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Watching SRK in JAM, MMX, or DT?

DU, DUSU, CP, SN, DDLJ, GK1, RTI, SRK, SEZ, HC, SC, PMO, K3G… intimidated by acronyms and abbreviations? Try reading the schedule of city’s cinema halls in the newspaper.

Updated on: Dec 24, 2009, 18:52:14 IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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DU, DUSU, CP, SN, DDLJ, GK1, RTI, SRK, SEZ, HC, SC, PMO, K3G… intimidated by acronyms and abbreviations? Try reading the schedule of city’s cinema halls in the newspaper. DT Shalimar Bagh is screening Avatar; Ghaziabad’s M4U and JAM are showing The Twilight Saga. PVR Naraina has Rocket Singh, and M2K Rohini is screening Paa.

HT Image
HT Image

Delhi has 99 screens in 56 cinemas, out of which 17 are multiplexes. Imagine the plight of an SRK fan looking for a film at, say, EDM’s PVR. Don’t know what EDM is? It’s the East Delhi Mall in Anand Vihar.

In the 40s, there were less than 10 cinemas in town, almost all in Old Delhi, and all had names that were easy to pronounce and remember — Ritz, Novelty, Regal. Delhiites called them by the area in which they were located, e.g; ‘Let’s go to Kashmere Gate’, since Ritz was there.

As more theatres cropped up in different parts of the city, the location-specific reference gave way to the theatre’s proper name. And they became landmarks of the area, rather than taking their identity from the area. The region around Filmistan talkies, just before Bara Hindu Rao Chowk, is simply called Filmistan.

In 1961, a gentleman named D C Kaushish opened India’s first 70mm theatre in Paharganj, and named it after his wife, Sheila. Mrs Kaushish died in 2005 but Sheila theatre lives. Savitri, in GK-II, shut down years ago but the bus stop is still called ‘Savitri’. Sangam, at RK Puram, also comes in handy for giving directions.

But for the city’s new theatres, this is the age of ‘initialism’. It began when Ajay Bijli of Basant Lok’s Priya cinema started a venture with the Australian company Village Roadshow. The result was Priya Village Roadshow (PVR) Cinemas. The company turned Saket’s rundown Anupam theatre into India’s first multiplex. After 9/11, the Australians pulled out, but Bijli retained the brand name and PVR-ised the city. His multiplexes popped up in places as far away as Prashant Vihar in north Delhi and Vikaspuri in West.

The multiplex chains are growing and taking over older, standalone theatres, and, in the process, creating new names. In August this year, the 70-year-old Odeon cinema in Connaught Place opened as the two-screen Big Cinemas Odeon. (Big Cinemas is a division of the Adlabs Films). Nearby Rivoli and Plaza have got their makeovers already, stamped with the brand that took control.

Inevitably, the city’s movie-buffs are as spoilt for these abbreviated names as for films. Sample these: DT, SRS, JAM, BIG, MMX, M4U, M2K, G3S and 3C’s.

Exceptions happen. Opened in 1954, Delite cinema in Asaf Ali Marg was renovated half-a-century later with Spanish paint and Italian marbles. It, however, retains its original name. Until, perhaps, the next chain comes along.

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