Film bazaar: india's independents seek distribution alternatives | features | screen

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Film Bazaar: India's independents seek distribution alternatives | Features | Screen

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Film Bazaar: India's independents seek distribution alternatives 23 November, 2016 | By Liz Shackleton

India’s independent film-makers are turning to alternative distribution strategies to reach audiences in India and overseas. India’s theatrical market is notoriously tough for independent film-makers to access. Both multiplexes and singlescreen cinemas focus on mainstream Bollywood, or in the south of India, regional-language films. Many indie films also run into problems with India’s Central Board of Film Certification. And even if they manage to secure screens and a favourable release date, the costs of marketing an indie film can easily outstrip the initial budget. But over the past few years, India’s growing ranks of indie film-makers have proved they are as innovative and entrepreneurial as they are creative. While some are exploring crowdfunding and digital distribution — through both local and international platforms — others are taking their films directly to audiences. Two developments have transformed the landscape for Indian indies over the past few years. The first is the emergence of TVoD (transactional video-on-demand) platforms such as Google Play, iTunes, Vimeo and India’s TVF InBox Office, which enable film-makers to sell their films directly to audiences. The second is the entry of the global SVoD (subscription video-on-demand) giants. Netflix, which launched in India in January, and Amazon Prime Video, launching later this year, are aggressively buying indie films and in some cases paying six-figure sums. Audience participation Bangalore-based film-maker Pawan Kumar, who recently sold his third film U-Turn to Netflix, was one of India’s first indie film-makers to use both crowdfunding and online distribution to build an audience for his films. He explains the two activities are connected — in addition to raising finance, crowdfunding helps to build a fanbase on social media who will later pay to see the film online and even in cinemas: “It gives me freedom because now I can target my digital audience; I don’t have to think about a theatrical audience,” Kumar says. His second film, trippy sci-fi drama Lucia, had a three-week theatrical release before being delivered online to the people who had helped to fund it. Kumar even allowed people who had contributed a certain amount via crowdfunding to set up their own digital stores and sell the film themselves using tools from Distrify. For supernatural thriller U-Turn, he decided that crowdfunding wouldn’t fly: “Crowdfunding only really works when the person pitching the project is an underdog — but I had become a hero after Lucia.” Instead he marshalled 65 of his more serious funders to jointly set up a company, Pawan Kumar Studios, to finance the $400,000 film.

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