Tag: UTV

  • Joker may be screened for Sunita Williams in space

    Joker may be screened for Sunita Williams in space

    MUMBAI: UTV Motion Pictures, the distributors of Akshay Kumar and Sonakshi Sinha starrer Joker, are going a notch up to promote the fantasy adventure film.

    The distributors are in talks with The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to work out logistics to screen the film at the space station for astronaut Sunita Williams.

    “We are trying to (show the movie to Williams), but I don‘t think we are going to get permission. There are lot of red tapes involved in that. UTV has been trying to get it up because the movie is about UFOs and space,” said Farah Khan wife of producer director Shirish Kunder.

    “They wanted it to be up there, but I think one has to take permission a year in advance. So the process is on,” she added.

  • Jet Airways to fly on Disney’s icon brands

    MUMBAI: Disney Channel India and Jet Airways Monday unveiled a Disney-themed aircraft wrapped with images of Disney’s Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Daisy, Goofy and Pluto at Mumbai International Airport marking the culmination of the Jet Set Go on-air campaign.

    The Boeing 737-800 from the fleet of Jet Airways, India’s premiere international airline, will be in the air beginning 10 July.

    The Disney Channel’s ‘Jet Set Go’ campaign generated a six million entries that were submitted from all over India, with 37 families being awarded the prize of an all-expense paid trip to Hong Kong Disneyland Resort where they will be able to meet all of their favourite characters.

    “At the heart of Disney DNA is our passion for telling the world’s best stories and providing unique experiences for kids and families. Jet Set Go is one such initiative which has seen a phenomenal response from all corners of the country,” said Disney UTV Executive Director – Disney Kids Network Vijay Subramaniam.

    “We‘re delighted to welcome the 37 winning families to the Hong Kong Disneyland Resort and help make their dreams come true with magical Disney experiences. They‘ll be joining the growing number of Guests who visit from India. In the 2011 fiscal year, the Resort experienced an 8 per cent increase in Guests from India over the previous year, with over 70 per cent indicating the intention to revisit in the future,” said Hong Kong Disneyland Resort Director, Marketing Wendy Chu.

    “Jet Airways is delighted to collaborate with Disney through this unique opportunity to deliver a creative and memorable experience to kids and their families. Exterior aircraft branding creates a bold visual impact for all airport guests and personnel. We are happy to see the results and will look for more opportunities to create unique experiences for JetKids in the future,” said Jet Airway VP Marketing Manish Dureja.

  • ‘We will post robust double digit growth’ : Disney UTV executive director and Disney kids network business head Vijay Subramaniam

    ‘We will post robust double digit growth’ : Disney UTV executive director and Disney kids network business head Vijay Subramaniam

    The kids television market in India is a tough nut to crack. Disney UTV executive director and Disney kids network business head Vijay Subramaniam, however, believes that the brand-driven media conglomerate has got the right formula to break the nut.

     

    Two of the channels have succeeded to penetrate the ratings. Disney Channel houses its global brands like MickeyMouse and is growing these franchises. Hungama is a fun-filled channel and works on Japanese anime content. TheWalt Disney Company India is now pulling its resources behind Disney XD to make the comedic action channel popular in the Hindi speaking markets.

     

    The company‘s strategy is two-fold: offer a wide spread of content that entertains not just kids but also the family; support this with strong activation to connect directly with the TG through multiple touch points.

     

    The challenge is to expand the advertising revenue which is pegged at Rs 2.5 billion. The genre is under indexed and the growth in audiences is not translating to a corresponding increase in advertising monies.

     

    Disney is waiting for digitisation to develop other genres that will yield more subscription revenues. The company is determined to find potential in live action and has three shows in development stage. Local animation is another genre that it wants to explore actively. The superhero genre is also to be exploited as an opportunity.

     

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com‘s Javed Farooqui, Subramaniam talks about the potential the kids genre has amid tough revenue challenges.

     

    Excerpts:

    What is the challenge the kids broadcasting genre faces today?
    Some of the challenges that existed earlier even prevail today. Distribution, for instance, was a hard game to play when we launched in 2007. That situation continues and India is still one of the most expensive markets to procure distribution. So that definitely is a challenge. But we hope things will better with digitisation.

     

    Another challenge that has stuck around is that the kids market is highly under indexed. You can take a five year trend and you will find it is still under indexed, despite the fact that viewership on kids channels have grown overall. It’s a Rs 2.5-2.7 billion ad market. If you take the viewership, the total number of GRPs in 2007 was about 400-450 and currently it’s at about 700 GRPs. Every year this has been one genre that has added consistent growth, but it stays under indexed.

    Is that because the genre is highly fragmented?
    The question that advertisers need to ask is where the quality of viewership is and are they leveraging it. Going by the science of the marketplace, I don’t think advertisers have still realised the full potential of this audience.

    What could be done to overcome this hurdle?
    There are three things that we consistently do from a Disney kid’s networks standpoint and we believe it’s increasingly giving us returns. One is to have entertainment content that is completely family inclusive with the kid at the centre of it.

     

    Two, every single marketing activity that we have undertaken as a network has driven a very strong engagement value building loyalty through several intangibles. These become the talking points for advertisers and, more importantly, it deepens the relationship between the consumer and the channel. Take Jet Set Go as an example. We got six million entries from across the country and the best thing is that the contest was completely driven through Disney channels without cricket and Bollywood.

     

    Thirdly, we are constantly engaged in educating the advertising fraternity of the increase in value that the kids centric family brings. Yes, that’s a long journey to cover still. But the fact is that new categories of advertisers are walking in. Kids channels reach about 85 per cent of the genre’s universe.

     

    We are the leading kids network with 43 per cent share and we bring the power of terrific story telling through our franchises. The activations that we do are pretty wholesome and these are things that can be easily leveraged for value by brands. Having said that, it is a very competitive marketplace. And I don’t see enough attention being given to this segment when people strategise.

    So in an ideal situation what should be the size of the ad revenue market considering the audience delivery?
    That would be a hard one to say. I am of the view that brands that invest in kids channels should have a long-term view of building partnerships. We in Disney believe in evolving with the consumer and it’s important that brands demonstrate similar partnerships and evolve with us as we evolve with consumers. To illustrate a point, the engagement that we brought with Jet Set Go is something that money can’t possibly buy. Just imagine 33 families coming together and nobody knowing each other as they set out to experience the whole thing together at Disneyland. So these kinds of opportunities can be created by us. It’s more of a strategy that is driving this investment as opposed to asking ‘Can you spend a little more’? It’s not just about how you spend; it’s about how much you are staying invested with this important target audience.

    ‘The segment that we are going to drive as an opportunity as well as a strategy is the superhero genre. We have got the Marvel Universe premiering on Disney XD. That’s our first foray and we have got Marvel as a part of Disney‘

    Disney has been positioning itself as family entertainment channel. Do you think that works when you have to compete in the kids genre?
    The kids channel label is what prevents us from looking at family as a unit. If you look at it from the lens of a television professional, then that’s a limitation. But if you look at consumers in general and brand Disney in particular, we are a family entertainment channel worldwide. There are enough adults who buy Disney merchandise and then there is Disneyland which will give you an indication of just how big the Disney brand is.

     

    Agreed we are a young brand in India and we have not been here as long as the brand has been in other countries. But that said Disney stands for family entertainment. Secondly, if you look at consumers, they have at least one meal together and even as we live individualistic lives, the meaning of family is still very strong. We believe that Disney is a brand that provides the environment for families to come together. Yes, its kids centric but it’s something that is enjoyed by the family. And we believe that we have some of the best family comedy shows.

    But isn’t it still animation that works for kids channels?
    Agreed that animation is the staple diet for all kids channels. But it does not for a minute mean that the two cannot co-exist. In fact, there should be a healthy balance of the two.

     

    We will continue to invest on live action and we are very clear that we want to make it work. Ok, let me change the perspective and ask the same question about Satyamev Jayate. When you bring in a new format in a new slot, you will have people who will be very enthusiastic and supportive and there will be people who will be at the fence. As leaders, it is important to bring these new formats to the country. We have to drive it in a manner that Indian audiences find it most entertaining and relevant. We started with live action two years ago with Ishaan and we have three shows under development stage now. We genuinely believe that this is an added dimension for both kids and their families.

     

    Live action is fun but it is harder to do. We are fortunate that we have the repertoire of successful stories that have been scripted and aired successfully internationally.

    What is the ratio between live action and animation on Disney Channel?
    It’s between 15-19 per cent with just two shows – Suite Life of Karan and Kabir and Best of Luck Nikki.

    What is your content strategy for the three channels? Any specific genres that you are planning to experiment with?
    One segment that we have identified clearly is live action. It’s very rich and is something to which we are committed strategically and financially; we are going to drive that to build significant volume for us.

     

    We see huge opportunity in preschool content and have ambitious plans for it. Frankly, it’s a function of right timing because it can’t be driven using the ad sales model. This is a far younger audience and requires a lot more responsibility in managing it. This is one genre we would like to explore once we see where this digitisation piece is moving.

     

    The third genre that we want to play a role in is local animation. Indian animation has come a long way and we believe that there are lots of dimensions that are still to be explored. A day in the life of a kid is also an opportunity to explore much more; it doesn’t necessarily need to be mythology. So that’s the piece we are keen on.

     

    Musicals is something which is at the heart of everything we do. It is another interesting genre, but the challenge is how do we do so because development in some of these things is very difficult to do in an environment that is not necessarily seen as an opportunity through the eyes of the kid.

     

    Comedic action and adventure is an interesting genre that we are going to contribute significantly in.

     

    Lastly, the segment that we are going to drive as an opportunity as well as a strategy is the superhero genre. We have got the Marvel Universe premiering on Disney XD with Spiderman and Iron Man-Armored adventures on Saturday. That’s our first foray and we have got Marvel as a part of Disney. There are interesting stories to be built around them.

    How are Disney Channel, Hungama and Disney XD positioned?
    Disney Channel is the home of Disney brand and everything it stands for. All the Disney franchises are housed under this channel. Micky Mouse Clubhouse, Winny the Pooh and Phineas and Ferbs will be championed by Disney Channel as will the live action production that I spoke of – Suite Life of Karan and Kabir, Best of Luck Nikki and Art Attack (an art and craft show).

    Hungama is a brand aimed at the 4-14-year-olds. It is a total unbridled fun channel, so Japanese anime is the content expression there.

    Disney XD is an action and comedic brand channel targeting boys in the age group of 8-14 years.

    Hasn’t Disney XD been the weak link in your network?
    I would say Disney XD required the maximum amount of work among the three channels that we have in India. We have got Disney Channel and Hungama sitting pretty but our work is not finished yet. We have to stay on top of the live action game, something that I keep emphasising on. It has to be truly entertaining because that is what differentiates Disney from other entertainment products. Hungama is going to stay fun and enjoyable.

     

    With Disney XD, we are sure we will be able to take it to the position the other two are in. That’s really the game plan.

    What direction are you going to give Disney XD?
    Disney XD is a channel that has traditionally done well in the South and HSM (Hindi Speaking Market) was not a focus area. We are at a stage where we are going to focus a lot of our resources on Disney XD to make it strong in the HSM. We have made encouraging beginnings but we have a long way to go. We are pretty confident of reaching there. Prior to January, we were 30 odd GRPs, which is really nothing. But currently we hold about 60 GRPs on an average and are confident that it will be a 100+ GRP channel in the coming months, given that we have a whole lot of initiatives planned to give it the push.

    What are the growth projections for Disney network?
    I am not at liberty to share financials, but they are robust double digit numbers. The growth will be delivered by consistency of performance due to high quality programming and a discerning advertiser who is placing a premium on both brand value as well as consistency. As far as break-up of revenues is concerned, its 50-50 for us between distribution and ad revenue. Licensing and merchandising is a separate business altogether.

    How important is new media in the scheme of things?
    New media in most media companies is an extension of the linear product. But for us it’s a full-fledged digital universe onto itself. Disney is a unique brand that tells great stories and then disseminates them through as many platforms and environments as possible.

     

    We have Disney Interactive Media Group. Like DisneyConsumer Products, it is a separate company altogether that works across the length and breadth of the digital universe. When we did the Princess movie festival on the channel, we also built a game on mobile and they then fed it to over 7-8 million consumers. So that’s the scale we can build for our stories across platforms.

  • UTV set to release Delhi Belly in Hong Kong on 10 May

    UTV set to release Delhi Belly in Hong Kong on 10 May

    MUMBAI: UTV Motion Pictures is set to release Aamir Khan‘s Delhi Belly on 10 May in Hong Kong.

    A rip-roaring film, Delhi Belly will release across eight screens in cinemas for the first week with Cantonese subtitles.

    After consecutive success of Hindi films in Hong Kong, there has been immense demand of content that has the ability to crossover and work with local audiences across culture and sensibilities.

    The film is about Tashi, Arun and Nitin – flatmates, buddies and partners in crime. Tashi is to get married in a month but still doesn‘t know if his fiancé is the one. Arun can‘t make up his mind who he wants to kill first – his girlfriend who has just dumped him or his stupid, annoying boss whose idea of creativity is sketching a smiling banana.

    On the other hand, Nitin is about to discover that eating delicious tandoori chicken off a street vendor is going to give him the worst case of Delhi Belly he‘s ever known! Three regular blokes, living the regular life except for one small detail – they are on the hit list of one of the world‘s deadliest crime syndicates. Will they be able to get away before the shit hits the roof and it comes crashing down? Delhi Belly is the meanest comedy you‘re ever likely to see.

    Said UTV Motion Pictures Senior Vice President, International Distribution and Syndication Amrita Pandey, “It‘s a very proud moment for us to have our film Delhi Belly release in Hong Kong. Hong Kong has a large young local and expat population and Delhi Belly has done superb business in cities like London, Singapore, Dubai, New York, Sydney, Melbourne, we hope it resonates with audience in Hong Kong. After the phenomenal success of 3 Idiots in Hong Kong, there is huge fan following for Aamir, and correspondingly for Delhi Belly since it is produced by him.”

    Directed by Abhinay Deo and written by Akshat Verma, Delhi Belly stars Imran Khan, Kunal Roy Kapur and Vir Das.

  • UTV Spotboy buys rights of Chetan Bhagat book, starts shoot

    UTV Spotboy buys rights of Chetan Bhagat book, starts shoot

    MUMBAI: After the screen adaptation of his book Three Idiots, another of Chetan Bhagat‘s bestsellers, The 3 Mistakes of My Life, is to be made into a film by UTV Spotboy titled Kai Po Che!. It will be directed by Abhishek Kapoor who had earlier directed Rock On!

    UTV Motion Pictures has officially bought the rights to the bestselling book that was first published in May 2008 and had an initial print-run of 420,000 copies with many reprints after that.

    Said UTV Motion Pictures CEO Siddharth Roy Kapur, “If ever there was a script that captures an era in our history and defines an entire generation on celluloid, this is it. Abhishek, Pubali, Supratik and Chetan have done a magnificent job of adapting Chetan‘s book into a screenplay that has the potential to emerge into an iconic film like Rang De Basanti or Dil Chahta Hai, which captured the essence and aspirations of the youth.

    Kai Po Che! has already created headlines as the Gujarat government has agreed to give their full support to the production. Chief Minister of Gujarat, Narendra Modi, has himself given a go-ahead to UTV to shoot freely in the state.

    “We are thrilled to be collaborating with Chetan, Abhishek, Javed Akhtar, Amit Trivedi and a fresh new cast on what promises to be a landmark film,” added Kapur.

    The film will have screenplay by Kapoor along with Pubali Chaudhuri, Supratik Sen and Chetan Bhagat.

  • UTV to remake Delhi Belly in Tamil

    UTV to remake Delhi Belly in Tamil

    MUMBAI: After a lot of dilly dally, UTV Motion Pictures has finally decided to remake Delhi Belly in Tamil.

    In the yet to be titled Tamil version, Imran Khan‘s role will be played by Arya, while Santhanam will play Kunaal Roy Kapur‘s role and Premji Vir Das‘s role. Hansika and Anjali will play the roles of the air hostess and journalist respectively. Nasser will essay the role originally played by Vijay Raaz. The film will also have several known stars in other pivotal roles.

    Remarked UTV Motion Pictures CEO Siddharth Roy Kapur, “Delhi Belly will work superbly well with Tamil audiences and we are thrilled with the exceptionally adapted screenplay that a team of young writers has developed. We have brought on actors who are youthful and popular, along with a very skilled director at the helm, and we are confident that the great content of Delhi Belly will act as a bridge for cinema loving audiences across languages.”

    The film, to be directed by R Kannan, is slated for a Pongal release in January 2013.

  • UTV wins case against Percept Pictures

    UTV wins case against Percept Pictures

    MUMBAI: UTV has won a case against Percept Pictures regarding the copyright dispute of its film Shoebite.

    The latter filed a case against Shoojit Sircar, the director of the film, and UTV Motion Pictures asking them to desist from infringing their copyrights in the script and dialogue of their film Johnny Walker.

    On July 16 2008, an order was passed in favour of Percept restraining UTV from proceeding with the shooting of the film. However, even after UTV filing an appeal against the order, the suit was pending for hearing.

    On May 2 last year, the matter finally came up for hearing before the mediator appointed by the Delhi High Court Mediation Cell. Finally in March this year, the Honorable Court dismissed the suit filed by Percept and upheld UTV‘s stand on the issue.

  • Releases in July and Sepember

    Releases in July and Sepember

    MUMBAI: Two months of this year, July and September, would be unique in their own way. While July, termed as a lucrative month, will have releases of four big Bollywood films, the month will see releases of three big Hollywood films. September, on the other will release three big women centric films.

    The Hollywood invasion in July starts with Sony Pictures Entertainment’s Amazing Spider-Man 3D, which releases on 3 July. Next in line is Fox Star Studios’s Ice Age 4: Continental Drift on 13 July and Warner Bros’s Dark Knight Rises on 20 July. All these Hollywood movies are likely to be released in 400-500 screens in English, Hindi, Tamil and Telugu languages, going by what was done when Titanic 3D released on 6 April.

    Bollywood has lined up big releases that month. The list includes Golmaal remake Bol Bachchan on 3 July, UTV Motion Pictures’ Barfee and Deepika Padukone starrer Cocktail (both 13 July) and U, Me aur Mein on 27 July.

    September, in contrast, will see three major releases of three top actresses. The process may have been triggered by successes of women centric films like Kahaani, The Dirty Picture and Ishqiya.

    The first film to release would be UTV and Madhur Bhandarkar’s Heroine. The film revolves around female protagonist Kareena Kapoor, a struggler who wants to make it big in Bollywood. Her struggle and rise to stardom take the plot forward. The film looks set for box office as well as critical acclaim because of Bhandarkar’s prophecy in handling women centric scripts.

    The film following next is Preity Zinta’s Ishk In Paris. The film features Zinta in a role of a strong headed lady who falls in love with a man but then how they handle complications of their lives and love in urban settings of Paris form the rest part of the story. The film seems to be an urban romantic drama that can work at box office.

    And the last of the lot is Viacom18’s Rani Mukerji, Prithviraj-starrer Aiyya. The film is a quirky love story between a Marathi girl and a Tamil boy. The central theme of the film is about a woman who finds a man desirable because he smells good. The film is expected to do well at the box office.

  • Bindass to shed UTV name, go ‘Rest Less’ from 16 April

    Bindass to shed UTV name, go ‘Rest Less’ from 16 April

    MUMBAI: Youth channel UTV Bindass is in for a makeover as it drops ‘UTV‘ from its name, dons a new logo and changes the tag line to ‘Rest Less‘ from 16 April.

    The channel, falling under the complete control of The Walt Disney Company India with UTV founder-promoter Ronnie Screwvala at the helm, will have 133 variations of the new ‘dynamic‘ logo.
    “Bindass as a brand has grown over the years. Today it is not just a television channel and we are going to promote it that way,” Bindass business head Keith Alphonso tells Indiantelevision.com.

    The channel will launch a new brand campaign created by Taproot India. “On 16 April, Bindass is set to undergo a mega transformation with a a new brand campaign, created by Agnello Dias (Taproot India). The new motto – Rest Less – perfectly symbolises the new identity rest less and do more. It is all about let’s do more, be it action, fun… Bindass is the brand that will get you there,” Alphonso adds.

    The channel has decided to undergo the repositioning after a research that the company conducted with MarketGate Consulting. Alphonso stresses that the research has suggested that there is a clear need gap and Bindass aims to fulfill that.

    MarketGate Consulting founder director Shripad Nadkarni says, “Our consumer research indicated that the youth has moved beyond passive optimism and are bustling with ideas and have a sense of urgency attached to their ambitions. We decided to reflect this spirit of purposive dynamism into the brand’s refreshed positioning as we believe the Indian youth is in the middle of one of the most exciting times.”

    The channel will also kickstart its marketing campaign on 16 April.
    Taproot India chairman and co-founder Agnello Dias says, “A key trait that marks youth behaviour today is a sense of constant motion; everyone is either going somewhere or doing something all the time. This non-stop motion, well channelised is the new objective ideal. Settling down is fast going down the priority list. The bubbling undercurrents of discovery, exploration, invention, challenge, action seem to top that list. The new brand campaign for Bindass captures precisely this, that the youth today are ‘Rest Less’ and actually rest even lesser. We had earlier worked on Bindass’ immensely successful ‘What I am’ campaign as well which really caught on with the youth and this time around with Rest Less we hope to continue connecting with them yet again.”

    In a bid to move beyond TV, Bindass is also planning to launch separate divisions for events and products and services. Though the plans are in formative stages, Alphonso confirms that events division will focus on creating tent-pole on-ground IP properties. From conceptualising to execution, the events division will work on properties, which can be scalable on a year-on-year basis, he adds.

    Meanwhile, the company has identified six categories of product and services. While it is planning a range of apparels and accessories, the services will include holiday services, Bindass style.

    On the content front, the channel will launch two new reality shows soon. On 28 April, it will launch Live Out Loud, a 10 episodic series in which one person will be made to overcome fear by saying that one thing he or she wanted to say.

    This will be followed by another show Fear-Less in July, wherein participants will be helped by their friends to overcome fear of height, water or other such things which result in not enjoying life to the fullest.

    Bindass is also betting big on the digital front and from 16 April, the whole look and feel of the brand in the digital world will also get a makeover. It will make its presence felt on all the social media platforms including Facebook, Google Plus, Twitter, while a special channel for Youtube will be created with exclusive content, Alphonso adds.

    Bindass fights in a market which is too cluttered with youth and music channels including MTV, Channel [V], Mastiii, and 9XM.

    Bindass was launched in September 2007. It adopted the brand values of youth – fun, frank, and fearless – and built it as a platform to catch its target audience using TV, movies, web, mobile, ground and campus activities. Later it changed the positioning to ‘What I am’.

  • Boney’s ex-wife Mona Kapoor dies of cancer

    Boney’s ex-wife Mona Kapoor dies of cancer

    MUMBAI: Mona Kapoor, ex-wife of Bollywood filmmaker Boney Kapoor and CEO of Future Studio, died on Sunday at the age of 48.

    Mona was battling multiple organ cancer for five months and was admitted to the Hinduja Hospital in Mumbai two weeks ago.

    She leaves behind son Arjun and daughter Anshula. Arjun will soon be making his Bollywood debut with Yash Raj Films‘ ‘Ishaqzaade‘.

    Future Studio, an indoor shooting studio in Mumbai, is a brand equity in itself. Located in Mumbai at Goregaon, minutes away from Mumbai‘s Film City, the studio boasts of a clientele ranging from Balaji Telefilms, UTV, Cinevista, Tips Films and Sohail Khan productions, among others.

    Mona separated from Boney after being together for a long time and the producer married actress Sridevi in 1996.