it’s because of the audience or because producers demand shorter films, there’s a spate of them coming up. Honeymoon Travels Pvt Ltd (2 hours), Nishabd (2 hours), Hattrick (2 hr 15 mins), 1971 (2 hours), Just Married (2 hr 10 mins) and even Vipul Shah’s Rs 25-crore Namastey London (2 hour 10 mins) are just a few that come to mind.

 
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