logo
Actors ditch urban-centric films for mass-market genres after Covid

Actors ditch urban-centric films for mass-market genres after Covid

Mint08-07-2025
Actors primarily known for upmarket, slice-of-life urban-centric films are making a clear shift towards mass-market genres to appeal to a broader audience base as the movie business struggles to reclaim its pre-covid glory.
While Rajkummar Rao will be seen in a gangster role in Maalik, slated for release in July, Ayushmann Khurrana will feature in horror comedy Thama, a genre that is the flavour of the season after successes like Stree 2 and Bhool Bhulaiyaa. Both the actors are known for small-town comedies and films with social messaging such as Bala, Chandigarh Kare Aashiqui, Srikanth and Badhaai Do.
Trade experts say the actors have realised post-covid that there is a need to improve footfalls in single screen cinemas and small towns and reach out to wider audiences as multiplex viewers are over-saturated with entertainment options, particularly those on streaming platforms such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and ZEE5.
'There is a realisation among younger actors that they really need to work towards attracting footfalls in single screen cinemas, which is why so many of them are now gravitating towards massy directors or subjects,' film producer Shariq Patel said.
The younger generation of actors has, so far, not really managed to do the kind of 'heroic' or larger-than-life roles that lead stars in the 1990s did, a void that has been filled by southern stars with commercial entertainers, he added. Many of the Hindi actors made their debut in the 2010s playing mostly boy-next-door roles when slice-of-life comedies and urban films had begun to make money thanks to a growing multiplex base.
'On the other hand, if you see southern stars like Yash (in KGF) or Allu Arjun (in Pushpa), they are all fighting the system and telling rags-to-riches kind of tales that work well,' Patel pointed out.
Some entertainment industry experts also point out that it is always interesting for actors to keep exploring new roles, as it is more satisfying from a creative point of view and allows the audience to witness a wider range of their talent.
'Sometimes, such choices are driven by box-office performance, but in most cases, actors take them up to expand their audience base and for creative fulfilment. A new avatar often generates curiosity and becomes a talking point. Once the look or the freshness of the genre starts trending, it adds to the buzz and contributes to a stronger opening for the film,' Vipul Shah - chairman and managing director, Sunshine Pictures Ltd, a film and OTT production house, said.
To be sure, actors such as Rao and Khurrana, among others, are also learning from their past failures. Both have seen niche, experimental films like Bheed ( ₹ 2.03 crore), An Action Hero ( ₹ 10.89 crore), HIT- The First Case ( ₹ 9.29 crore) and Anek ( ₹ 8.15 crore), all released post-covid, underperform at the box office. While Rao's recent horror comedy Stree 2 did cross the ₹ 600-crore mark, trade experts say it has more to do with the genre, proof that actors should target subjects that speak to wider, and not segmented audiences.
'Post covid-19, serious stocktaking has become imperative in the industry as audience tastes have evolved due to extensive exposure to international content. Makers are now steering clear of formulaic films because they no longer work. What works are nuanced human stories that are universal and yet rooted in local culture,' film producer Anand Pandit said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Thammudu' OTT release: When and where to watch Nithiin's action drama; read more
'Thammudu' OTT release: When and where to watch Nithiin's action drama; read more

Time of India

time37 minutes ago

  • Time of India

'Thammudu' OTT release: When and where to watch Nithiin's action drama; read more

(Picture Courtesy: Facebook) After its theatrical release on July 4, 2025, 'Thammudu' is all set for its digital debut. The Nithiin-starrer, which struggled at the box office amid mixed-to-negative reviews, will begin streaming on Netflix from August 1. The platform confirmed the release date through an official post that read, 'Thana lakshyanni, akkani thirigi thevadaniki ee thammudu is on a mission!' The film will be available in Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, and Kannada, opening it up to a broader South Indian audience. A story of siblings, survival, and skill 'Thammudu' follows Jai, played by Nithiin , a gifted archer separated from his sister Jhansi in childhood. Years later, Jhansi, now a principled government officer, refuses to sign a falsified report about a chemical factory explosion in Vizag. Her moral stand turns her into a target of powerful and corrupt forces. As her world begins to crumble, Jai reenters her life. The hero is determined to protect her and her family using not just courage, but also the precision of his bow. Even with an intriguing plot, the movie had received mostly mixed reviews from the audiences. Thammudu - Official Trailer A packed cast and a new turn for familiar faces Directed and written by Venu Sriram, 'Thammudu' marks his first collaboration with Nithiin. The film also brings actress Laya back to Telugu screens, years after her brief appearance in Amar Akbar Anthony. The supporting cast includes Sapthami Gowda, Varsha Bollamma, Saurabh Sachdeva, Swasika, and Hari Teja, among others. B. Ajaneesh Loknath's music received decent responses from the viewers. ETimes gave the movie a rating of only 2 stars out of 5 and an excerpt from our official review read, "On the technical front, the film is visually appealing, with cinematographer KV Guhan capturing the tribal locales with flair. Ajaneesh Loknath's background score is atmospheric but rarely elevates the emotional beats. The action choreography is stylised, though several sequences stretch believability, further distancing the viewer from the story's emotional core. Thammudu had all the ingredients for a stirring emotional-action drama, but in trying too hard to be everything, it ends up being less than the sum of its parts. A film that had the potential to hit the bullseye sadly misses the mark."

Parineeti Chopra Reveals She Googled ‘Raghav Chadha Height' After Their First Meet
Parineeti Chopra Reveals She Googled ‘Raghav Chadha Height' After Their First Meet

News18

time37 minutes ago

  • News18

Parineeti Chopra Reveals She Googled ‘Raghav Chadha Height' After Their First Meet

Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha celebrated their wedding in a private and elegant ceremony at The Leela Palace, Udaipur, in September 2023, overlooking scenic Lake Pichola. The intimate affair was attended by close family members and a select guest list that included prominent figures from both Bollywood and politics, such as Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal, Punjab CM Bhagwant Mann, Aditya Thackeray, Sania Mirza, Harbhajan Singh, Manish Malhotra, Bhagyashree, and Shailesh Lodha. The nuptials followed traditional Punjabi wedding rituals and were framed by pre-wedding festivities, including mehndi, haldi, and sangeet, held a day before the main event. Parineeti Chopra's most recent film role was in Imtiaz Ali's Amar Singh Chamkila, where she portrayed the singer's wife, Amarjot Kaur, opposite Diljit Dosanjh. The Netflix musical biopic premiered in April 2024 and saw her undergo a major transformation—gaining 16 kg for the role. She has since wrapped shooting for her upcoming untitled mystery thriller on Netflix, co-starring Jennifer Winget, Tahir Raj Bhasin, Soni Razdan, and others

Sarzameen: Ibrahim Ali Khan's terrible film accidentally gets you to root for a terrorist to kill an Indian soldier, and you can't even deny it
Sarzameen: Ibrahim Ali Khan's terrible film accidentally gets you to root for a terrorist to kill an Indian soldier, and you can't even deny it

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

Sarzameen: Ibrahim Ali Khan's terrible film accidentally gets you to root for a terrorist to kill an Indian soldier, and you can't even deny it

In Sarzameen, a stern military man allows his only son to be murdered by terrorists in Kashmir because… nation comes first or something. You often hear about parents who proudly declare that they are willing to sacrifice their children for the country, and perhaps Prithviraj Sukumaran's Vijay Menon is cut from the same cloth as those folks. The only difference is that his son isn't a soldier on the front-lines, but a child for whom he feels no love. Played by Ibrahim Ali Khan, the child's name is Harman, and the only reason his father hates him is that he isn't like the other boys; he's timid, he can't play sports, and he speaks with a stutter. Bizarrely enough, Sarzameen implies that Vijay wouldn't have let his son die had he conformed to the 'norms' of boyhood. If Harman didn't have a speech impediment, the movie suggests, he'd likely have lived. It's an astounding thought that struck absolutely nobody in the Dharma writing incubator that coughed up this script, which relies almost exclusively on contrivance, convenience, and coincidence to keep the plot moving. Sarzameen expects us to root for a reunion of some kind after it reveals that Harman miraculously survived a bullet to the head — nobody dies in this movie, even after being shot at point-blank range — but unintentionally gets us to cheer for a terrorist to kill a member of the Indian Army. Also read – Nadaaniyan: Ibrahim Ali Khan makes one of the worst debuts in years; is Karan Johar determined to set fire to his career before it even begins? Only a complete failure in storytelling can send a viewer so wildly off track. Sarzameen is directed by Kayoze Irani, who showed such promise with his heartfelt short film in Ajeeb Daastaans. For him to have selected this as his feature debut makes no sense; as it is, it feels like he wasn't involved in the conceptualisation and execution of the action scenes at all. His focus, presumably, was on the drama. And it's drama straight out of a poor '90s movie; you can imagine how competent Sarzameen is when you realise that even Netflix, which gave an enthusiastic thumbs-up to Nadaaniyan, drew the line. As with that film, it feels like every line of dialogue here has been dubbed in a booth and not performed on set. Hindi isn't Prithviraj's mother tongue, and acting doesn't come naturally to Ibrahim. He shows up only after the first act, when Harman inexplicably escapes from the clutches of his captors and reappears in his parents' lives. For some reason, his mother, played by Kajol, is still married to Vijay, even after he abandoned Harman and left him to die. Had Sarzameen shown us what happened during those eight years, her decision would've made sense. But because it doesn't, you're left to assume that the only reason she stuck around is because she has a job to fulfil in the film's third act. Unlike Brody from Homeland, who was closely monitored by the CIA after he returned from captivity tried to begin his life afresh, Harman is simply allowed to go home to his parents. They barely recognise him. He no longer has a stutter, and he seems more confident than he used to be. Vijay is convinced that he's an imposter — the fact that he believes Harman would be the same person who 'died' eight years ago is bananas. Vijay knows that Harman was living with terrorists; he knows that Harman was probably tortured and brainwashed. And still, he welcomes Harman into his house without having him cleared first. Sarzameen seems to think that the dramatic conflict of these scenes rests in whether Harman is Vijay's son, and not whether he's a terrorist. The more suspicious Vijay becomes of Harman, the more you want to lean in and remind him that it's all his fault. Consequently, you root for the kid to shoot him in the face. This almost happens in the pre-interval scene, by the way. But the scene ends with a twist so wild that its sole purpose, seemingly, is to disarm you for the further insanity that Sarzameen has prepared for the climax. Let's talk about it. It is revealed that Harman was, indeed, a militant brainwashed against his father, who, it wouldn't be a stretch to assume, is the living manifestation of India. The villains didn't have to work too hard; Vijay did have him murdered, after all. The movie would've been far more complex had Harman come from a loving home, or if it had shown Harman commit a terrible crime before resurrecting himself. It's almost as if the most interesting chunk of the story — the eight years that Harman spent away from home — was deliberately edited out. Read more – Ae Watan Mere Watan: Heartbreaking, the worst film you've seen just made some strong political points Vijay, of course, has an awakening. But nothing can redeem him; he's like the dad from Udaan, but if he was also a child-killer. The real twist — and Abbas Mustan would be so proud of Kayoze — is that Kajol's character was a double agent all along. It's like they're gifting the Saiyaara generation with their own version of Gupt: The Hidden Truth. She was sent to spy on the Indian Army, but she fell for Vijay and had a child with him. Why she fell in love with a man like him isn't something that the movie feels confident enough to explain. And, having seen what sort of guy he is, it's impossible for the viewer to fill in the blanks either. Sarzameen is, after all, a movie that paints an Army officer as the villain and projects militants as morally justified in their actions. So, why can't it be appreciated like the scores of films made about America's war crimes after 9/11? Why does Sarzameen have more in common with Kajol's own Fanaa — the film's Harry Potter connections deserve a separate article — than it does with something like The Forever Prisoner, a film that understands the difference between empathising with a wrongdoer and actively cheering them on. By relying on trivial tropes, the movie does a disservice not only to its own characters, but also a very real geopolitical issue.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store