Sep 162017
 

Renowned filmmakers, marketers and  distributors all gathered today sharing their insights on the future of cinema at the first ever Jagran Cinema Summit held at JW  Marriott, Juhu. The event kick started with the opening ceremony where *Shekhar  Kapur, Kangana Ranaut, Vinod Srivastava, Sr. General Manager – Strategy and Brand Development – Jagran Prakashan Ltd. and Ajay Brahmatmaj* inaugurated with light lamping ceremony followed by key note speech from director *Shekhar Kapur* where he addressed to the new-age filmmakers to be storytellers utilizing digital platforms available today.

“ I am not a Man Hater” , speaking on her image of a feminist, Kangana Ranaut expressed that she feels sorry for the state of the society due to the inequality that persists and this is the reason why feminism finds its  way. She spoke that a person’s opinion has nothing to do with their 

profession, and so as an individual she before an actress is a woman and citizen of the country with a freedom of expression.

In an another interesting panel discussion headed by Mini Mathur were joined by Madhu Mantena (Founder, Phantom Films), Ajay Chacko (Founder, Arré), Sameer Nair (Former CEO, Balaji Telefilms), Shrishti Behl (Vice President of the Film and Television Producers Guild of India & Producer, Rose Movies) and Actor Vivek Oberoi where Does size matter? (of the screen) was the focal point of getting the panel’s perspectives owning to their profiles. Each of the panelists regarded that the size of the screen is irrelevant as long as content is enabling enough room for personal themes to resonate be it through mobiles, television or big screen theaters.

 A presentation “*Looking back as we look ahead” *by *Shivendra Singh Dungarpur (Founder, Film Heritage Foundation)* gave a wonderful insight on the heritage of Cinema and restoration of old Indian films. Shivendra shared intriguing images from his experiences of films being stripped for extraction of silver in Pathanwadi. Tragic fire at FTII that lost over 150 film negatives to how the Indian railways carried 1000s of unclaimed film prints were shared in an full excerpt.

 The second panel discussion at the summit took a light on “changes in the economics of film making” setting Bahubali as the benchmark of achieving gross hits. Mukesh Bhatt expressed the drama of Bahubali as an ‘event experience’ similar to how he had witnessed the charisma of Mughal-E-Azam which was a success product of good cinematic vision. Sajid Khan believes that the actual big numbers only come in when the people who usually would not come to cinemas, make it to the cinemas like in case of Bahubali that was wide-spread like fire.

 Towards the end of the summit, Varun Dhawan joined in a conversation with Mayank Shekhar on the ‘Future of Stardom’ where he shared the dilemmas he had while auditioning and the failures with no intentions of his father launching him before he made it. Fans bring stardom and Content has become the star of the films is what Varun iterated to embracing Stardom.

Concluding the event, Mayank Shekhar said, “Future of cinema as the theme of the summit has been very well tackled with top filmmakers, producers, actors and distributors in each of its segment, we definitely look forward to the next year’s installment.”

Jagran Cinema Summit has been curated to know the perspective of films produced and the future of cinema. For the consumers perspective, the
Jagran Film Festival will be held in Mumbai between 18-24th September’17.

Trending Video

Watch video: Sussanne Khan slams Kangana Ranaut, calls her allegations ‘evil’

Download the new mid-day android app to get updates on all the latest and trending stories on the go https://goo.gl/8Xlcvr

Let’s block ads! (Why?)

Sep 152017
 

Varun Dhawan. Pic/Satej ShindeVarun Dhawan. Pic/Satej Shinde

Five years into Bollywood, Varun Dhawan has already earned a place for himself. In an industry that chooses to separate its stars from actors, many find him the perfect combination of the two. Eight-film-old Dhawan has successfully straddled commercial hits with serious, gritty films that bring his acting prowess to the fore.

But Dhawan says the tag of ‘star’ sits heavy on his shoulders. Speaking at the Jagran Cinema Summit held in the city yesterday, the actor said, “The term star is totally misused today. I think the media makes anyone a star these days.”

He agreed that many from the current crop of actors, including himself, enjoy a wide fan following across the country. But he stated that it can’t be the only barometer to judge one’s stardom. “There is a difference between liking someone and being mad about someone. You need mass hysteria to be a superstar. From Rajesh Khanna to Amitabh Bachchan, and even Salman Khan and Shah Rukh Khan — these are real stars. This is a tag that we should not give away too easily.”

According to the youngster, a person “whose film works in the single screens as well as at multiplexes” is a star. Not one to be deluded by the fan frenzy that surrounds him, Dhawan said, “People always love us when we are at public events. They are hooting and whistling, but this doesn’t translate into box-office success. I don’t think people who come to see you at events always come and watch your film.”

Dhawan also brought up how the young generation of actors often gets rattled by criticism. “The millennials are shaken if they are criticised. Actors today are going under depression and battling anxiety,” he said, adding that social media aggravates the situation.

Trending Video

Watch video: Sussanne Khan slams Kangana Ranaut, calls her allegations ‘evil’

Download the new mid-day android app to get updates on all the latest and trending stories on the go https://goo.gl/8Xlcvr

Let’s block ads! (Why?)