City
Epaper

R. Balki: Few blockbusters happened in the last few years have actually been the worst films

By IANS | Updated: November 20, 2024 15:40 IST

Mumbai, Nov 20 National Award-winning director R. Balki feels that the few blockbuster movies that have happened ...

Open in App

Mumbai, Nov 20 National Award-winning director R. Balki feels that the few blockbuster movies that have happened in the last few years actually have been the worst films not only from an intellectual point of view but also from old entertainment feels as well.

Balki, who has made films such as “Paa”, “Pad Man”, “Cheeni Kum”, and others, shared these thoughts during a fireside chat on "What on Earth Is Wrong with Advertising and Cinema" at MIT World Peace University in Pune.

He said: “Few blockbusters that have happened in the last four, five years, or whatever, have actually been the worst films. I’m just saying, not only from an intellectual or an artistic point of view but also from the old entertainment, ‘masala, paisa vasool’ kind of a feel. Also, they’re damn boring.”

Drawing comparisons to iconic Manmohan Desai films, he added, “If you take a Manmohan Desai film... I remember there was a retrospective of Amit Ji. There was one on Manmohan Desai, and I was watching Amar Akbar Anthony, Naseeb, all these films by Manmohan Desai. There was so much fun! The fun has completely gone from our blockbusters.”

On blockbuster films lacking entertainment value but still earning big at the box office, Balki pointed out that movies have become more like projects.

“It’s become like a project. There’s an economics associated with that stuff. They want to recover this, they’re putting this money, they’re pumping the marketing out. It’s marketing, basically. It’s just driving people towards believing something is good.

He further noted that audience psychology also contributes to this phenomenon.

“Sometimes people don’t want to believe it’s bad. People don’t want to go to a film and curse it. They want to find one or two good things to like about the movie. If they like one or two good things about a star, they’ll say, ‘Time pass.’ Because you will never pay 500 bucks and curse yourself. You will want to say, ‘I was not that foolish. Oh, it was... it was fun. It was a little bit fun,’” he said.

Balki also talked about the reasons behind audiences losing interest in cinema.

“The interest that there was in cinema is not there anymore. It’s not the same kind of interest. Just because you find one or two films that are kind of working, or people are going to them during festival time, doesn’t mean things are the same. There’s just too much content, and people have so much more to devour,” he said.

He added, “We’re producing a lot more films now, and there’s so much to watch. I think sometimes, most people’s entertainment is actually not watching a film. They go to Netflix or something just to scan, just to kind of surf and see what’s available.”

“The movie itself has become an experience, not so much about actually watching the film. If you don’t like it within ten minutes, you switch off. You’re not committed to a film or somebody’s work—you just move on.”

Addressing filmmaking students, he advised them to keep working and surprising themselves. “Keep writing and thinking of ideas you feel have not been explored before. Craft stories that surprise you,” he encouraged.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentEmmy winner Cristin Milioti wrote her speech on back of her therapy notes

MumbaiMumbai Weather Update: Heavy Rains Hit The City, IMD Issues Yellow Alert Till September 16

CricketNew Zealand stars take casual contracts, commit for T20 World Cup

EntertainmentNostalgia alert! 'Gilmore Girls' stars Alexis Bledel, Lauren Graham reunite at Emmys 2025

BusinessLast date of ITR filing today; Income Tax Dept says deadline not extended

Entertainment Realted Stories

Entertainment15-year-old Owen Cooper becomes youngest male actor to win Emmy, breaks decades-old record

Entertainment77th Primetime Emmys: Britt Lower bags Outstanding Lead Actress in Drama Series in 2nd win for 'Severance'

EntertainmentEMMYS 2025: Pedro Pascal looks dapper in all-white suit

Entertainment'Andor' writer Dan Gilroy takes home Emmy for Best Writing in a Drama Series

Entertainment77th Primetime Emmys: Tramell Tillman clinches Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for ‘Severance’