His blockbusters earn multiplex owners 60 to 70 per cent of their annual box office revenues. That is why Bollywood mogul Yash Chopra is flexing his muscles again with a distribution deal that both increases and frontloads his returns. |
With five releases slated this year "� including a Madhuri Dixit comeback movie and a Bachchan father-and-son starrer "� Chopra will be meeting owners next week to propose a 50:45:40 revenue-share arrangement in the first, second and third weeks, respectively. The industry standard is 48:45:40. |
Unlike last year, when they rejected Chopra's 50:48:45 package plus a demand for the same rates for Dhoom 2 and Kabul Express, multiplex owners seem inclined to accept this year's package deal. |
"You cannot afford to miss his movies. It makes sense to negotiate once for all the movies rather than negotiating terms for each movie," said Devang Sampat, general manager (marketing & sales), Cinemax. |
Added Ashish Saxena, COO-films cell, PVR Cinema, "With a lot of movies being churned out by the renowned production house, it is viable for us to sign for all five movies together." |
Last year, the multiplex company had lost significant revenues during the release of Dhoom 2 because it failed to reach an agreement with Chopra's Yash Raj Films on the revenue share. |
While PVR was willing to take Dhoom2, it refused to pay a high revenue share for Kabul Express an experimental film with a non-star cast of John Abraham and Arshad Warsi. A spokesperson for Yash Raj Films declined to comment on the development. |
Typically, 12 out of a year's 52 weeks are non-productive in the movie-theatre business. Of the remaining 40 weeks, Yash Raj Films accounts for almost half the movie stock "� it makes four or five films a year that run for an average of three weeks. This makes it difficult for multiplexes to withstand aggressive bargaining deals from the house. |