Hard sell in Bollywood

Sudipta Datta, Alokananda Chakraborty

Posted: Tuesday, Jan 13, 2009 at 2258 hrs IST
Updated: Tuesday, Jan 13, 2009 at 2258 hrs IST


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: Will Dibakar Banerjee lift the Best Story award for Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye!, or will it be Neeraj Pandey for thriller drama A Wednesday!? Will AR Rahman’s lilting musical scores for Jodhaa Akbar clinch the trophy for Best Background Music, or will it be Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy for their campus-rock music for Rock On!!?

In the run-up to the 15th Star Screen Awards slated for January 14, 2009, The Financial Express flagged off a three-part series on the state of Bollywood on January 10. In the first part, we examined the effects of the economic slowdown on the Hindi film industry, and in the second the giant strides Bollywood has made towards corporatisation. We end the series today with a look how marketing is gaining ascendance in tinsel town.

Some weeks after movie Krrish—directed by Rakesh Roshan, and starring Rekha, Hrithik Roshan, Priyanka Chopra, among others—hit theatres in 2006, a television commercial had a little boy asking his friend, “Aey Chhotu, Krrish banega?” In exchange for five wrappers of Lifebuoy soap, we were told, we could get a Krrish mask and a chance to meet the superhero. This was one of the many initiatives Filmkraft, the maker of the movie Krrish, launched to prop the Rs 50-crore movie.

In Madhur Bhandarkar’s low-budget flick Corporate, the main characters are seen in Allen Solly shirts and trousers. They worked on Lenovo laptops and lounged on Durian furniture. News channel Times Now’s correspondents could be spotted in the movie reporting news stories. Trade pundits say the marketing budget for Corporate was nearly as much as the film’s cost of production.

More recently, Madura Garment’s premium menswear brand Van Heusen launched Ghajini’s apparels in their stores all across India and is backing it with in-store campaigns and giant posters of Khan dressed in formal attire. again, Samsung has launched special Ghajini editions of L700 and M200 handphone models. These handsets have preloaded with Ghajini ringtones, pictures and songs. For its part, Tata Indicom has launched an outbound dialer service with Khan’s pre-recorded voice.

Get the drift?

These three are not isolated events. Movie marketing has become big business over the past few years. If trade sources are to be believed, a film’s marketing budget is now 40-50% of the film’s total budget. To ensure that no potential ticket buyer goes home empty handed, movies are being launched with 1,000-1,500 prints nationally, at a cost of Rs 50,000 per...

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