Tag: Bard of Blood

  • Sacred Games 2, Bard of Blood, and Delhi Crime: Netflix most popular originals in 2019

    Sacred Games 2, Bard of Blood, and Delhi Crime: Netflix most popular originals in 2019

    MUMBAI: Netflix has announced the list of most popular originals and movies in 2019 in India.  Sacred Games 2, Bard Blood and Delhi Crime were the top three most popular series in the list of top 10 most popular series releases of 2019. The list also included Sex Education, Leila, Stranger Things S3, Typewriter, Little Things S3, The Witcher and The Spy: Limited Series. 

    The company took this initiative for helping its customers to know about the popular releases which they can watch in the holiday season. Compared to any other country, the viewership percentage on Netflix is the highest in India as 70 per cent of subscribers watch at least one film in a week.

    The top 10 most popular movies in 2019 on Netflix include Kabir Singh, Article 15, Drive, Badla, House Arrest, 6 Underground, Chopsticks, Baazaar, Luka Chuppi and Romeo Akbar Walter at the tenth position.

    These lists are ranked by the number of accounts choosing to watch at least 2 minutes of a series, movie or special during its first 28 days on Netflix in 2019. At least two minutes is the same way Netflix calculates its daily Top 10 lists in the UK and Mexico – and similar to the way in which the BBC compiles its iPlayer rankings.

  • Inshorts curates interactive campaign for ‘Bard of Blood’

    Inshorts curates interactive campaign for ‘Bard of Blood’

    MUMBAI: Advocating that creative content in today’s time cannot be restricted to only text, English news app Inshorts has created a first-of-its-kind interactive campaign for the recently launched Netflix original ‘Bard of Blood’.  

    The interactive campaign is designed to intrigue the audience to engage with the content and further hook the users to the brand story. The innovative ad is designed to tell the users a story in an interactive format in short snippets activated on user actions. Starring popular actors including Emraan Hashmi, Shobhita Dhulipala, and Vineet Kumar Singh in the lead roles, the innovation is appropriately able to capitalise on aspects of the series and create intrigue which would have been hard for any other media or format. 

    Inshorts national sales head Piyush Thakur asaid, “The six-inch screen today allows for ample experimentation to create ad formats and innovations that are non-intrusive, interactive, and easy to follow for the user. We have seen high engagement on such formats, which makes us believe in utilising the combined power of vertical, video, and interactive to create a new paradigm in advertising on the small screen.” 

    With a large pool of content available on the internet, consumers today are spoilt for choice and it takes a flicker of a second to lose the interest of the audience. Thus, it has become crucial for marketers to choose the right ad format to engage the users and get the most value out of their advertising spend. Inshorts being the leader in the short form content space has effectively catered to the changing online behaviours by consistently investing in Ad-tech and thus offering novel and customised ad solutions to brands. 

    With the primary focus on creativity and innovation, Inshorts has marked a dent in the advertising space with its engaging ad formats like – motion story, digital magazine, and vertical videos.

  • Indian content creators must find out right stories to reach global audiences

    Indian content creators must find out right stories to reach global audiences

    MUMBAI: Over the top platforms have opened up the doors for content creators to share their creativity across the world. Despite the influx of major companies such as Netflix and Amazon Prime Video in India, content creators are still figuring out how to make their stories go global.

    At the stage of Indiantelevision.com’s Vidnet 2019 summit, some of the successful creators spilt the beans on their strategies. The creators of Delhi Crime, Lunch Box and Bard of Blood believe that stories that resonate and connect emotionally with the global audiences do travel. 

    The panel discussion ‘Making Indian Stories Travel’ in the creators’ track was moderated by BookMyShow VP content and strategy Manisha Singh Katial and the panellists were MUBI India content advisor Guneet Munga, Delhi Crime creator, director and writer Richie Mehta, and Red Chillies Entertainment chief revenue officer Gaurav Verma. 

    Katial opened the discussion by stating, “Yes, stories that are good do travel. But they also have to be culturally connected and I think that also becomes the challenge. Something that culturally connects with you resonates more, and something that connects with you emotionally, definitely works. I do feel making stories that travel is a challenge because it depends on the content that one is creating.”

    Katial asked Mehta to share the feedback he received on Delhi Crime. “The feedback for Delhi Crime is global. I have been hearing that the story has travelled quite far, and seems to have resonated with people all over the world. I knew this when I was conceiving the project.”

    He further elaborated, “I was in Delhi when the crime happened. So I reacted to it as somebody in India would. Then I left and went to Toronto and there I realised that this wasn’t just an ‘Indian’ thing, this was a humanitarian issue for the planet’s citizen. When I pieced together my work I figured out that it could have deep meaning for the Indian audience.”

    Mehta’s aim was to show a positive representation of India through his story. “It is the worst thing that has ever happened in this country and if you can spin that around to make a story of the extreme positive environment, especially for somebody outside with no knowledge and understanding about India, I certainly want to make it like that,” he said.

    Monga, the creator of Lunch Box, also expressed that content creators have tried to represent Indian beyond Bollywood’s depiction. Distribution has been the challenge previously. She said, “Across the world there are different sets of distribution, buyers and strategies. So it was not the same release day of films worldwide. Lunch Box released over two years around the world. And it is important for us to understand there are many layers to this.”

    Monga said that films can travel either because of its content or because of the choice of distribution partners. Sometimes a really good film is unable to travel because it does not have the right access. “So having the right access and having that distribution division, which is not just diaspora, is important. I feel with Netflix coming in India the lines are merging and now people will be able to see what India is with all its languages and colours, all its type of filmmaking and storytelling.”

    Katial commented that while having partners like Amazon and Netflix is great, it is also necessary to think internationally. To this, Verma added that one should not try to attempt an international story with the pressure that one has to appeal to seven billion consumers because emotional stories will connect to people. The best way to dazzle the audience is through content and script. Verma also opined that the industry is facing the issue of lack of talent. OTT platforms need writers who can understand the audiences’ need. 

    The panellists also said that apart from appealing stories and subjects, subtitles and dubbing of the content in different languages are also extremely pivotal in reaching global audiences.

  • Netflix offers first episode of ‘Bard of Blood’ free for non-members

    Netflix offers first episode of ‘Bard of Blood’ free for non-members

    MUMBAI: Netflix is offering the first episode of Bard of Blood for a limited time to non-members of leading OTT platform. The strategy behind this move is to attract as many viewers as possible to the platform.

    According to the ET reports the episode is currently accessible through Netflix homepage and the Bard of Blood show listing on the platform and can be viewed across all web browsers on desktop and Android devices. Support for iOS devices seems missing, although those users will be able to generate a link by entering their email address and watch it on supported devices.

    For the rest of the episodes viewers will be made to subscribers to Netflix. The offering of initial episode by Netflix is made to hook the viewers on the story of Bard Of Blood.

    "At Netflix, we try different ways to bring people closer to great stories. We believe many people will find the thrilling story of spy Kabir Anand very appealing and are excited to make the first episode of the series available to everyone for a limited time. In the future, we will consider if we will do this for other films and series,” the company said in a statement.

    Bard of Blood is an Indian fictional spy thriller web television series based on the 2015 espionage novel of the same name by Bilal Siddiqi. Directed by Ribhu Dasgupta and produced by Red Chillies Entertainment, the series stars Emraan Hashmi in the lead role along with Kirti Kulhari, Vineet Kumar Singh, Jaideep Ahlawat and Sobhita Dhulipala.It is a seven-episode series that revolves around the story of an ex-RAW agent. The series premiered on 27 September 2019 on Netflix.

  • Netflix announces the launch date for Bard of Blood

    Netflix announces the launch date for Bard of Blood

    MUMBAI: The first original that Netflix announced in India, now has a launch date! Bard of Blood is all set to launch on the 27th September, 2019 on the service. All episodes of the series will be launched at the same time exclusively on Netflix to 149 million users across 190 countries. 

    The series features a commercially successful and critically acclaimed and cast comprising Emraan Hashmi, Vineet Kumar Singh, Shobhita Dhulipala, Kirti Kulhari and Rajit Kapoor  amongst others. Directed by Ribhu Dasgupta and produced by Shah Rukh Khan’s Red Chillies Entertainment, the series is based on the best selling and loved book of the same name written by Bilal Siddiqui.

    The story is about four Indian intelligence officers belonging to the Indian Intelligence Wing (IIW) who are compromised, before they can relay an important piece of information to India. They get captured and are about to be decapitated. The stakes are high.

    Back in India, the intelligence veteran Sadiq Sheikh, the handler of the captured agents, realizes he must spearhead a clandestine mission to rescue his men. He reaches out to a former spy and now professor of Shakespeare, Kabir Anand – a man who knows the terrain and politics of Balochistan inside out. Kabir must connect the dots from the cryptic information that he has at his disposal. The only way for Kabir to get the answers is to embark upon a dangerous journey and complete unfinished business.