NARROWING
LINES BETWEEN TV AND CINEMA! |
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Will
you go to theaters to watch
a movie? Most of you would answer
in the affirmative. But there
is also a counter side to this.
There are people who do not
frequent theaters and yet manage
to catch up with all the latest
releases. You got it, they rely
on the unfair means which include
internet downloads and the most
popular means, the ‘thirittu’
VCD. It is indeed a booming
business in Tamil Nadu at the
moment, going by the number
of street side vendors who are
specializing in the sales of
such VCDs. Some of them even
function as video libraries,
taking back CDs at half rates
after regular clients have watched
them once. There is also replacement
guarantee if the disc provided
does not work. Everyone is wise
enough to not complain about
the picture and sound quality
though. That is the only front
on which the pirated VCD industry
is not able to compete with
the actual film industry. The
sound and picture quality can
never be recreated. But new
and emerging technologies in
the form of high definition
handy cams and other sophisticated
equipments will soon enable
them to be reproduced exactly
too. It comes to your doorstep,
it comes cheap and it comes
with a replacement and payback
guarantee. All these three can
never be provided by theater
owners; ever heard of ticket
rates being paid back because
the movie was awfully bad? With
pirated VCDs threatening day
by day, cinema was in a big
quandary. Now, however, pirated
VCDs are not the major problem,
there seems to be an even more
dangerous opposition, the TV.
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What does one mean by saying TV? Well, we
don’t know whether it was some sort
of ploy by the producers to try and reduce
at least to some extent the dominance of
the pirated VCD industry. But, there has
definitely been an increase in the number
of films being handed over to TV channels
in a hurry. No one is sure whether the current
channel war has accelerated budgets of each
competitor to acquire the most wanted productions
and products. But, the overall process of
getting a film from the big screen to the
small one has become considerably faster,
maybe by a huge factor.
Look back at this Navarathri. The last two
days of the festival are the most special
and all channels preserved their arsenal
for these couple of days. Do you remember
the films that were played out across channels
on those two days? Even a person with a
sharp memory and a great interest in cinema
might not able to recollect effectively.
But, one does remember images of Abhiyum
Naanum, Subramaniapuram and Poo flashing
across the screen while flipping channels.
The common factor between all these films
is that all of them were released in 2008,
got great critics’ views and did good
business at the box office. Subramaniapuram
was last year’s sensation while Abhiyum
Naanum and Poo were revelations. In fact,
all major hits of 2008, barring Dasavatharam
have already been shown on the small screen;
the likes of Saroja etc.
All of a sudden, TV is flooded with new
movies and more importantly with advertisements
claiming it to be a historical landmark
(varalaaril mudhal muraiyaga) that the particular
movie is being telecast on that particular
channel at a particular time - which of-late
is also seen to be deliberately coinciding
with similar plans of another channel.
It is not just mere coincidence or a one
off occasion. Almost all the small movies
of 2009 have already been telecast including
the reasonably successful Dindigul Sarathi.
The movies that are less fortunate at the
ticket window find themselves on the small
screen before they can even blink. This
year’s Anandha Thandavam is a good
example which did not have to wait for much
long after its theatrical release to get
to the small screen.
Is it a healthy trend? The common sense
answer would be no. Already, families think
twice, thrice and maybe even more before
planning to watch a movie in theaters, the
expenses and the stress demands that kind
of planning. Imagine how their minds would
change if the same pattern of big screen
release to TV premier is followed. The difference
is just a few months or even lesser which
would not rob the movie of any of its freshness
or novelty. A couple of years or so back,
the big festival premiers used to be blockbusters
fetched from at least 2 -3 years in the
past. The new style is definitely welcome
news for those who prefer that couch than
the theater seat. But, it might ultimately
turn out to be a self inflicted wound for
the film industry. Maintain, preserve and
use sparingly the unique appeal that TV
can never have when compared to cinema.
By narrowing down the distance between TV
and cinema, it is the theaters that will
finally go empty.
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