center lO saDemiyaa
by Darina
poye daanayya
Amid
unprecedented fanfare is released the latest offering of
our top hero. Our movies have overcome boundaries, literally.
No longer are time, distance and space the obstacles to
the reach and extent of our telugu movie print's tentacles.
To different continents is beamed the same signal simultaneously
and audiences across the globe can cheer, dance, whistle,
clap, jubilate and celebrate at just the same time. True
global event, this is. Gone are those days when one patiently
had to wait for the print to arrive to his city to recreate
the fun and relive the frolic. Now a days, the only places
that do not witness such global events are ones that simply
aren't plugged into the civilization through electricity.
The media is abuzz with the "time and distance",
"time and work" type calculations - if a movie
is released in 200 centers, with 300 prints and runs for
400 days, collecting returns that would rival a small country's
budget figures, rewriting a few records along the way, what
would be the business range of the hero's next venture?
What would he have to do to top this? how huge has our industry
grown in terms of potential and marketability?
After
the initial euphoria subsides, it is better to evaluate
some basic economic principles. There is a small law hidden
somewhere in those vaults governing the principles of economics.
It is termed as law of diminishing returns. In simple terms
it states that more of anything cannot be sustained over
longer periods of time. In other words, more the number
of theaters, more the number of prints, the returns start
to diminish at some point. This point cannot be refuted
and has been proved beyond any reasonable doubt. The only
tricky issue is, nobody knows at what point this starts
to happen. So during the time when the industry is heating
up like a boiler with a broken knob, unmindful of burst
that is as inevitable and as certain as the sun rising in
the east, the media and the fans join in this effort by
stoking the egos and false-prestige's of our heroes, increasing
the number of prints, theaters, centers, the certain result
would be right in the face at times, much much earlier than
expected. Going by this mass hysteria, the industry is certainly
headed toward that dreaded S word - yeah, the SLUMP!
Somewhere
in our secondary standard economics textbook is mentioned
the bedrock principle about the inverse proportionality
relation between demand and supply. When demand increases
and supply is in shortage, demand (read craze) has to increase
and it surely does increase. Nowhere is it written that,
if the every outlet of the market is flooded with the same
product, the demand sustains over longer periods of time
and the returns double, triple and quadruple at unprecedented
rates. Well, one would adhere to and abide by these rules
and act accordingly, if the intention is to conduct better
business and get better returns for the investment. On the
other side, if the ultimate aim is to be able to print 100
days in 1000 theaters spread all across our Milky Way on
the back ends of special editions of newspapers, that is
a different matter altogether! And chest-thumping that all
these improbable and impractical equations add up to the
an increased business potential of the telugu movie, is
an act of self-deception, great idiocy and pure stupidity.
When
the Barjatyas scored a hit with Maine Pyaar Kiya, they turned
extra-cautious and more business savvy while marketing their
subsequent venture Hum Aapke Hai Koun! They drastically
cut down on the number of prints and thus the number of
theaters and the numbers of the cities the movie would release
in, thus ensuring greater longevity and continued clamor
and yearning for their product and lo and behold, the movie
ran for years, thanks to some cool heads and thinking minds!
It is usually the practice in Hollywood to flood the multiplexes
with a movie trying to make the best out of the initial
hype and hoopla, if it tests badly with test audience and
prospects appear to be bleak if the word of the mouth spreads
around creating negative publicity and thereby fewer ticket
sales. It is pure commonsense! Less is more and more is
less! How would one ensure that a movie runs longer over
extended periods of time, even after every movie going soul
has watched the movie once? Enter, the creative ways of
propping (or rather, pushing and prodding) the movie, like
prolonging the life of a gone case on a ventilator! The
producers recycling the returns, and probably the profit
margins, the fans associations digging deep into their not-so-deep
pockets, the distributors fearing retribution from the producers
if they pull the plug on the movie, and the exhibitors dreading
fall out with the distributor should they choose to replace
this movie with a really profitable one, collectively work
towards the common goal of putting up the 100th day poster
and collecting the rolling shield at the grandly arranged
functions! What solidarity and what camaraderie!! Whoever
thought reinvesting into the industry meant this?
One
can be philosophical about this whole charade and call this
a zero sum game! Or call this a law of conservation of collections
- Collections are neither created nor destroyed! They just
assume different shapes and names depending on the run time
- aaDaDam, aaDincaDam, naDipincaDam, toyincaDam!
kalakshanu
varshamulu cooDa kumbha vRusTi ayi vunDu
daani poTTa vippi cooDa produceru paaTlu vunDu
telugu citra naDaka gati tappi pOyenayaa
viSwadaabhi raama vinave sinee seema!
-
Daarinapoye Dannayya
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