© Khumaer.us
Entertainment Bollywood
Insists the Hindi film industry stop equating good movies with box office numbers
Array
(
[galleryId] => 85394a276dc92d2b903df6d60221eb236ae9f6b466fca5ee
[thumbImage] =>
[largeImage] =>
[fullImage] =>
[videoObj] =>
=> Amol Palekar
[altText] => Amol Palekar
… declining state of Hindi films, veteran actor-filmmaker Amol Palekar said … Why do we associate good movies with their business? Is our … a movie makes? We are often told that a film earned … and RRR, while smaller films with substantial content often fade … => Amol Palekar
Amol concerned about Hindi films =>
)
Amol Palekar
PTI
Feb 28, 2025 04:00 PM | UPDATED: Feb 27, 2025 10:10 PM | 8 min read
Expressing his concern over the declining state of Hindi films, veteran actor-filmmaker Amol Palekar said there’s a need to rethink the criteria for defining a “good” film, which shouldn’t always be defined by how much money it has earned at the box office.
He cited the recent The Mehta Boys, directed by Boman Irani, as an example of the type of heartfelt storytelling that is lacking in contemporary Hindi cinema. “A film is more than the money that it has earned. Why do we associate good movies with their business? Is our understanding limited to the business a movie makes? We are often told that a film earned Rs. 400 or 500 crores but a good film should not be about how much it has earned at the box office,” Palekar said.
According to Palekar, The Mehta Boys is similar to the kind of films that were made in his era. “I feel we are unable to make such beautiful films today, and we rather make only one kind of factory churn out kind of films,” Palekar said.
He also lamented the hype surrounding massive blockbusters like Baahubali and RRR, while smaller films with substantial content often fade into the background. “An OTT platform made a serial based on a well-known writer from the Malayalam industry named, Vasudevan Nair, and it featured all the top stars including Mammootty, Mohanlal and many others, and it was presented by Kamal Haasan. If a project like this is being made in the South, we must talk about it but we only talk about Baahubali and RRR,” Palekar added.
While acknowledging the advent of AI in the entertainment industry, the 80-year-old cinema icon asserted that technology cannot replace human creativity. “AI is another step or big jump for the industry. A noted musician Zakir Hussain passed away recently, his tabla and the sound he created, can easily be recreated and reproduced through AI, but still, the tabla played by him will have a human effect. AI is created by a human being but it can’t replace human talent.” PTI
Images are for reference only.Images and contents gathered automatic from google or 3rd party sources.All rights on the images and contents are with their legal original owners.