What film exhibitors expect from Pakistani cinema in 2018
With major films slated for release this year, exhibitors seem hopeful
KARACHI:
There is no denying that 2017 was a disappointing year for the Pakistani film industry with no box office successes other than Punjab Nahi Jaungi and Na Maloom Afraad 2. 2018’s first release Parchi opened to a fairly large audience (for a non-Eid release), especially in Islamabad and Rawalpindi, and it remains to be seen how it fares in the next few days.
Although it’s too early to tell what fate local cinema would have in 2018, with major films slated for release this year, exhibitors seem hopeful.
Atrium Cinemas’ managing director Nadeem Mandviwalla told The Express Tribune, “I hope this year is going to be better than 2017. There are a few major films coming out this year.” He cited films such as Parwaaz Hay Junoon, Saat Din Mohabbat In, Ali Zafar’s Teefa in Trouble, Jawani Phir Nahi Aani 2 and Load Wedding as having potential to bring in big money for the cinemas.
Nueplex director of media and marketing Kamran Yar Khan also hoped 2018 was going to be better than last year. “There are major films coming out like Parwaaz Hay Junoon, Load Wedding and Jawani Phir Nahi Aani 2 (JPNA2), which are expected to deliver big time but it all depends on their content as well.”
Exhibitors are not putting all eggs in one basket this year. Along with several major films, which can safely be assumed to be almost sure fire successes, there will be several debut films such as Pari and Cake.
As to where we stand as an industry and where 2018 may take us, exhibitors believe film-makers must learn from their mistakes, but that it’s also too early to expect them to become perfect at everything.
“So far, we are still struggling for successful films which actually turn in profit so economic sustenance is the priority right now. After that, we can think about diversifying in terms of genres and other concerns,” said Mandviwalla.
He continued, “In India, 100 out of 250 films recover their budget and more film-makers are trying to get into that ‘Top 100’ slot. Here, two out of 20 are making money and that is not going to take us anywhere."
Year in Review 2017: Which Pakistani movie song of 2017 is your favourite?
"Our film-makers are new so of course, it’s not going to happen in their first projects. But they need to learn how to budget a movie and not overspend. The key is intelligent film-making where even low budget films make money.” he added.
According to him, only Nabeel Qureshi and Nadeem Beyg have proven themselves as viable film-makers so far, while he thinks Wajahat Rauf and Yasir Nawaz are gradually building their repo and proving themselves.
Super Cinemas’ general manager Khorem Gultasab thought 2017 largely proved to be a year of experimentation by the film-makers.
“Only a few credible groups succeeded but most failed at the box office for one reason or the other. This frustrates the exhibitors who have fixed capital investments and appreciate supply of decent local content to keep cinemas alive,” he said.
Gultasab added that we cannot depend on Bollywood anymore as it might get choked just like cricket and that we should have better-quality films throughout the year, instead of just during Eid.
He also stated that exhibitors must question film-makers and production houses as to why they have been incapable to serve decent content.
Zahid Ahmed to star in Netflix's first original Pakistani production
Khan said, “I think we are putting too much pressure on Pakistani film industry. There is a mad rush to produce more films and that’s resulting in weaker content being put out. We should go through the process in an organic manner rather than forcing it. Give it a decade and let it grow. Right now, everybody is in the learning process.”
However, Gultasab believed that both veterans and newcomers displayed inadequate proficiency in film-making and that film-makers need to stop treating cinemas as laboratories to test their products.
He further added, “This is serious business with very high fixed operational costs. All said and done, I believe that everyone has learnt enough lessons during the preceding years. I have a gut feeling that 2018 is a dawn of better times for all stakeholders.”
Have anything to add to the story? Share it in the comments below.
There is no denying that 2017 was a disappointing year for the Pakistani film industry with no box office successes other than Punjab Nahi Jaungi and Na Maloom Afraad 2. 2018’s first release Parchi opened to a fairly large audience (for a non-Eid release), especially in Islamabad and Rawalpindi, and it remains to be seen how it fares in the next few days.
Although it’s too early to tell what fate local cinema would have in 2018, with major films slated for release this year, exhibitors seem hopeful.
Atrium Cinemas’ managing director Nadeem Mandviwalla told The Express Tribune, “I hope this year is going to be better than 2017. There are a few major films coming out this year.” He cited films such as Parwaaz Hay Junoon, Saat Din Mohabbat In, Ali Zafar’s Teefa in Trouble, Jawani Phir Nahi Aani 2 and Load Wedding as having potential to bring in big money for the cinemas.
Nueplex director of media and marketing Kamran Yar Khan also hoped 2018 was going to be better than last year. “There are major films coming out like Parwaaz Hay Junoon, Load Wedding and Jawani Phir Nahi Aani 2 (JPNA2), which are expected to deliver big time but it all depends on their content as well.”
Exhibitors are not putting all eggs in one basket this year. Along with several major films, which can safely be assumed to be almost sure fire successes, there will be several debut films such as Pari and Cake.
As to where we stand as an industry and where 2018 may take us, exhibitors believe film-makers must learn from their mistakes, but that it’s also too early to expect them to become perfect at everything.
“So far, we are still struggling for successful films which actually turn in profit so economic sustenance is the priority right now. After that, we can think about diversifying in terms of genres and other concerns,” said Mandviwalla.
He continued, “In India, 100 out of 250 films recover their budget and more film-makers are trying to get into that ‘Top 100’ slot. Here, two out of 20 are making money and that is not going to take us anywhere."
Year in Review 2017: Which Pakistani movie song of 2017 is your favourite?
"Our film-makers are new so of course, it’s not going to happen in their first projects. But they need to learn how to budget a movie and not overspend. The key is intelligent film-making where even low budget films make money.” he added.
According to him, only Nabeel Qureshi and Nadeem Beyg have proven themselves as viable film-makers so far, while he thinks Wajahat Rauf and Yasir Nawaz are gradually building their repo and proving themselves.
Super Cinemas’ general manager Khorem Gultasab thought 2017 largely proved to be a year of experimentation by the film-makers.
“Only a few credible groups succeeded but most failed at the box office for one reason or the other. This frustrates the exhibitors who have fixed capital investments and appreciate supply of decent local content to keep cinemas alive,” he said.
Gultasab added that we cannot depend on Bollywood anymore as it might get choked just like cricket and that we should have better-quality films throughout the year, instead of just during Eid.
He also stated that exhibitors must question film-makers and production houses as to why they have been incapable to serve decent content.
Zahid Ahmed to star in Netflix's first original Pakistani production
Khan said, “I think we are putting too much pressure on Pakistani film industry. There is a mad rush to produce more films and that’s resulting in weaker content being put out. We should go through the process in an organic manner rather than forcing it. Give it a decade and let it grow. Right now, everybody is in the learning process.”
However, Gultasab believed that both veterans and newcomers displayed inadequate proficiency in film-making and that film-makers need to stop treating cinemas as laboratories to test their products.
He further added, “This is serious business with very high fixed operational costs. All said and done, I believe that everyone has learnt enough lessons during the preceding years. I have a gut feeling that 2018 is a dawn of better times for all stakeholders.”
Have anything to add to the story? Share it in the comments below.