Home > Hindi Film, Talking Points > Successful Hindi Films And How We Stopped Having A Repeat Audience

Successful Hindi Films And How We Stopped Having A Repeat Audience

The business of Hindi films in India has increased exponentially in the last few years. Every third month we are having a Hindi film which is generating revenue more than 80 Cr Nett, a figure unheard of, even 10 years back.

While dissecting the collection pattern of the hits, superhits and blockbusters in the last few years, one very interesting observation can be made. Most films, even though successful, are not finding repeat audience. However, this particular scenario is applicable primarily to big-budgeted films. Limited budget/indie films, irrespective of quality, face many hurdles. Most of them are not promoted at all and released in very few theaters, with the hope that the film if good, will grow on word of mouth. In such cases, it becomes very difficult to club their collection pattern with big-budget films.

Now, how do we define repeat audience through box office collections? When any big-budget film releases, how much it sustains in its second, third and subsequent weeks is directly proportional to its repeat audience.

The collection of a film normally falls by 40-45% from Week 1 to Week 2 if it sustains well. In case there is another big-budget film releasing the next week, the collection falls 50-60%. By the end of its theatrical run, if a film has sustained well, it will atleast double its first week collection if not more.

Is that the case in the last few years? Let us take a look.

The most successful film in terms of revenue generated in Hindi cinema is 3 Idiots. The Nett collection for the film is 202.57 Cr. It collected 79.05 Cr in Week 1. So the film made 2.56 times the opening week collection. Now, let us take a look at the collection of different weeks. Week 1 collected 79.05 Cr, Week 2 collected 56.24 Cr and Week 3 was 30.30 Cr. So the collections dropped by only 28.8% from Week 1 to Week 2 and 46.1% from Week 2 to Week 3, which clearly indicates the repeat audience.

Let us take another example, Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi. First week collection for the film was 42.19 Cr. The Nett collection for the film after its theatrical run is 86.78 Cr, which is little over 2 times the first week collection. If we analyze the collection by weeks, Week 1 collected 42.19 Cr, Week 2 collected 24.56 Cr and Week 3 was 9.8 Cr. From Week 1 to Week 2, the collections dropped by 41.7% and for Week 2 to Week 3 the collections dropped by 60%. The reason for the larger drop in Week 3 was primarily due to the release of Ghajini.

The third and final example of a film sustaining well is Om Shanti Om. The Nett collection for the film is 79.42 Cr. It collected 36.97 Cr in Week 1. So the film made 2.15 times the opening week collection. Now, let us take a look at the collection of different weeks. Week 1 collected 36.97 Cr, Week 2 collected 22.18 Cr and Week 3 was 10.51 Cr. So the collections dropped by only 40% from Week 1 to Week 2 and 52.6% from Week 2 to Week 3.

Here onwards, the graph goes downward.

First on the list is Ghajini. First week collection for the film was 64.28 Cr. The Nett collection for the film after its theatrical run is 114.67 Cr, which is 1.78 times the first week collection. If we analyze the collection by weeks, Week 1 collected 64.28 Cr, Week 2 collected 26.50 Cr and Week 3 was 14.13 Cr. From Week 1 to Week 2, the collections dropped by 58.8% even though there were no releases in the next two weeks.

The same can be said for Rajneeti too. The Nett collection for the film is 92.93 Cr. It collected 53.91 Cr in Week 1. So the film made just 1.72 times the opening week collection. Now, let us take a look at the collection of different weeks. Week 1 collected 53.91 Cr, Week 2 collected 23.92 Cr and Week 3 was 7.89 Cr. So the collections dropped by 55.6% from Week 1 to Week 2 and 67% from Week 2 to Week 3.

Bodyguard suffered the worst fate. First week collection for the film was 109.47 Cr. The Nett collection for the film after its theatrical run is 140.95 Cr, which is shockingly only 1.28 times the first week collection, clearly indicating the picture.

At the time of this article, Ra.One, another supposedly successful film is going through the same crisis. The Week 1 collection for the movie is 97.47 Cr. The Week 2 collection stands at a shocking low of only 15.27 Cr, a plunge of 84.3%, probably the worst of the decade.

The same story goes on and on for every hit, superhit or blockbuster film in the last years. Dabangg, Golmaal 3, Singham, Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, My Name Is Khan, Housefull, Love Aaj Kal… None of them managed to double their first week collection by the end of their theatrical run. In the last 5 years, only 3 successful big-budgeted films collected more than two times their first week total.

Gone are the days of Golden Jubilee and Silver Jubilee. Rarely does a film complete a theatrical run of 50 days. The audience is simply not connecting. A pan-India hit has almost become a myth. It is either a Multiplex success or a Single Screen success, but never both. The reason is simple. We are just not making enough good films.

Producers and distributors keep on shouting that the only business that is now left is the first weekend business. And so, irrespective of the product, good or bad, everyone is going for the kill by over promoting their films till it becomes nauseating. The bubble of the first week business will burst sooner or later. What will the producers do then? And that is one scary thought!

  1. November 16, 2011 at 2:21 AM | #1

    this is plain sad… like even Ranbir said in one his interviews unless the movies sustains in a long time and like you said finds a repeat aundience, its not successful !

  2. November 16, 2011 at 2:25 AM | #2

    Superb. Well researched and nicely written.

  3. November 16, 2011 at 8:52 AM | #3

    and we have our very own box office analyst :-)

  4. Eshan
    November 16, 2011 at 8:59 AM | #4

    Super article…!!so enlightening….3 idiots seems to be the only strong winner in this 100 crore club..people watched it again and again..others were just week 1 films…poor story telling…worked on stardom only..

  5. jhonmoy
    November 16, 2011 at 12:05 PM | #5

    Graphs! Can we have some graphs in posts such as these?

    Rest was nice!

  6. November 16, 2011 at 7:33 PM | #6

    In a way, too much publicity can make the film less attractive. One keeps watching trailer after trailer , one looses interest.
    Can’t compare 25 weeks/50 weeks. Those days, the film guys were out of reach of people. So they went o theaters to see them. Now the starts are in your face, through out the day! People know all the details about their daily lives!

  7. Arvind
    November 16, 2011 at 10:22 PM | #7

    Partly agree about the drop being due to quality issues and nauseating promotions, but the other reason is that Hindi/Indian movies (99%) don’t warrant a theater experience. So while people are drawn by the hype to watch it for the first time in a theater, they would prefer to see repeats on “Torrent” downloads (which are avl from day 1 or 2 of the theatrical release) or pirated DVDs (again avl from day 2 or 3 of release) or catch it on Sat TV 4-5 weeks down the line. As these modes of viewing don’t affect the movie-going experience in anyway ppl tend to save money by seeing the movie on a DVD or their PC. The average ticket price (+ parking + eats etc) in a metro multiplex comes to Rs 400 per person at a minimum. Who would be willing to watch it in a theater second time when he/she can watch it on a DVD at home for 50 bucks?

    Compare this with a Hollywood biggie with special effects etc…people are forced to watch in theatres due to the effect that a big screen gives.

  8. Stone
    November 17, 2011 at 12:03 AM | #8

    I guess they know what crap they are dishing out, that’s why they put extra energy in building the hype and then releasing record number of prints, in record number of screens, in record number of shows. Whole model is based on first week’s collection, and sadly it is coming down to first weekend’s collection.

  9. George
    November 17, 2011 at 10:52 AM | #9

    how many screens were there when movies were silver and golden jubilees ?
    how many tickets were sold in previously and how many sold now ?
    what are the avenues for entertainment available then and now?

    pretty shallow research if you haven’t analysed any of the above.. if all the movie watching audience can watch it in the 2 weeks itself than how could a movie run for 50 days ….

  1. February 19, 2012 at 6:33 PM | #1

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