Zürcher Nachrichten - India's Bollywood counts costs as star fees squeeze profits

EUR -
AED 4.292155
AFN 73.630022
ALL 95.660722
AMD 433.820933
ANG 2.091891
AOA 1072.89358
ARS 1625.640519
AUD 1.639926
AWG 2.106635
AZN 1.989439
BAM 1.952742
BBD 2.354712
BDT 143.445359
BGN 1.94956
BHD 0.441283
BIF 3478.139667
BMD 1.16873
BND 1.492856
BOB 8.078349
BRL 5.86585
BSD 1.169069
BTN 110.82744
BWP 15.802186
BYN 3.291945
BYR 22907.102646
BZD 2.351318
CAD 1.597712
CDF 2711.453101
CHF 0.923768
CLF 0.026873
CLP 1057.665303
CNY 7.992066
CNH 7.998383
COP 4249.174042
CRC 531.66739
CUC 1.16873
CUP 30.971338
CVE 110.883264
CZK 24.386484
DJF 207.706755
DKK 7.472759
DOP 69.393369
DZD 155.010938
EGP 61.966036
ERN 17.530946
ETB 183.490384
FJD 2.577809
FKP 0.865002
GBP 0.866187
GEL 3.143842
GGP 0.865002
GHS 13.078328
GIP 0.865002
GMD 85.317404
GNF 10255.603616
GTQ 8.931974
GYD 244.595908
HKD 9.159341
HNL 31.100055
HRK 7.53574
HTG 153.120208
HUF 365.405106
IDR 20279.506037
ILS 3.473991
IMP 0.865002
INR 110.932261
IQD 1531.035942
IRR 1537463.955859
ISK 143.800767
JEP 0.865002
JMD 183.32291
JOD 0.828645
JPY 187.12067
KES 150.918829
KGS 102.181223
KHR 4686.606051
KMF 493.203668
KPW 1051.817796
KRW 1736.241647
KWD 0.359876
KYD 0.97427
KZT 541.501988
LAK 25682.835559
LBP 105068.006298
LKR 373.525046
LRD 214.900133
LSL 19.71662
LTL 3.450955
LVL 0.706953
LYD 7.421745
MAD 10.82682
MDL 20.126395
MGA 4850.228543
MKD 61.643688
MMK 2454.30857
MNT 4182.750656
MOP 9.437521
MRU 46.72645
MUR 54.731158
MVR 18.062732
MWK 2035.344994
MXN 20.478827
MYR 4.62701
MZN 74.687662
NAD 19.716257
NGN 1607.611388
NIO 42.904043
NOK 10.895173
NPR 177.323546
NZD 2.00069
OMR 0.449393
PAB 1.169069
PEN 4.118602
PGK 5.072442
PHP 72.164437
PKR 325.929515
PLN 4.259839
PYG 7273.609264
QAR 4.258269
RON 5.103147
RSD 117.408282
RUB 87.358859
RWF 1707.514131
SAR 4.383217
SBD 9.395231
SCR 16.265293
SDG 701.853831
SEK 10.862957
SGD 1.49591
SHP 0.872575
SLE 28.748379
SLL 24507.673526
SOS 667.929265
SRD 43.781816
STD 24190.345689
STN 24.77707
SVC 10.229979
SYP 129.419402
SZL 19.692922
THB 38.276234
TJS 10.960289
TMT 4.096398
TND 3.380258
TOP 2.814021
TRY 52.797319
TTD 7.949551
TWD 36.980363
TZS 3032.853161
UAH 51.529303
UGX 4355.179631
USD 1.16873
UYU 46.527137
UZS 14083.192775
VES 567.520844
VND 30803.04068
VUV 138.345073
WST 3.174125
XAF 654.928556
XAG 0.016218
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.15855
XCG 2.107
XDR 0.815444
XOF 653.319985
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.888106
ZAR 19.636238
ZMK 10519.964604
ZMW 22.066443
ZWL 376.330495
  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    63.47

    -0.84%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.82

    -0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    35.8

    -0.59%

  • GSK

    -3.0700

    51.4

    -5.97%

  • NGG

    -1.4700

    85.98

    -1.71%

  • BTI

    -1.0200

    57.45

    -1.78%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    185.2

    -0.8%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.26

    -1.03%

  • RIO

    -2.0000

    96.49

    -2.07%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.74

    -0.55%

  • BCC

    -3.6100

    79

    -4.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    23.06

    -0.61%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    15.34

    -0.98%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    15.22

    +0.13%

  • BP

    0.4500

    46.8

    +0.96%

India's Bollywood counts costs as star fees squeeze profits
India's Bollywood counts costs as star fees squeeze profits / Photo: Indranil MUKHERJEE - AFP/File

India's Bollywood counts costs as star fees squeeze profits

From fleets of private trailers to personal chefs and sprawling entourages, Bollywood stars' "obnoxious" demands are driving up production costs and putting a strain on the Indian film industry's finances, insiders say.

Text size:

Bollywood has long been unpredictable at the box office and the pandemic compounded problems, but producers argue that today's losses stem less from creative failure and more from top artists' runaway expenses.

"It is not so much about production cost -- it is more about star fees," says producer Ramesh Taurani, best known for the successful Race action franchise.

Actors, filmmakers say, increasingly arrive on set with a dozen-strong entourage -- including makeup artists, hairdressers, stylists, gym trainers and assistants -- all billed to production.

Stars are paid hefty fees of up to $22.18 million per film but additional requests for first-class travel, five-star hotels, multiple private trailers and work-shy hours have become routine.

"Expansive support teams, premium travel and luxury accommodations often inflate budgets without proportionate creative impact," said veteran producer Mukesh Bhatt. "The kind of demands stars make is obnoxious."

Distributor and trade analyst Raj Bansal added: "One actor usually comes with 10 to 15 staff members.

"Earlier, actors wouldn't mind sharing one vanity van. Then they decided to give one vanity van each to a big star -- and demand went on increasing."

A single trailer hired for the duration of a film shoot can cost as much $18,000. For some actors, insiders say, demanding more has become a status symbol.

- 'Self-respect' -

Bollywood has always been considered high-risk, producing more flops than hits, but producers say the balance has tipped sharply as star-driven costs spiral beyond what box office returns can sustain.

The fragile model was shaken after the pandemic, when streaming platforms bought films at inflated prices.

When those deals dried up, producers faced a painful course correction as income plunged but actors' demands stayed elevated. And that problem continues today.

Competition has also intensified.

"Audience behaviour has matured, streaming platforms have broadened horizons and regional cinema has elevated creative standards," says Bhatt.

"Yet, alongside this progress, rising production costs -- particularly talent-driven budgets -- have introduced a significant strain. It is not the films that falter, but the economics that lose balance."

Actor-filmmaker Aamir Khan slammed stars for burdening producers with these costs.

"You earn in crores (tens of millions of rupees)," Khan said, in a September interview with the YouTube show Game Changers. "Where's your self-respect?"

- 'Power of storytelling' -

Industry insiders say actors' demands also have a cascading effect, as stars seek to exceed each other's perks.

"A measured approach will allow us to redirect resources toward what truly defines cinema -- the power of storytelling," said Bhatt.

Producers have pushed for partnership-style compensation models.

"When a film thrives, every contributor should benefit," Bhatt said. "When it struggles, the weight should not rest solely on the producer, who shoulders risk from the very beginning."

The 2024 science fiction action film Bade Miyan Chote Miyan ("Big Mister, Little Mister"), starring Akshay Kumar and Tiger Shroff, reportedly cost about $42 million. After poor ticket sales, producers were reported to have mortgaged property to cover debts.

There have been exceptions.

Actor Kartik Aaryan waived his fee for the 2023 action-comedy Shehzada, which tanked at the box office.

"If your star value and the entire project's value gives profit to the entire team, I think then the math adds up," Aaryan said. "If it doesn't, then you should take a cut."

Some producers argue that the industry must confront its own excesses.

"If the star fee and entourage is affecting your budget, then don't take stars," says actor-writer-producer Viveck Vaswani.

"I have made 40 films with 40 newcomers and have prospered. I took SRK (Shah Rukh Khan) when nobody wanted him. I cast Raveena Tandon when nobody knew her."

Vaswani, a longtime friend of Khan, notes that "SRK has no entourage cost, he pays his own", as does Akshay Kumar.

"Lots of them do that, they don't burden the producers," he said. "If you think your star is stronger than your script, you are wrong."

W.Odermatt--NZN