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Bollywood on song: the whopping price
tag (Part II)
By
Jivraj Burman
Mumbai,
June 6 (IANS) Once playback singing was in place in Hindi films,
elaborate filming of the numbers caught the fancy of filmmakers.
The process has come to be called 'picturisation'.
Bollywood's original showman, Raj Kapoor, had the vision to picturise
songs lyrically. He had a tremendous sense of music. Besides being
a good dancer, he could also sing like a professional.
What's more, he grasped the cinematic idioms perfectly early
on in his career. Thus equipped, he could use the art, artistes
and technology like pawns in his hand.
The transition from a scene to a song in his movies was so smooth
that it flowed like a river into the sea - a quality very few
Bollywood filmmakers can boast of.
Shot inside studio, the song "Ghar aaya mera pardesi"
in the dream sequence in his "Awara" creates such an
illusion that it transports the audience to a rarefied world.
This particular song from "Awara" set the benchmark
for visual effects in Bollywood movies and did so at a time when
there were no computer graphics to create virtual reality in movies,
to make make-believe seem real.
"Pyaar kiya do darna kya", the song from K. Asif's
"Mughal-e-Azam" picturised on Madhubala with her image
reflecting on hundreds of pieces of cut glass, also had a mesmerising
effect on the audience. Though it was a picture of awesome opulence,
the manner in which Asif shot the song sequences became the highpoint
of the movie.
Creating such visual effects in "Awara" and "Mughal-e-Azam"
cost Kapoor and Asif quite a fortune and time. But they were makers
who never compromised on anything to translate their vision for
a song on screen.
One of the most popular songs of the 1970s, "Roop tera mastana,
pyar mera deewana", from Shakti Samanta's "Aradhana",
was notable for the fact that Samanta filmed it in a studio in
just one take from a trolley, using the least possible material
to create visual effects.
It was perhaps the only song from a successful Bollywood movie
of its time to have been picturised at a minimum cost.
Today, directors like Karan Johar and Sanjay Leela Bhansali spend
a good part of the total budget of their movies on song picturisations,
erecting lavish sets, dressing up the characters and a hundred
or more junior artistes in expensive costumes, selecting the most
picturesque of locations and getting the number choreographed
in the most flamboyant manner.
When they film songs in studios, they erect sets costing not
less than Rs.5 million. And to think that a song lasts on the
screen only for a few minutes!
Today, a song picturised on outdoor locations may cost the producer
a minimum of Rs.2.5 million per day if shot in India. The songs
shot abroad costs about Rs.5 million, not counting travel and
lodging expenses to be incurred for taking the unit there.
While shooting outdoors in India, besides paying for the usual
expenses, like the union-fixed wages to junior artists, choreographer,
dancers, technicians, transport and travelling expenses, a producer
invariably finds himself making unofficial payments to various
government agencies like the public works department (PWD), the
forest department and the local police.
Unless palms are greased, the officials from these departments
may disrupt the shootings on one pretext or the other.
While shooting on the streets of Mumbai, a producer has to obtain
permission from the police and the municipal corporations and
officially it costs around Rs.50,000 to Rs.60,000 per day. If
the shooting takes place near or on sea beaches, an additional
permission has to be taken from the customs department, along
with a payment of Rs.10,000 per day.
Here too, a producer generally shells out more than Rs.100,000
unofficially per day to ensure that the officials from the departments
do not disrupt the shootings. Shooting at railway stations also
costs around Rs.100,000.
The choreographer is the most important technician when a song
is being picturised. For the services rendered, a choreographer
commands a fee varying from Rs.50,000 to Rs.300,000 per song.
The assistants to the choreographer get between Rs.15,000 and
Rs.25,000 each per song.
Each choreographer has his or her own favourite dancers. Depending
upon their looks, the rates of the dancers vary from Rs.4,000
to Rs.5,000 per day. The better-looking ones, called A-class dancers,
obviously get better rates and they appear in the front row when
a song is being picturised.
Nowadays Bollywood producers generally recruit aspiring models
and foreigners as front-row dancers and pay them extra, ranging
from Rs.12,000 to Rs.15,000 per day.
The costumes that the lead pair wears for a song cost between
Rs.25,000 and Rs.50,000 per outfit and sometimes even more if
the same are cut by well-known fashion designers. The dresses
that the background dancers wear generally cost Rs.2,000 apiece.
These costs may multiply if the lead pair and the dancers have
changes of costumes during the song, which they invariably have
these days.
The equipment required for song picturisation, like extra cameras,
lights, cranes and the Jimmy Jib, collectively cost the producer
around Rs.150,000 per day.
Today, make-up vans, also called vanity vans, have become a permanent
fixture during shootings. Producers have to provide them each
not only to the stars but also to the cinematographers. They have
to keep at least five or six make-up vans lined up on a location.
The hiring charge of these specially-designed air-conditioned
vans is Rs.5,000 per eight-hour shift per day.
All expenses put together, a song may cost a Bollywood producer
around Rs.10-15 million. He does not mind it because by selling
the music rights of his movie, comprising five to six songs, he
may earn Rs.150 million to Rs.200 million, provided the music
director has done a good job.
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