‘It’s the pictures that got small’

February 23, 2010 04:00 pm | Updated December 16, 2016 03:02 pm IST - BANGALORE

MULTIPURPOSE: It is not just young people who hang out in multiplexes. There are others who combine shopping, eating and chilling with friends for whom the multiplex is a natural destination. Photo: K. Murali Kumar

MULTIPURPOSE: It is not just young people who hang out in multiplexes. There are others who combine shopping, eating and chilling with friends for whom the multiplex is a natural destination. Photo: K. Murali Kumar

That fact that there is a serpentine queue at the box office of a multiplex at the crack of dawn on a Friday morning makes for a strong reiteration of Bangalore’s love of movies. The humongous lines were for the Shah Rukh Khan starrer My Name is Khan that has been consuming reams of newsprint and hours of airwaves. Despite the steep ticket prices, the display board showed “sold out” and “fast-filling” for the weekend.

As 21-year-old collegian Aparna Ashok said: “I don’t mind spending money to watch good films in multiplexes.”

It is not just the youth for whom multiplexes rock. For D. Ambika Nair (49), homemaker and mom to twins, the multiplex is a natural destination “when I am out with friends as we can shop, eat and watch a movie all in the same place.”

But there are limits to fan following. Given that ticket prices can buy a sizeable bag of rice and the enervating expedition of negotiating what appear to be permanent traffic snarls the city is plagued with, the Internet and DVDs come to the rescue of a section of movie buffs. While most movie lovers know nothing compares to the “complete” theatre experience, they also face party-poopers such as long queues, a big hole in the pocket, freeze-level ACs, irritating cellphones, etc.

Lowdown on downloads

So you have people like Krishnaveni Badikillaya (24) who download movies from the Net. “It is definitely more convenient for working professionals,” she says.

In our over-communicated world where glitzy promos try to outdo each other to grab eyeballs, the wide, wild world of the Internet offers a totally different perspective. It is thanks to the Internet that a small, intimate movie such as Paranormal Activity became the rage it did. The haunted-house mockumentary, directed by Oren Peli, eschewed big-screen must haves like super effects for a static camera but managed to scare people out of their wits - including director Steven Spielberg. The movie took on a life of its own on the Internet and by the time it was released in theatres early this year, most movie buffs had already watched it online and been suitably terrified.

The other trend nowadays is films coming out on the telly within weeks of their release. Movies like that super-expensive underwater disaster Blue was aired on television within a blink of the eye. Even Rajkumar Santoshi’s Ranbir Kapoor-Katrina Kaif starrer Ajab Prem ki Gazab Kahani was aired soon after its theatre release.

However, the adage of content being king rules and a good movie will always find takers in theatres. Most people echo 15-year-old Joshua Samuel, a Baldwin High School student, when he said: “I prefer to watch good films on the screen rather than on the telly.”

The cost factor is taken care of with selective viewing with most people going to the big screen once in two months. As Aparna said: “It depends… Avatar was released with many other good films such as Sherlock Holmes and 3 Idiots. So I ended up spending a lot of money. Otherwise, there are times when months go by without me spending on movie tickets.”

Weekend rates

Oddly enough, the theatre-going public grumbled about being parted with their money for a few hours to pay the deposit for the special glasses to watch James Cameron’s 3D sci-fi extravaganza Avatar. The pricey weekend rates also added to the mutterings.

“That has always been the case,” commented A. Premchand, movie buff and Paramount Pictures representative.

“When Cleopatra was released in 1965, there was the new 70 mm technology and the tickets were priced higher.”

Mr. Premchand says the tickets in the Swinging Sixties were priced between “80 paise and Rs. 2.50.” “I remember then an increase of 50 paise, which was a decided pinch on the pocket. I had to beg for money from my grandmother to watch Cleopatra,” she said.

While Avatar has the world in a tizzy with its 3D effects, Mr. Premchand remembers watching the 1950s horror classic House of Wax. “I watched it at the Imperial. There was no extra charge for the red and blue glasses which were secured round our heads with a rubberband. We watched the film and returned them at the gate,” he said.

While Mr. Premchand concedes that multiplexes have kept pace with all the technical advances, he said: “The Sixties and the Seventies were a great time for the movies. The screens were bigger and the 70 mm experience was awesome.”

As Norma Desmond commented in Billy Wilder’s Sunset Boulevard: “It’s the pictures that got small.”

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