Tag: Chhota Bheem

  • Japanese kids’ content going strong despite home-grown onslaught

    Japanese kids’ content going strong despite home-grown onslaught

    MUMBAI: The growth of Japanese anime in children’s television programming in India has been far more rapid and visible than other segments of television. It all started in 1990 when everyone grew up watching Rudyard Kipling’s original collection of series, The Jungle Book, which was a Japanese style animation series that couldn’t be missed on Sundays.

    Since then, there has been no turning back; the fascination for Japanese content in India has grown by leaps and bounds. It didn’t stop with Kipling’s Mowgli series, instead, there was another manga series called Avatar: The Last Airbender. Manga are hand-drawn by artists. Naruto, Naruto: Shippûden were among the known manga series that grabbed more traction from their fans.

    There was a time when Cartoon Network reigned supreme, which, for nine years, maintained its premier position by capitalising on the paucity of television entertainment for children. Animax India, a channel of Sony Entertainment, telecast Japanese anime shows before being shut down.

    Shemaroo Entertainment head-animation business Smita Maroo says that even today Japanese shows gets the eyeballs whereas Indian content is still not the order of the day. “The broadcasters still bombard the channels with Doraemon, Shinchan and Ninja Hattori among others. It’s not that they are rushing towards Indian content,” she says.

    Japanese animation made its entry in the programming line-up of channels with animation series such as Doraemon on Hungama, and Ninja Hattori on Nickelodeon. This was followed by a rush of animation series from Japan and the rest of Asia with shows such as Chibi Maruko Chan on Nickelodeon and Anpanman on Pogo (Nandi, 2012). Giving Doraemon a close competition is Crayon Shinchan, another manga-based anime. It’s among the top five shows for kids aged 2-14, competing with the likes of Chhota Bheem.

    According to some media reports, the market for manga has expanded and Japanese publishing houses, which were earlier reluctant fearing piracy, are showing interest to license more titles.

    Green Gold Animation VP-content sales Bharath Laxmipati said that Chhota Bheem, their original home-grown content was the game changer in the Indian industry because it gave confidence to the broadcasters that local shows can have a tremendous response. It broke the fascination for international shows that was also giving a wrong attitude. He says, “The core of a successful Indian show is the ability to tell stories. Japanese content is popular because they shared similar sentiments with Indians. But the difference is that Indian stories are written with the hero in mind but protagonists in Japanese content such as Doraemon, wherein the kid is not a hero but finds help from a robot, so the main character is the robot Doraemon. Oggy and the Cockroaches from France wasn’t famous until Shahrukh Khan, Sunny Deol and other Bollywood actors gave their voices to the show.”

    He further adds that there are two ways of writing styles, where Chhota Bheem is all about courage, bravery, respect for elders, friendship and all the positive cultures that we have in our Indian culture. “Doraemon was created during the 70s and 80s and were picked up by the broadcasters because they had to fill in the programming, so there’s a different approach between theirs and ours,” he says.

    Maroo says that kid’s content syndication is only for topical reasons but beyond that, the channels want to create their own content and focus on their 2-3 properties. She further added, “In terms of Chhota Bheem and Motu Patlu being famous nowadays, both the shows don’t come on the same channel, so the channel’s overall ratings still comes from other shows.

    According to Maroo, acquiring Japanese content is definitely cheaper than production. Agreeing with Maroo, Laxmipati says, “Anything that is made for the own territory is far more expensive than syndicated content.”

    According to the reports, animation production is expensive in comparison to a general entertainment channel show with the former requiring Rs 10-20 lakh an episode against Rs 7-8 lakh for the latter. 

    “Producing episodes for 2D and 3D for 11-22 minutes would cost Rs 10-20 lakh or even above, depending on the number of characters, background and many other factors. The initial episodes are way higher than even Rs 20 lakh,” adds a media professional.

    Another media professional, however, gave a higher estimate. “Any top show’s production value is between Rs 30-50 lakh. Good content has to be produced at such cost. If we talk about producing for outside, the production cost will be up to Rs 1 crore per episode.”

    The trend of today is to produce home-grown content. The concept of producing original content started in 2008 with Chhota Bheem. Later Nickelodeon India produced Motu Patlu as its home-grown IP show in 2012. Not only this, the year 2017 kick-started a new channel called Sony Yay that completely focused on producing its own IP shows.  

    The supply of India-produced shows is very limited compared to the unlimited growth of Japanese content and other foreign language cartoons. Since Japan has 15-20 years of headstart over India, its library is massive. In 2016, Cartoon Network had 91.61 per cent foreign shows; Pogo had 82.67 per cent while Disney had 60.61 per cent shows from abroad. 

    When asked whether it is easier to attract advertisers for syndicated content as opposed to original content, Maroo commented, “If syndicated content has already got a track record, it would be easier to pick advertisers, because new shows will take time to deliver.”

    She further said that kids will like any content that the channels feed them. With the growth of digital, both TV and digital will co-exist and kids will shift their likeness towards a particular medium or content whatever they find interesting.

    Also Read :

    Original Indian kids’ animation content is the need of the hour

    Kids today watch more animated content than ever

     

  • Kids genre grows on TV despite digital onslaught

    Kids genre grows on TV despite digital onslaught

    MUMBAI: There was no dearth of excitement in the kids’ entertainment space in 2017. Despite the digital onslaught, original content producers grew from strength to strength, keeping children enthralled on television. TV viewership grew during the year even as doomsayers predicted that the end of the good old box was nigh.

    Among the major events of the year, Toonz India Media Group struck a deal with ReachMe.TV in the US to enable streaming of Toonz TV through the latter’s mobile web platform. Green Gold Animation signed a deal with Netflix for creating a spinoff of popular character Chhota Bheem for snippets of Mighty Little Bheem.

    Here’s a look at what each channel did this year.

    Disney

    A favourite among young adults, the Disney channel is known for television programming for children through original series, movies and third-party programming. This year witnessed top-level corporate reshuffling. The company promoted Amit Malhotra as the country head for Singapore and Malaysia. Earlier, Malhotra was the general manager for media networks, responsible for businesses across all functions in the media networks in Southeast Asia (SEA). Abhishek Maheshwari was elevated to country head (India).

    There were reports that Doordarshan was in talks with Disney for kiddy content in evening slots. Disney also launched a three-week campaign for merchandise, celebrating the spirit of sisterhood, featuring two young daughters and how the Frozen sisters inspired them in their day-to-day lives.

    Furthermore, Disney’s sister channel—Hungama—came up with Chacha Bhatija who go on a new adventure in the second movie.

    Turner

    Turner India creates and manages the sales, distribution and marketing of entertainment brands in India and South Asia, including CNN International, Cartoon Network, Pogo, Toonami, HBO and WB.

    It turned out to be a fruitful year with great deals and partnerships. Turner India was successful in imparting a larger-than-life feel to its characters through a tie-up with Amaazia, an upcoming amusement park in Surat. The park is owned and operated by Gujarat-based Rajgreen group. Scheduled to open in 2019, the park will serve as a medium for Turner’s kids channel Cartoon Network (CN) to launch new products and conduct ‘meet and greets’ with its animated characters. Out of the four sections in Amaazia, only the theme park is branded by CN. The rest are a water park, family recreational hub, and serviced apartments and retail shopping area.

    Apart from having a chase comedy in the bouquet, Pogo came up with another indigenous slapstick comedy show for its fans. Focussing more on home-grown content, Tik Tak Tail was the chase comedy that it experimented with in September and then came the slapstick show Andy Pirki. It also announced the launch of a brand-new show, Grizzy and the Lemmings. Moreover, Cartoon Network came up with the fifth and sixth parts of Oggy and the Cockroaches.

    Discovery Kids

    The channel announced a deal with IM Incorporated, a London-based content distribution company, to premiere Sunny Bunnies in India. Angry Birds Sing the Blues came up for the first time in Indian television in a series format.

    Nickelodeon

    This year, Nickelodeon came up with the Halo Movement—a new year-round pro-social initiative celebrating kids who are helping and leading others. In terms of viewership, too, the channel has done pretty well for itself. In week 50 of Barc data, the channel was ranked number one with 127600 impressions (000s) sum. Another important event was the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards 2017, which honoured the best in the world of entertainment across film and television.

    Sony Yay

    On 18 April 2017, Animax Asia was replaced by Sony Yay. While the former focussed on serving young adults, Yay concentrated on children of all ages. Animax was handed over to SonyLiv.

    The channel is building local characters to monetise and launched four original shows Guru AurBhole, Sab Jholmaal Hai, Prince Jai aur DumdaarViru, and Paap-o-Meter and it holds the IP rights for all of them. The channel also associated with ‘animals matter to me’ to make Diwali ‘pawsome.’

    Although 2017 wasn’t an eventful year, there were plenty of nuggets of action with the latest entrant, Sony Yay, throwing its hat into the ring and fighting it out with the existing players in the kids genre. We will have to wait and see how channels gear up to take on the growing trend of digital in 2018 and whether OTT adds significant value for kids.

  • Green Gold’s golden Mumbai launch

    Green Gold’s golden Mumbai launch

    MUMBAI: Green Gold Animation is all set to hit the green running with its new offshoot Golden Robot. The Rajiv Chilaka-run animation outfit has been wowing everyone with its deals for animation series with both Netflix and Amazon Prime. 

    But the occasion this time was the celebration of the launch of Golden Robot’s new Mumbai studio in Mumbai’s Goregaon West area’s DLH Park (which also has the presence of Red Chillies’ VFX facilities) earlier this week.

    Spread over some 10,000 sq feet, Golden Robot is Chilaka’s third animation initiative. Its purpose: to capture more outsourced work from international studios. While Green Gold will house the original IP creating arm – churning out episodes of Chhota Bheem, Mighty Raju, and many others, Golden Robot will be producing episodes for large American and European studios.

     The whos who of the animation industry made it a point to attend the launch party which was cheered on by Golden Robot’s 250 or more employees. Among those who came to congratulate Rajiv, Srinivas, and Samir Jain included Nick boss Anu Sikka, Sony Pictures Networks India vice-president programming Ronojoy Chakraborty, Amazon Prime’s Manish Menghani and Abhishek Goradia, Bioscopewalla Pictures’ Nishit Takia and AnimationXpress.com’s Anil Wanvari.

    They all came in to wish the team luck, and of course a golden pot for Golden Robot.

    Also Read:

    Green Gold, Amazon Prime put Kerala martial art on the map

    Chhota Bheem-makers launch Golden Robot Animation

    Chhota Bheem becomes Mighty with Netflix

  • Original Indian kids’ animation content is the need of the hour

    Original Indian kids’ animation content is the need of the hour

    MUMBAI: There is a dire need for creating home-grown content when it comes to kids’ entertainment. The scope for reducing the dependence on acquired content is immense especially since India has loads of unexplored talent.

    Brand extension, merchandising and marketing sponsors’ products are compelling reasons to produce original Indian shows and for this intellectual property (IP) rights are crucial. Shaktimaan was probably the first Indian superhero on TV but today’s popular figures are Chhota Bheem and Motu Patlu.

    “The amount required for one single episode of animation content production abroad will suffice for making the entire series in India,” says Toonz Media country business head development Kishor Chandra Shrivastav, who was speaking on a panel recently.

    A big boost to India’s animation industry came when recently Netflix announced it will be creating a spinoff of Green Gold Animation’s popular show Chhota Bheem as Mighty Bheem.

    Animation production is expensive in comparison to a general entertainment channel (GEC) shows with the former requiring Rs 25-28 lakh an episode as against Rs 5-6 lakh for the latter. The advertising rates, however, commanded by the two are inversely proportional according to estimates.

    The type of content and the investment in it also attracts the right kind of sponsors. ICOM Global vice chairman and South Asia Kushal Sanghvi says that low budget content will only get a handful of sponsors while big budget and sponsors will require the storyline to be universal. He gives the example of Disney’s Jungle Book that was a hit in India.

    Sanghvi also highlighted that Indian shows lack merchandising power with the notable exception of Chhota Bheem. For great quality content and merchandising, investment needs to touch Rs 40-50 lakh an episode.

    Punnaryug Artvision founder Ashish Kulkarni differed in his opinion. He said, “I don’t agree completely. In India, there are characters which get licensed. Sometimes, just the character is licenced and not the content. We do not have interesting brands for Indian cinema.”

    The supply of India-produced shows is very limited compared to the unlimited growth of Japanese and other foreign language cartoons such as Doraemon and Shinchan. Since Japan has 15-20 years of headstart over India, their library is massive. In 2016, Cartoon Network had 91.61 per cent foreign shows, Pogo had 82.67 per cent while Disney had 60.61 per cent shows from abroad.

    Licensing can happen only if the character is extremely popular for which it needs to be present on both TV and OTT.

  • Indian OTTs to be in focus on day 2 of ATF

    Indian OTTs to be in focus on day 2 of ATF

    MUMBAI: Singapore-based Reed Exhibitions’ Asia TV Forum (ATF) will commence today with 60 countries taking part. The first day will see sessions based on content, advertising and the evolution of storytelling and digital traditions and innovation Ninety thought leaders will deliver fresh insights in over 24 sessions from 28 November to 1 December 2017, discussing present-day issues such as big data, movement in the over-the-top (OTT) scene, new monetisation strategies, unscripted entertainment formats and kids’ content.

    The Indian sessions will start from the second day. The first one will be ‘Bollywood & Beyond: Fresh content from India’. The speakers present for the session will be Epic TV network head content syndication Adita Jain, Greengold Animation VP content sales Bharath Laxmipati, One Life Studios founder Siddharth Kumar Tewary, Rajshri Entertainment MD Neha Barjatya, and Toonz Animation India senior manager- content syndication and distribution Viju Thomas. The session will be moderated by Indiantelevision.com group founder, CEO and editor-in-chief Anil Wanvari.

    Wanvari has been working on developing opportunities for India’s animation and live action sector – whether for TV or OTT – over the past three years at ATF as its representative for India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

    India’s OTT ecosystem has been exploding with newer apps popping up ever so quickly. At last count, close to 42 OTT services were operational in India. The second Indian session will be about the needs and wants of Indian OTT buyers. The panellists for the discussion will be Pittie Group/Epic TV CEO and MD Aditya Pittie, Viacom18 Digital ventures COO Gaurav Gandhi, producer, entrepreneur and storyteller Sidharth Jain, Spuul founder and global CEO Subin Subaiah, and GoQuest Media Ventures MD Vivek Lath. This panel discussion will also be moderated by Wanvari.

    ATF will also focus on virtual reality (VR) sessions, which will delve into the discourse that takes place among ecosystem partners, from content concept, creation and circulation. Real Vision VR filmmaker, speaker and published author Clyde Desouza will moderate the panel. Desouza is working with Times Now for its VR immersive journalism.

    On day three, listen to GreenGold Animation founder and CEO Rajiv Chilaka talk about how to provide 360-degree experience to kids. Chilaka has created and built one of the India’s largest animation brands Chhota Bheem, which currently has a viewership of over 40 million across platforms. He will also talk about nurturing localised IPs and stories and priming them to go global.

    The major Indian satellite TV networks Sony Pictures Networks India, Star India, Indiacast-Viacom18, and Zee Telefilms have their syndication and licensing teams exhibiting at the Marina Bay Sands venue. Other noteworthy exhibitors include: format and content syndication company GoQuest, Swastik Productions’ One Life Studios that is hawking its mega-budget Porus and homegrown formats, One Take Media, which is selling its kids animation and cookery shows, film and digital content creator and distributor Rajshri Entertainment, infotainment channel Epic TV, and kids’ content pioneer GreenGold.

  • Chhota Bheem becomes Mighty with Netflix

    Chhota Bheem becomes Mighty with Netflix

    CANNES: The studio behind the popular animated show Chhota Bheem, Green Gold Animation has been commissioned by Netflix to make an exclusive 13-episode series on its trademark show. Paradoxically titled Mighty Little Bheem, the series is set to be released in August 2018.

    Each episode of Mighty Bheem will 22 minutes long and feature a baby version of the popular kids character. It could also be broken into 52 episodes of 5 minutes each.

    The announcement was made by Netflix international kids acquisitions and co-production division head Aram Yacoubian at MIPCOM 2017. He said, “Chhota Bheem is iconic in India. We are happy to work with Green Gold to produce a younger baby version of him and bring it to global children.”

    Green Gold will dedicate a separate team of 100 people for the project.

    Green Gold Animation CEO Rajeev Chilaka expressed, “We are very happy to partner with Netflix. We have created this especially for the world’s leader.”

    The budgets for the whole show are expected to be in the range of about $ 3-4 million.

  • Chhota Bheem-makers launch Golden Robot Animation

    Chhota Bheem-makers launch Golden Robot Animation

    MUMBAI: Green Gold Animation Pvt. Ltd, the multi-award winning animation studio, has embarked upon aggressive expansion plans. It has announced the launch of its brand new studio in Mumbai. The new entity ‘Golden Robot Animation’ will operate as a sister concern to Green Gold Animation with a common management structure.

    With plans to cater to the burgeoning global demand for animation content and with the aim to strengthenthe team, an animation studio in Mumbai is a clear cut shot in the arm for Green Gold Animation, the creators and producers of superhit series – Chhota Bheem and Mighty Raju.

    “Green Gold is amongst the leaders in the animation industry today in India. Launching Golden Robot Animation in Mumbai is a big realisation, which will help promote leading-edge expertise in the production of animated shows. This investment acknowledges the talent, creativity and quality of Mumbai’s team,” says Green Gold Animation MD Rajiv Chilaka.

    The senior leadership of Golden Robot comprises industry veterans with a proven track record. RK Chand will head business development along with Ritesh Kumar and Abhishek Chandra heading the creative and animation departments, respectively, at Golden Robot Animation.

    The strong leadership and creative team at Golden Robot boasts of a cumulative rich experience of 15 years along with more than thousand minutes of animation content, which makes Golden Robot,a formidable entrant in the industry to network and generate business with leading production houses and broadcasters in India and across the globe.

    The brand new full service studio facility, set in the heart of the city boasts of world class infrastructure which will be able to cater to diverse markets, wide scaled and complex projects. The animation teams comprising of senior artists and department heads have already joined and are working towards ramping up to a robust strength of 200 artistes.

  • Viacom18 & E&Y partner licensing expo, Fashion TV & Universal, etc. to participate

    MUMBAI: India Licensing Expo (ILE), India’s first business-to-business brand licensing show, will kickstart in August at Sahara Star in Mumbai and see participation of over 100+ global and domestic brands for retail industry. The show sponsors are Viacom18, Orian Installations, Dream Theatre and Bradford License India.

    Ernst & Young are process tabulation partners for India Licensing Awards, concurrent event of ILE 2017.

    Viacom 18, Fashion TV, Marie Claire, Universal Music, Mondo TV, JCB, Polaroid, NBA, Sesame Street, Authentic Brands Group, Green Gold Animation, are a few amongst list of top brands participating at the first ever licensing show to be held in the country.

    The show will be organised by exclusive licensing media company, License India, and is supported by global licensing body, Licensing Industry Merchandisers’ Association (LIMA), Indo-French Chamber of Commerce and Industry (IFCCI) and Sports Goods Foundation of India.

    “We intend to position India Licensing Expo as a dedicated hub where the industry unifies to shop brands for business across all industries. We bring together brands of every kind – sports, character, corporate, music, art, entertainment, for retailers to embed in their business / products,” License India chairman Gaurav Marya said.

    The exposition displays all kind of licensing opportunities for manufacturers & retailers across products, such as in characters, Chhota Bheem, Peppa Pig, PJ Masks, Dora, Popeye, Motu Patlu, Toki Doki, Jungle Book, Ben 10, Power Puff Girls, Mighty Raju, Sponge Bob, Jumanji movie, Emoji Movie, Sesame Street, and much more. In corporate brands, the galore offers brands like Juicy Couture, Aeropostale, Spyder, Misook, Airwalk, Lamborghini, Compaq, JCB, Fashion TV, University of Oxford, Marie Claire, Absorba, Shell, Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Route 66, Polaroid, Femina Flaunt, Kuber, Mechanix, and much more. Music & Art brands would be Universal Music with wide pool of top artists, MTV, Billboard, Michael Jackson, Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Romero Britto and much more; and sports properties would be NBA, Delhi Daredevils, Extreme Sports, VOIT, Mancity FC, FC Barcelona, Roland & Garros, Cycle Polo Federation of India, Maui & Sons, Muhammad Ali, Shaq and much more.

    Bradford license India director Chitra S. Johri said, “This would be a bigger movement in our domain of licensing, benefitting each product category in actual sense.”

    ILE has also tied up with Indo-French Chamber of Commerce and Industry (IFCCI). “We look forward to enabling multiple French licensors eyeing Indian market to capitalize and leverage this show,” said IFCCI secretary-general Payal. S. Kanwar.

    The conference puts forth a strong panel with industry stalwart’s like Dan Frugtniet (VP-Licensing & Business Development, Nickelodeon, Viacom Consumer Products), Saugato Bhowmick (Head of Viacom18- Consumer Products), Yannick Colaco (MD-NBA), Siddharth Chury (Senior Director – NBA India), Manan Mehta (VP-Marketing & Merchandise, Yashraj Films), Sandeep Dahiya (Director – Brand Extensions, Bennett Coleman & Co. Ltd), Samir Jain (ED & COO, Green Gold Animation), Shivram Saran (AVP & Head Consumer Products, JCB), Roberto Bre (Director, Private Collection, Marie Claire), Rajan Madhu (President, FTV India), Maura Regan (Sr. Vice President, LIMA), Manish Mandhana (CEO, Mandhana Retail – Being Human), Jason Sutton (Director, Polaroid), Jiggy George (Head, LIMA India & CEO, Dream Theatre), Ishmeet Singh (Country Manager, Mattle Toys India), Anurag Sachdeva (Director, Rovio, Angry Birds), Afsar Zaidi (MD, Exceed Entertainment, HRX) and many more. Witness the veterans of licensing industry coming together to discuss the challenges, explore the kind of engagements and further work towards uplifting of the L&M industry as a whole in India.

    ILE 2017 ‘exclusively’ also hosts India’s foremost licensing recognition platform, India Licensing Awards 2017 partnered with Marie Claire. Celebrating the best in Indian Licensing Industry, these awards would remain to be one of its kind recognition where the whole fraternity will come together to celebrate excellence, right from the brand owners, brand custodians to entrepreneurial retailers, latest licensees on the block, to raise a toast to outstanding achievements in the industry so far. Judged, curated and tabulated by panel of experts, the awards are supported by Ernst & Young as process partners. With 21 focused categories for licensing fraternity, the awards would acknowledge top brasses of the industry. To name a few categories – Licensor Of The Year (Entertainment, Celebrity, Sports, Corporate, Bollywood, Art, Character, Music), Licensee Of The Year (Apparel, Fashion Accessories, Toys & Games, Gifts & Novelties, Back To School, Electronics, Retail Innovation & Business Concept, Home Décor, FMCG, New Media & Publishing), along with Special Categories like IP Firm Of The Year and Licensing Agent Of The Year.

  • Chhota Bheem forays in MENA Global Village

    Chhota Bheem forays in MENA Global Village

    MUMBAI: The 21st Edition of Global Village, Dubai, the multi-cultural festival park will have Chhota Bheem leading the pack for their attraction this season. As a part of the kids festival which kick-starts in February 2017. Chhota Bheem and his gang will mark his presence at Global Village in a musical show and kids will see the characters in this format for the first time in MENA.

    The musical will be a part of the special Kids Fest offering at Global Village. Mascots of the central characters of Chhota Bheem Series – Chhota Bheem, Chutki, Jaggu & Kalia, will be part of the musical that will have Dholakpur recreated. The 20 minute show will be played daily on the main stage. The story line is being picked from one of the episodes of Chhota Bheem series and is being drawn up by Green Gold Animation, the makers of Chhota Bheem. The musical will be directed by Global Village. The show will be laced by Chhota Bheem’s theme song and other popular Bheem songs.

    Green Gold Animation COO Samir Jain said, “We are ecstatic to be the part of one-of-a-kind festival like Global Village. Global Village is considered to be one of the main tourist attractions of Dubai and the region as a whole. Our presence at Global Village expands the brand at multiple levels in the region. With the musical and through mascot presence we will extend an experience of the brand. Global Village is a truly international platform in spirit and I see some brilliant business opportunities opening up through this collaboration.”

    Talking about Chhota Bheem’s entry, Global Village CEO Ahmad Hussain Bin says, “We are very happy to collaborate with Green Gold Animation to become the first entertainment park outside of India to launch live shows of Chhota Bheem at Global Village. We have a large number of visitors from the Indian subcontinent and are aware of the popularity of the success of the IP of Chhota Bheem. Global Village as a cultural and family park has a strong focus on bringing top entertainment to its target audiences and this collaboration is just part of the bigger vision of adding more such successful IP shows to the fantastic line-up that we already have. We look forward to the successful launch of Chhota Bheem at Global Village in February of next year during our special ‘Kids Fest’ when the live activations will take place.”

    This season of Global Village will go on till 8 April 2017 while Chhota Bheem will make its debut in the first week of February at ‘Kids Fest’.

  • Chhota Bheem forays in MENA Global Village

    Chhota Bheem forays in MENA Global Village

    MUMBAI: The 21st Edition of Global Village, Dubai, the multi-cultural festival park will have Chhota Bheem leading the pack for their attraction this season. As a part of the kids festival which kick-starts in February 2017. Chhota Bheem and his gang will mark his presence at Global Village in a musical show and kids will see the characters in this format for the first time in MENA.

    The musical will be a part of the special Kids Fest offering at Global Village. Mascots of the central characters of Chhota Bheem Series – Chhota Bheem, Chutki, Jaggu & Kalia, will be part of the musical that will have Dholakpur recreated. The 20 minute show will be played daily on the main stage. The story line is being picked from one of the episodes of Chhota Bheem series and is being drawn up by Green Gold Animation, the makers of Chhota Bheem. The musical will be directed by Global Village. The show will be laced by Chhota Bheem’s theme song and other popular Bheem songs.

    Green Gold Animation COO Samir Jain said, “We are ecstatic to be the part of one-of-a-kind festival like Global Village. Global Village is considered to be one of the main tourist attractions of Dubai and the region as a whole. Our presence at Global Village expands the brand at multiple levels in the region. With the musical and through mascot presence we will extend an experience of the brand. Global Village is a truly international platform in spirit and I see some brilliant business opportunities opening up through this collaboration.”

    Talking about Chhota Bheem’s entry, Global Village CEO Ahmad Hussain Bin says, “We are very happy to collaborate with Green Gold Animation to become the first entertainment park outside of India to launch live shows of Chhota Bheem at Global Village. We have a large number of visitors from the Indian subcontinent and are aware of the popularity of the success of the IP of Chhota Bheem. Global Village as a cultural and family park has a strong focus on bringing top entertainment to its target audiences and this collaboration is just part of the bigger vision of adding more such successful IP shows to the fantastic line-up that we already have. We look forward to the successful launch of Chhota Bheem at Global Village in February of next year during our special ‘Kids Fest’ when the live activations will take place.”

    This season of Global Village will go on till 8 April 2017 while Chhota Bheem will make its debut in the first week of February at ‘Kids Fest’.