Tag: Udta Punjab

  • Box Office: Udta Punjab disappoints, Housefull3 continues doing well

    Box Office: Udta Punjab disappoints, Housefull3 continues doing well

    MUMBAI: Udta Punjab did not benefit out of the media frenzy generated on account of its censor controversy. The film’s opening remained average and because of the content of the film, the collections didn’t show much rise over Saturday and Sunday. The film collected Rs 33.75 crore for its opening weekend.

    Dhanak is much appreciated but does not show it in its collections.

    Te3n is poor with just Rs 15.1 crore to show for its first week.

    Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is rejected. The film managed to put together Rs 3.4 crore in its first week.

    Houseful3 did well in its second week to collect Rs 22.7 crore taking its two week total to Rs 103.1 crore.

    Sarbjit added Rs 10 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 27.05 crore.

    Waiting collected Rs 20 lakh in its third week taking its three week tally to Rs 2.6 crore.

  • Box Office: Udta Punjab disappoints, Housefull3 continues doing well

    Box Office: Udta Punjab disappoints, Housefull3 continues doing well

    MUMBAI: Udta Punjab did not benefit out of the media frenzy generated on account of its censor controversy. The film’s opening remained average and because of the content of the film, the collections didn’t show much rise over Saturday and Sunday. The film collected Rs 33.75 crore for its opening weekend.

    Dhanak is much appreciated but does not show it in its collections.

    Te3n is poor with just Rs 15.1 crore to show for its first week.

    Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is rejected. The film managed to put together Rs 3.4 crore in its first week.

    Houseful3 did well in its second week to collect Rs 22.7 crore taking its two week total to Rs 103.1 crore.

    Sarbjit added Rs 10 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 27.05 crore.

    Waiting collected Rs 20 lakh in its third week taking its three week tally to Rs 2.6 crore.

  • nexGTv acquires rights for 25 key entertainment assets by ATechnos

    nexGTv acquires rights for 25 key entertainment assets by ATechnos

    MUMBAI: Need the latest dope on the Udta Punjab controversy, or want to know which superstar has bagged the lead in the next instalment of the hit franchise Dhoom? If such viral content is what you’re looking for, look no further! nexGTv, India’s largest subscription-led video entertainment app, has acquired the digital rights to 25 key entertainment assets developed and distributed by ATechnos, a leading digital media content distribution and techno media company.

    ATechnos provides services in Video/Audio/Text/Image/App distribution and production domain. Their media distribution arms in 52+ countries have empowered thousands of customers worldwide and enabled several key content distribution partnerships. ATechnos is currently distributing approximately 11,000 clips in more than 17 languages on a daily basis.

    Speaking on the tie-up, nexGTV COO Abhesh Verma said, “In today’s digital-first world, snackable viral content is fast emerging as the preferred entertainment option for viewers across the globe. Even Indian viewers have caught on the trend, as can be witnessed by the rise in mobile-based video data traffic within the country. Since we, at nexGTv, have always tailored our offerings to meet the requirements of our subscribers, partnering with ATechno was a logical decision. The association greatly augments the entertainment options available on our platform and allows our users to stay informed about the latest trends, developments and gossip from the entertainment industry worldwide.”

    The move will allow nexGTv users to view premium videos containing celebrity interviews, public reactions on trending topics besides style updates and news that range from bewildering to bizarre from around the globe. Be it a sneak peek in to Shahid Kapoor’s smoking hot workout videos or the controversial scandals inside the Big Brother’s house, nexGTv subscribers can catch up on all the latest news and developments in the world of entertainment! So what are you waiting for? Download the nexGTv app on your smartphone today, or visit www.nexgtv.com today!

  • nexGTv acquires rights for 25 key entertainment assets by ATechnos

    nexGTv acquires rights for 25 key entertainment assets by ATechnos

    MUMBAI: Need the latest dope on the Udta Punjab controversy, or want to know which superstar has bagged the lead in the next instalment of the hit franchise Dhoom? If such viral content is what you’re looking for, look no further! nexGTv, India’s largest subscription-led video entertainment app, has acquired the digital rights to 25 key entertainment assets developed and distributed by ATechnos, a leading digital media content distribution and techno media company.

    ATechnos provides services in Video/Audio/Text/Image/App distribution and production domain. Their media distribution arms in 52+ countries have empowered thousands of customers worldwide and enabled several key content distribution partnerships. ATechnos is currently distributing approximately 11,000 clips in more than 17 languages on a daily basis.

    Speaking on the tie-up, nexGTV COO Abhesh Verma said, “In today’s digital-first world, snackable viral content is fast emerging as the preferred entertainment option for viewers across the globe. Even Indian viewers have caught on the trend, as can be witnessed by the rise in mobile-based video data traffic within the country. Since we, at nexGTv, have always tailored our offerings to meet the requirements of our subscribers, partnering with ATechno was a logical decision. The association greatly augments the entertainment options available on our platform and allows our users to stay informed about the latest trends, developments and gossip from the entertainment industry worldwide.”

    The move will allow nexGTv users to view premium videos containing celebrity interviews, public reactions on trending topics besides style updates and news that range from bewildering to bizarre from around the globe. Be it a sneak peek in to Shahid Kapoor’s smoking hot workout videos or the controversial scandals inside the Big Brother’s house, nexGTv subscribers can catch up on all the latest news and developments in the world of entertainment! So what are you waiting for? Download the nexGTv app on your smartphone today, or visit www.nexgtv.com today!

  • Udta Punjab….Rough landing! Dhanak Delightful!

    Udta Punjab….Rough landing! Dhanak Delightful!

    MUMBAI: Much in the news first for its duel with the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) and later for the leak of the film on the internet, Udta Punjab puts an end to all the controversy as it hits the cinemas today.

    Has the media glare helped the film as due to this it is said to have got extra promotion? No, because controversies can bring a film into news but can’t add to the content. On the contrary, such a thing can add to expectations. Also, when you watch the film you realize that according to the CBFC norms, 89 cuts offered may be  fewer than the film deserved—it is replete with street-side expletives. The film is almost 90 percent in Punjabi language and the Punjabi way of abusing only makes the abuses sound worse.

    The generous use of foul words and extensive use of Punjabi dialogue may severely limit the film’s prospective audience, especially the women and families.
    The film starts with a funny ‘Believe It Or Nuts’ kind of scene where a discus thrower from Pakistan, wearing a national jersey, throws a package of cocaine into India! The film proceeds to deal with the drug problem in Punjab and limits itself to that. There are no side attractions. All the characters except the few exploiters are victims.

    Shahid Kapoor is a small town Punjab lad who goes off to London and returns as a singing sensation, a pop star. His idea, and that of the makers, is to model him on rock stars in West from 1960s who did Psychedelic rock which was hugely drug induced. There was a phase when rock stars did repulsive things on stage like showing bare bottoms, puking, peeing which seems to have been the inspiration here. The success as well the drugs, both having gone to his head, he considers himself bigger than the system of the state. The result is a week in jail and some eye openers like a teenager inmate having killed his mother for refusing to give him money for drugs.

    Shahid needs no de-addiction, the seven day jail and the mother killer story has put him off drugs. Drugged bodies in various states of stupor are spread across the screen.

    The film moves to the system side of the drug problem. There are cops on one side who are totally on the take and set rates to let the truck filled with drugs pass: this includes Diljit Dosanjh, the Punjabi star making his debut in Hindi films, and there is Kareena Kapoor, attempting to nurse drug addicts to normalcy. Try to cure them is all that Kareena can do as there is no way she can stop the spread of drugs, which involves everybody from politicians to police. But, there is a curious scene where Kareena is distributing sterile disposable syringes moving from home to home; is this her idea of stopping drug abuse?  Conveniently, Dosanjh’s kid brother becomes a victim of drugs. He is on his death bed with Kareena tending to him. That changes Dosanjh for good.

    Shahid, who has projected the drug menace in the first part, now takes a backseat as Dosanjh and Kareena form a team and become investigators. They are convinced that a big name is involved in the drug racket. In the process of investigating, they also get attracted to each other. The investigation and clues usually fall into their laps. Because, Dosanjh may have little intellect but Kareena can weave magic on Google.

    Shahid is due to perform a show. He is not quite sure he can do it without drugs. He has realized he is a fluke and without drugs he is nothing. When egged on to sing by the audience, he vents his frustration, delivers a speech about drugs and when provoked, pees on the audience. His fans-turned-detractors are after him to lynch him and while he is on the run, he comes across Alia Bhatt, also on the run from her captors. She saves him from the goons out to beat him up. Shahid, in search of finding a man in himself, finds one in Alia instead! He goes soft on her.

    Alia is a Bihari laborer, one of thousands who work on the farms of Punjab. But, this one is a smart cookie. A state level hockey player, she gives into circumstances to work in farms away from home. Her captors have taken her back from Shahid, basically a weak man with no courage to fight. He now decides to save her. The forces combine as Shahid and Dosanjh end up at the same place, the villains’ den. The film goes into an abrupt climax.

    In the name of drug abuse in Punjab, Udta Punjab is a grossly crude film. The treatment is like a 1970s film when the drug issue was internationally in limelight. The script takes its own convenient twists and turns. The direction is routine and clichéd with an inclination for abrupt cuts and shifting to new scenes. For a film about a rock star, the music is grossly lacking (all songs are in Punjabi words). The first half lacks pace and needs to be trimmed.

    Performance wise, Alia excels. Totally deglamorized, and having limited exposure, she is a class apart. Shahid mixes up his drug abuser and rock star with lunacy in the first half till he gets more scope later in the film. Dosanjh is natural and looks good too. Kareena puts in a controlled act like a veteran. Satish Kaushik as Shahid’s promoter is formulaic. Prabhjyot Singh is good.
    Udta Punjab has a poor first half but the second half which shows some purpose and humour makes it tolerable. With the opening response being average and  finding the weekend family audience a suspect, the film has just average prospects.
    Producers:  Shobha Kapoor, Ekta Kapoor, Anurag Kashyap, Vikramaditya Motwane, Aman Gill, Vikas Bahl,
    Sameer Nair.
    Director: Abhishek Chaubey.
    Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, Diljit Dosanjh, Satish  Kaushik, Prabhjyot Singh.

    Dhanak

    Dhanak is basically a film aimed at children. What is good about the film is that it is a totally positive, no bad-elements in the story. There are two kids on the loose on the road and the whole world is out to help them, be nice to them. There is no stepmother, there is a benevolent uncle (chacha) and there is this half khaddoos aunty (chachi) who looks after these orphaned children.

    Hetal Gada and Krissh Chhabaria are an orphaned brother and sister in Rajasthan, their parents having died in Pushkar along with 25 others due to a camel stampede. They are now under the care of Vipin Sharma, their dead father’s younger brother and his wife, Gulfam Khan. While Vipin has taken to the kids as his own, Gulfam is restrained; to add to her frustrations is also the fact that she has no child of her own and that her husband, Vipin, is good for nothing. Hence, Gulfam dominates the household. Vipin lets it be that way.

    What adds to the discomfiture of Gulfam is that Krissh is blind. As if to compensate for his blindness, his other faculties like smell, sound and imagination work overtime. His perception is outstanding. Hetal has only one wish, to get her brother’s eyesight restored. She has even set a deadline to do so: her brother’s ninth birthday.

    Vipin loves the kids and even indulges them. He takes them to a touring cinema screening where Hetal spots a poster of Shah Rukh Khan advocating a movement against blindness. As she has already pledged that she would make sure her kid brother’s eyesight is restored before his ninth birthday, she decides to set out to a location in Jaisalmer about 300 kms away to meet Khan who is shooting there. One night, the kids walk out of their uncle’s house to search for Khan.
    It turns into a road movie thereafter as the kids traverse their destination 300 kms away. Their journey is all about anxiety as well as fun. While Hetal is an SRK fan, Krissh is a Salman Bhai fan and their arguments are an utter delight.

    The film is based in Rajasthan and the state’s depiction juxtaposed between its barren deserts and colourful culture is remarkable.

    Hetal and Krissh carry the entire film on their own strength and their lively banter keeps the viewing a pleasant experience. Both excel in performance; while Hetal’s is an emotional character, Krissh is sharp-witted and an exploiter. He gets the best lines, too. Vipin is good in a brief role. The direction is good, adhering to the simple narrative. Dialogue is the mainstay of the film.  The musical score enhances the Rajasthan ambience.
    Dhanak is a fun film, a must-watch: Amen!

    Producers: Manish Mundra, Nagesh Kukunoor, Elahe Hiptoola.
    Director: Nagesh Kukunoor.      •       
    Cast: Hetal Gada, Krissh Chhabbbria, Vipin Sharma, Gulfam Khan.

  • Udta Punjab….Rough landing! Dhanak Delightful!

    Udta Punjab….Rough landing! Dhanak Delightful!

    MUMBAI: Much in the news first for its duel with the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) and later for the leak of the film on the internet, Udta Punjab puts an end to all the controversy as it hits the cinemas today.

    Has the media glare helped the film as due to this it is said to have got extra promotion? No, because controversies can bring a film into news but can’t add to the content. On the contrary, such a thing can add to expectations. Also, when you watch the film you realize that according to the CBFC norms, 89 cuts offered may be  fewer than the film deserved—it is replete with street-side expletives. The film is almost 90 percent in Punjabi language and the Punjabi way of abusing only makes the abuses sound worse.

    The generous use of foul words and extensive use of Punjabi dialogue may severely limit the film’s prospective audience, especially the women and families.
    The film starts with a funny ‘Believe It Or Nuts’ kind of scene where a discus thrower from Pakistan, wearing a national jersey, throws a package of cocaine into India! The film proceeds to deal with the drug problem in Punjab and limits itself to that. There are no side attractions. All the characters except the few exploiters are victims.

    Shahid Kapoor is a small town Punjab lad who goes off to London and returns as a singing sensation, a pop star. His idea, and that of the makers, is to model him on rock stars in West from 1960s who did Psychedelic rock which was hugely drug induced. There was a phase when rock stars did repulsive things on stage like showing bare bottoms, puking, peeing which seems to have been the inspiration here. The success as well the drugs, both having gone to his head, he considers himself bigger than the system of the state. The result is a week in jail and some eye openers like a teenager inmate having killed his mother for refusing to give him money for drugs.

    Shahid needs no de-addiction, the seven day jail and the mother killer story has put him off drugs. Drugged bodies in various states of stupor are spread across the screen.

    The film moves to the system side of the drug problem. There are cops on one side who are totally on the take and set rates to let the truck filled with drugs pass: this includes Diljit Dosanjh, the Punjabi star making his debut in Hindi films, and there is Kareena Kapoor, attempting to nurse drug addicts to normalcy. Try to cure them is all that Kareena can do as there is no way she can stop the spread of drugs, which involves everybody from politicians to police. But, there is a curious scene where Kareena is distributing sterile disposable syringes moving from home to home; is this her idea of stopping drug abuse?  Conveniently, Dosanjh’s kid brother becomes a victim of drugs. He is on his death bed with Kareena tending to him. That changes Dosanjh for good.

    Shahid, who has projected the drug menace in the first part, now takes a backseat as Dosanjh and Kareena form a team and become investigators. They are convinced that a big name is involved in the drug racket. In the process of investigating, they also get attracted to each other. The investigation and clues usually fall into their laps. Because, Dosanjh may have little intellect but Kareena can weave magic on Google.

    Shahid is due to perform a show. He is not quite sure he can do it without drugs. He has realized he is a fluke and without drugs he is nothing. When egged on to sing by the audience, he vents his frustration, delivers a speech about drugs and when provoked, pees on the audience. His fans-turned-detractors are after him to lynch him and while he is on the run, he comes across Alia Bhatt, also on the run from her captors. She saves him from the goons out to beat him up. Shahid, in search of finding a man in himself, finds one in Alia instead! He goes soft on her.

    Alia is a Bihari laborer, one of thousands who work on the farms of Punjab. But, this one is a smart cookie. A state level hockey player, she gives into circumstances to work in farms away from home. Her captors have taken her back from Shahid, basically a weak man with no courage to fight. He now decides to save her. The forces combine as Shahid and Dosanjh end up at the same place, the villains’ den. The film goes into an abrupt climax.

    In the name of drug abuse in Punjab, Udta Punjab is a grossly crude film. The treatment is like a 1970s film when the drug issue was internationally in limelight. The script takes its own convenient twists and turns. The direction is routine and clichéd with an inclination for abrupt cuts and shifting to new scenes. For a film about a rock star, the music is grossly lacking (all songs are in Punjabi words). The first half lacks pace and needs to be trimmed.

    Performance wise, Alia excels. Totally deglamorized, and having limited exposure, she is a class apart. Shahid mixes up his drug abuser and rock star with lunacy in the first half till he gets more scope later in the film. Dosanjh is natural and looks good too. Kareena puts in a controlled act like a veteran. Satish Kaushik as Shahid’s promoter is formulaic. Prabhjyot Singh is good.
    Udta Punjab has a poor first half but the second half which shows some purpose and humour makes it tolerable. With the opening response being average and  finding the weekend family audience a suspect, the film has just average prospects.
    Producers:  Shobha Kapoor, Ekta Kapoor, Anurag Kashyap, Vikramaditya Motwane, Aman Gill, Vikas Bahl,
    Sameer Nair.
    Director: Abhishek Chaubey.
    Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, Diljit Dosanjh, Satish  Kaushik, Prabhjyot Singh.

    Dhanak

    Dhanak is basically a film aimed at children. What is good about the film is that it is a totally positive, no bad-elements in the story. There are two kids on the loose on the road and the whole world is out to help them, be nice to them. There is no stepmother, there is a benevolent uncle (chacha) and there is this half khaddoos aunty (chachi) who looks after these orphaned children.

    Hetal Gada and Krissh Chhabaria are an orphaned brother and sister in Rajasthan, their parents having died in Pushkar along with 25 others due to a camel stampede. They are now under the care of Vipin Sharma, their dead father’s younger brother and his wife, Gulfam Khan. While Vipin has taken to the kids as his own, Gulfam is restrained; to add to her frustrations is also the fact that she has no child of her own and that her husband, Vipin, is good for nothing. Hence, Gulfam dominates the household. Vipin lets it be that way.

    What adds to the discomfiture of Gulfam is that Krissh is blind. As if to compensate for his blindness, his other faculties like smell, sound and imagination work overtime. His perception is outstanding. Hetal has only one wish, to get her brother’s eyesight restored. She has even set a deadline to do so: her brother’s ninth birthday.

    Vipin loves the kids and even indulges them. He takes them to a touring cinema screening where Hetal spots a poster of Shah Rukh Khan advocating a movement against blindness. As she has already pledged that she would make sure her kid brother’s eyesight is restored before his ninth birthday, she decides to set out to a location in Jaisalmer about 300 kms away to meet Khan who is shooting there. One night, the kids walk out of their uncle’s house to search for Khan.
    It turns into a road movie thereafter as the kids traverse their destination 300 kms away. Their journey is all about anxiety as well as fun. While Hetal is an SRK fan, Krissh is a Salman Bhai fan and their arguments are an utter delight.

    The film is based in Rajasthan and the state’s depiction juxtaposed between its barren deserts and colourful culture is remarkable.

    Hetal and Krissh carry the entire film on their own strength and their lively banter keeps the viewing a pleasant experience. Both excel in performance; while Hetal’s is an emotional character, Krissh is sharp-witted and an exploiter. He gets the best lines, too. Vipin is good in a brief role. The direction is good, adhering to the simple narrative. Dialogue is the mainstay of the film.  The musical score enhances the Rajasthan ambience.
    Dhanak is a fun film, a must-watch: Amen!

    Producers: Manish Mundra, Nagesh Kukunoor, Elahe Hiptoola.
    Director: Nagesh Kukunoor.      •       
    Cast: Hetal Gada, Krissh Chhabbbria, Vipin Sharma, Gulfam Khan.

  • Q1-2016: Balaji Telefilms’ net down 80% at Rs 2.08 crore; revenue down 45%

    Q1-2016: Balaji Telefilms’ net down 80% at Rs 2.08 crore; revenue down 45%

    MUMBAI: Balaji Telefilms Limited (BTL) reported lower consolidated profit after tax (PAT) (less than one-fifth) in the quarter ended 30 June, 2015 (Q1-2016) at Rs 2.09 crore (2.8 per cent margin), which was down 80 per cent as compared to the Rs 10.56 crore (7.8 per cent margin) in Q1-2015 and less than one-fourth the PAT of Rs 9.54 crore (12.3 per cent margin) in the immediate trailing quarter.

     

    BTL reported 44.8 per cent drop in consolidated total income from operations (TIO) in Q1-2016 to Rs 74.64 crore as compared to the Rs 135.34 crore in Q1-2015. The company’s Q1-2016 TIO dropped 2.6 per cent as compared to the Rs 76.94 crore in the immediate trailing quarter.

     

    Note:  (1)100,00,000 = 100 lakh = 10 million = 1 crore

    (2) All numbers are consolidated unless stated otherwise.

     

    Television segment

     

    BTL’s television segment reported 57 per cent growth in revenue from operations at Rs 68.46 crore in the current quarter as compared to the Rs 43.50 crore in Q1-2015 and 15 per cent more than the Rs 59.51 crore in Q4-2015.

     

    The segment reported a 62 per cent growth in PAT to Rs 4.51 crore as compared to the Rs 1.96 crore in the corresponding year ago quarter. PAT in Q4-2015 was however more than double at Rs 9.61 crore. Consolidated EBIDTA in the current quarter was Rs 4.97 crore as compared to the Rs 14.71 crore in Q1-2015.

     

    The segment’s cost of production shot up by 54 per cent in the current quarter to Rs 55.21 crore as compared to the Rs 35.77 crore in Q1-2015 and was 23 per cent more than the Rs 44.91 crore in Q4-2015, though the company had shot more commissioned programming hours in Q4-2015 than in the current quarter.

     

    The company’s television segment reported revenue of Rs 52.76 crores from 240.5 hours of commissioned programs as compared to the Rs 42.57 crore for 208 commissioned hours in Q1-2015 and revenue of Rs 59.51 crore for 258 commissioned hours in Q4-2015. The number of commissioned hours does not include Nach Baliye. Revenue per hour for commissioned programs in Q1-2016 increased 7.4 per cent to Rs 21.94 lakh as compared to the Rs 20.42 lakh in Q1-2015, but was 4.9 per cent lower than the Rs 23.06 lakh in the immediate trailing quarter.

     

    UPCOMING TELEVISION SHOWS

     

    BTL is gearing up to launch four new shows across four general entertainment channels (GECs) in 2015. The first show is a finite series of 130 episodes, which will be aired from Monday to Friday on Sony beginning second week of September. The second show is a daily fiction serial to be aired on Star Plus from Monday to Saturday from the second week of September. The newest GEC &TV from the Zee Entertainment Enterprises stable will air a new Balaji fiction daily from Monday to Friday by end September. On the other hand, Colors will air a finite show called Nagin comprising 26 episodes of one hour programming, which will be aired on Saturday and Sunday by end October this year.

     

    Additionally, the company is also in talks with GECs for various non-fiction ideas.

     

    UPCOMING MOVIES

     

    BTL has multiple films namely Grand Masti, XXX, Kya Kool Hai Hum 3 and Udta Punjab on the floor. These are either in the post production stage or are nearing completion. The company is looking at releasing these in Q3 or Q4 of the current financial year if schedules stand. Another biopic Azhar is expected to be released in Q1-2017, while shooting is also in progress for a superhero film Flying Jat.

  • Balaji joins hands with Phantom Films to co-produce ‘Udta Punjab’

    Balaji joins hands with Phantom Films to co-produce ‘Udta Punjab’

    MUMBAI: Balaji Motion Pictures has joined hands with Phantom Films to co-produce the Shahid Kapoor starrer Udta Punjab.

     

    The movie, which also stars Alia Bhatt, Kareena Kapoor and Punjabi actor Diljit, is being directed by Abhishek Chaubey.

     

    Ekta Kapoor’s Balaji Motion Pictures had earlier also collaborated with Phantom Films forLootera.

     

    The story of Udta Punjab revolves around substance abuse in the Indian state of Punjab. Earlier this month, the movie went on floors in Amritsar.

     

    Phantom Films is helmed by Madhu Mantena, Anurag Kashyap, Vikramaditya Motwane and Vikas Bahl.