Shah Rukh Khan's spy film sees bumper Bollywood opening despite protests
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[January 30, 2023]
By Shilpa Jamkhandikar
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Shah Rukh Khan's Hindi spy thriller opened to packed
movie theatres in India on Wednesday in one of Bollywood's top openings
on record, despite protests from some religious groups over scenes they
deemed obscene.
The success of "Pathaan", where Khan plays a spy fighting a militant
outfit, is crucial for the Indian film industry that has seen a spate of
high-profile flops since the COVID-19 pandemic began, as Netflix and
Amazon have provided varied, and much cheaper, content at home.
"It has seen a bumper opening, the second-best in Bollywood ever, even
on a non-holiday, mid-week day, when audiences don't go to theatres,"
said Girish Johar, a producer and trade analyst who tracks box-office
figures.
Movie critic Taran Adarsh said Pathaan, which marks Khan's return to the
big screen after four years, sold about 556,000 tickets on the first
day, just behind record-setter "Baahubali 2"'s 650,000 on the first day.
"Pathaan has it all: Star power, style, scale, songs, soul, substance
and surprises," Adarsh said on Twitter, adding that Khan was "back with
a vengeance".
Of the 5,000 screens Pathaan was playing in, the occupancy rate was a
high 65%-75%, a rarity in Bollywood for a film opening day, Johar said,
especially as it was mid-week.
The film will now be shown on 8,000 screens, 2,500 of whom are abroad
where Khan has a strong following, Adarsh said.
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Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan speaks
during an interview with Reuters at Madame Tussauds in London,
Britain April 13, 2016. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo
Right-wing Hindu nationalist groups
had in recent days protested against the movie as promotional
trailers showed lead heroine Deepika Padukone in an orange bikini,
dancing to a racy song. The groups said the scenes denigrated the
Hindu religion, which reveres the colour saffron as a symbol of
spirituality.
"It is full of obscenities," said Hemanta Ratha, chief of Odisha
political party Kalinga Sena, as dozens of its activists shouted
slogans against Khan and tore down the film's posters on Wednesday.
"It will have a bad impact on society."
Nevertheless, local media showed audiences dancing inside theatres,
waving their mobiles phones in the air and singing along with the
songs from the movie as it played.
(Reporting by Shilpa Jamkhandikar in Mumbai, Jatindra Dash in
Bhubaneswar and Sumit Khanna in Ahmedabad; Editing by Krishna N. Das
and Bernadette Baum)
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