Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The whole idea behind this write up is to make each and everyone understand the complex box office model in
India. Any questions, please ask in the comments section below.
Producer: The person who invests in films. The money that a Producer invests in making a film is called the
“Budget”. It includes everything from remuneration of the actors, technicians and other crew members to
transportation and other costs. Apart from this, once a film is complete, it has to be marketed and that calls for “PA
(Promotion & Advertisement)” expenses.
Distributor: The Distributor forms the most vital link in this money chain by acting as a medium between Producers
and Theatres. The Producer has to deal out their film to the All India Distributors. The price at which the producer
sells his film to the distributors is termed as “Theatrical Rights”. The producer can either directly sell the Theatrical
Rights to Distributors or make a contract with any Third Party which in turn has the responsibility to deal with
Distributors. In that case the Producer will get his share from the third-party even before his film releases and all
Profit/Loss will be incurred by third-party only. For example, Yash Raj Films distribute their films themselves, while
Nadiadwala Grandson’s had a contract with EROS for Housefull 2. Indian film industry is majorly distributed in 14
circuits and each have its distributors to represent them :- Mumbai, Delhi/UP, East Punjab, CI (Central India), CP
Berar (Central Provinces), Rajasthan, Bihar, West Bengal, Nizam, Mysore, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Orissa and Kerala.
Exhibitor (Theatre): In layman terms, Exhibitor is nothing but a theatre owner. The theatres form the end of the box
office model. On pre-defined agreements with the exhibitors, the distributors hire their theatres to showcase films.
There are two types of theatres in India: (i) Single Screens (ii) Multiplex Chains and both have different kind of
agreements with distributors. This agreement focuses mainly on “Number of Screens” and “Monetary Returns” to be
paid back by theatres to Distributors. Entertainment Tax (All India average of 30% approx) is deducted from the
total collections at the ticket window. This tax is enforced by individual state governments and thus differs from
circuit to circuit. After taxes, a percentage of the total nett gross is paid back to the Distributors. This return is
known as “Distributor Share”.
Box Office Terminology:
1) Cost of Film = [Budget + PA (Promotion & Advertisement) Expenses]
2) Non Theatrical Revenues = Satellite Rights + Music Rights + Overseas subsidy etc.
3) Footfalls = Total number of tickets Sold
4) Gross Collections = Total money collected from ticket sales
5) Net Collections = [Gross collections – Entertainment Tax and others]
6) Distributor Share is generally calculated as below:
This means 50% of the collections (after entertainment taxes) goes to the Distributor in the first week of release and
so on.
7) Profit / Loss (Distributor) = [ Amount at which film was bought – Distributor Share ]
Let us now go through a scenario to better understand about these terms.
Case Study – Suppose a film releases with an average ticket price of Rs 120 at Multiplex and Rs 60 at Single Screens in Week 1. 100 people visit a
multiplex and single screen each. Entertainment Tax to be deducted from gross collections is same as 30%.
This is the first part of a two-part article. Part 2 can be found here.
Today marks the one-year anniversary of the launch of China Film Biz, and this is the 100 China Film Biz post
th
I’ve published.
In honor of these events, I’m publishing a comprehensive set of articles about China’s film distribution
ecosystem, which I think you’ll find useful. I’ll publish the article in two parts, with today’s post offering a
glossary of concepts and definitions and an overview of the industry’s major players; a subsequent article will
discuss such topics as release dating, releasing, marketing and advertising, box office reporting and revenue
sharing.
were 10 revenue-shared movies allowed to reach Chinese theaters every year. In 2002, this annual quota was
raised to 20 revenue-shared movies. In 2012, the quota expanded to 34, 14 of which must be 3D or IMAX films.
Buyout movies
A buyout is a foreign movie acquired by a Chinese local distributor at a fixed price to be released in China. The
buyout prices usually range from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands dollars.
The first movie buyout occurred in the mid-1980s when China Film Group bought the theatrical release rights
for Superman (1978) from Warner Brothers at a price of $50,000. Most buyout movies are handled by Chinese
local film distributors. China Film and Huaxia Film also do a few buyout deals each year. Usually local
distributors seek foreign films via film festivals and markets like Cannes and AFM, or oversea producers offer
their films to local distributors seeking cooperation, and the local distributors submit the film to China Film for
import licenses. After receiving the import license, the local distributor hands the movie over to China Film or
Huaxia Film for the distribution. That being said, it is the local distributors who who do the actual distribution
work. China Film or Huaxia Film do little more than to provide the distribution authorization, for which they
receive about a quarter of the movie’s gross.
There are two kinds of buyout movies: 1) one-time buyout ones (as introduced above); most buyouts belong to
this category; 2) revenue-shared buyout movies, which are handled the same way as above but the foreign
producers can receive revenue share in addition to the buyout price when the films’ Chinese theatrical gross
reaches a certain level. This September’s hit, The Expendables 2, and Relativity Media’s Immortals and Mirror
Mirror were all revenue-shared buyouts.
Buyout movies weren’t common until 2005 when the buyout quota expanded to 30. Only 4 or 5 of the buyout
quota films can be Hollywood/American films; the rest must come from Europe, Hong Kong and Taiwan, South
Korea, Japan, Australia, India, Latin America, etc, or from multinational co-productions.
Currently, Disney, Paramount, Sony and Fox all are doing strong business in China. In the long run, it appears
that Disney might be the biggest player here.
Revenue Sharing
Until the new WTO MOU was agreed early this year, imported films entitled to revenue sharing would receive
from 13% to about 17.5% of the total box office receipts of their films, depending on how much the movie
actually made. “Total box office receipts” is defined as the amount reported by the Office of China Film Special
Funds. This figure is almost certainly always under-stated, for reasons we will see below, and because there is a
material amount of skimming that takes place at China’s theaters. Before the WTO MOU, if a revenue-shared
Hollywood movie earned less than 45 million yuan at the box office then it would only get 13% of the reported
gross. Those films grossing more than 45 million yuan would receive as much as 17.5%. After the WTO MOU
was agreed, revenue sharing films now receive a straight 25 percent of all box office receipts. Much simpler,
and better for the foreign producers.
China Film and Huaxia Film receive about 22 percent of the gross from foreign releases. The rest, after taxes,
goes to the exhibitors, and amounts to roughly 45 percent of the gross.
By way of comparison, local movie producers can distribute their products almost limitlessly and usually they,
the producers and distributors combined receive about 43% from the gross. Generally, theaters operators
receive slightly more share from Hollywood movies than from local movies.
Release Dating
The release date for each and every film is decided by the Distribution and Exhibition Association (DEA), a
government office that is a subsidiary of SARFT. Before any film can receive a release date, the finished version
of the film must first be approved by the Film Bureau. After that, the distributor submits the film to the DEA
seeking a release date. Multi-party negotiations take place among distributors, exhibitors, the Association and
sometimes even the Film Bureau, regarding the date of release.
The film is only officially dated after the DEA provides the corresponding release licenses and notification, which
can happen as late as just a few days before the film’s opening. The bigger the movie is, the harder it is for it to
get a quick approval and date, especially for imported films. Hollywood’s major studios are completely at the
mercy of this dating process, with no real say of their own, since they are not the distributors. For foreign
buyout movies, the local distributors can play a limited role. For local movies, the local distributors have much
greater influence over their films’ dating.
Before 2012, most movies still used physical release prints for distribution. But since early 2012, printed copies
are becoming rare, mostly because almost all theaters now only do digital projection. Prints, which usually cost
about 10,000 yuan per print, have been eliminated because they’re too expensive. Before this year, low budget
buyout movies usually received only limited releases, but with the lower releasing costs of digital distribution, it
is now possible for these same low budget buyout movies to enjoy wide releases.
In the heyday of physical prints, a wide release usually meant a few hundred printed copies. One of the biggest
physical print releases, Transformers 2, went out on roughly 700 prints. Nowadays, a wide opening can cover
more than 2,200 theaters. Fewer than 1,000 theaters, mostly single-screen older cinemas, run physical prints,
typically days or weeks after the film’s initial release on digital copies, so they are unable to contribute much to
a film’s total gross. Among all the imported movies in 2012, almost none used prints, except for the four non-
digital IMAX copies of The Dark Knight Rises.
A digital copy of a film can only be projected if the theater has the appropriate digital key. All keys are released
and managed by China Film Group. The keys expire every 15 days. Usually a big movie can have its key
renewed and enjoy 30 days of initial wide release, after which a two week extended limited run usually will
follow. However extended runs weren’t allowed this past September for releases like The Dark Knight
Rises, The Amazing Spider-Man, Prometheus and The Expendables 2. Sometimes extensions can be authorized
twice or even more for a movie with strong legs. For instance, Mission Impossible 4 managed seven weeks in
the top 10. Its entire run lasted from January 28 to March 31, 64 days. Along with Inception this was the longest
run for a movie since Avatar.
MI4 had very strong word of mouth that carried it to a 6X multiplier of its opening weekend after a record-
breaking two-day opening. But Avatar, remains the multiplier king. Opened on January 4, 2010, many theaters
were still showing the film in May. Some theaters were even showing it in November 2010. Shanghai’s Heping
IMAX theater sold out every single IMAX show for Avatar for almost three months.
The biggest marketing campaigns so far belong to Avatar, Transformers 3, and Titanic 3D.
Outdoor banners and billboards for Hollywood tent-pole movies can often be seen in crowded places and
heavily-trafficked urban areas. Though they can’t air spots on cable TV, studios like Sony often show movie
spots on advertising screens in the Shanghai subways. It was reported that about 800,000 yuan was spent for
doing such ads for two weeks to promote Men in Black 3.
The Special Funds have a nationwide theater-based computer ticket counting system which covers most
commercial theaters in China. Currently only 674 top selling theaters can be tracked by the system in real time.
This part usually accounts for 70% of a movie’s total box office. Over one thousand other theaters can do day-
end (usually around 02:00am when theaters close) or next-day (usually around 10:00am when daily business
begins) ticket sales reports. And by next late morning, usually about 1,900 to 2,200 theaters have reported box
office for the day before, and by that time, as much as 95%-97% of a movie’s (daily) box office has been
reported. The rest comes from hundreds of other theaters that report on a weekly or even monthly basis.
Unfortunately the Special Funds don’t do any weekly/daily report themselves, though they do offer paid
subscriptions to certain media outlets.
Weekly box office reports are all based on the Special Funds numbers. And since the movie website reports
seem to be the most accurate, we use their numbers here, sometimes augmented by other sources if
necessary.
The revenue-sharing figures provided to studios and distributors come from the Special Funds accounting
reports even if there are still theaters that didn’t get counted by the Special Funds. For example, a film may
wind up actually grossing 105 million RMB at the box office, but only 97 million of the 105 million was reported
by the end of its run. The 97 million will be shared by the Special Funds, distributors, exhibitors and foreign
studios. Three months later, another 5 million would be reported, so the 5 million will be shared in the same
way. Another revenue share will happen if extra money is found later. By the end, if only 103 million gets
reported by the Special Funds, 103 million will be the movie’s final box office number, that is, the
clearing/accounting number. 2 million gets lost in the long run. Again, take Avatar for example: no one really
knows how much it lost in this way. Generally conservative estimate put its loss at a whopping 200 million
yuan.
In total, only a few dozen people in China can get full access to the Special Funds data system. Dozens of local
film distributors can also get into the system, but only for their own distributed movies.
The China branche offices of Hollywood studios have no authority to access the Special Funds reports. The only
way for them to confirm the numbers reported to them by China Film or Huaxia Film is to do local checking with
every theater and theater chain.
Apart from the Special Funds, there is another national wide box office statistics agency: China Film Distribution
and Exhibition Association (the DEA).
The DEA box office statistics are based on exhibitors’ initiative report, including theaters that don’t even have
computer sale systems, though their report can take months to compile. As a result, the DEA numbers will
usually be a little higher than the Special Funds. But the DEA never releases weekly numbers publicly, just
monthly, quarterly, half-yearly, and yearly numbers. China’s official year-end reports tend to use the DEA
numbers, not the numbers that are reported to studios, distributors, or exhibitors in Special Funds accounting
reports. For example, say The Dark Knight Rises made 329 million yuan according to the Special Funds while
345M according to the DEA final number, it is the 329 million figure that matters to Warner Brothers, since that
is the number from which they ultimately collect their revenue share.
Chinese theater operators, distributors and film producers widely acknowledge the flaws in China’s theatrical
distribution and accounting systems, and SARFT appears to be taking these issues seriously. China has only
been in the modern multiplex business for a few short years, and steay improvements are constantly being
made. Whether these improvements will ultimately benefit foreign movie suppliers still remains to be seen.
Robert Cain is a producer and entertainment industry consultant who has been doing business in China since
1987. He can be reached at rob@pacificbridgepics.com and at www.pacificbridgepics.com.
MAY 31, 2017 @ 08:40 PM 1,662 THE LITTLE BLACK BOOK OF BILLIONAIRE SECRETS
'Dangal' Pins Down 1,000 Crore Rs / $154 mm To
Become China's Leggiest Movie Ever
I write about the Chinese, Indian and American movie industries. Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are
their own.
In the middle of its fourth week of release in mainland Chinese theaters, an Indian movie has
crossed a barrier that was unthinkable as recently as a month ago.
The Aamir Khan-starring family sports drama Dangal has reached the mind-bending figure of
1,000 Crore rupees (US $154 million, or 1.05 billion Chinese yuan) in box office receipts since
it opened on May 5th.
Aamir Khan Productions
Read more: No, It's Not A Typo -- 'Dangal' Is Nearing $150 Million At China's Box Office
The numbers are so staggering in the context of previous records that many box office
watchers in India have asserted they’re fake, or massively fudged. Proud South Indian movie
fans in particular, who have reveled in the success of the Telugu-Tamil language
blockbuster Baahubali: The Conclusion, have cried foul when confronted with the reality
that Dangal’s huge China gross has enabled it to surpass Baahubali 2 as the highest-grossing
movie in Indian cinema history. But it's not fake news. As of this posting, Dangal stands at
1719 crore rupees (US $270 million) worldwide, and Baahubali 2 is at 1633 crore ($250
million), with the latter film’s China release still pending.
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Dangal’s accomplishment is noteworthy on several counts. It’s the first widely-released film
from India to earn more money overseas than in its home territory. It is also the first Indian
movie to attract a high proportion of ticket buyers—well over half in this case—who aren’t
ethnically from the sub-continent. And it joins the extremely exclusive club of non-English
language movies that have earned more than $250 million in worldwide theatrical receipts.
Thanks to China, Aamir Khan's 'Dangal' is now the world's 4th highest-grossing non-English
Rob Cain ,
CONTRIBUTOR
I write about the Chinese, Indian and American movie industries.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
About 8 years ago there came a fateful moment for Bollywood actor Aamir Khan when he made a counter-
intuitive decision that propelled his career trajectory into a completely unexpected direction.
He had been approached by director Rajkumar Hirani with an offer to play the part of an 18-year-old college
student. Khan was bewildered by the offer, and he said so:
“It was very tough,” he told an interviewer for China’s CCTV movie channel. “I was 44 at the time when the film
was offered to me. And I told the director, ‘You have a beautiful story. It’s a beautiful script. Don’t spoil it by
taking me. And if I play a student of 18 years old, people will laugh at me, and make fun of the film.' But the
director Raju Hirani was very keen to take me and made very clear that he wanted me.”
Aamir Khan
So against his better instincts Khan took on the role of Rancho in the coming-of-age comedy 3 Idiots. That
turned out to be a life-changing move.
Khan was already extremely successful, both commercially and critically, with numerous hit films to his credit,
including the picture he had just done, Ghajini, which was the highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2008. He had
also won lots of prestigious award recognition, including a 2001 Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign
Language Film for the period sports drama Laagan, which he both produced and starred in.
But until 3 Idiots, Khan’s fan following was limited to India and the Indian diaspora. He was completely
unknown to most of the world, and especially in China, where Indian films were rarely screened.
Read More: Dangal Pins Down Rs. 1,000 Crore / $150 MM To Become China's Leggiest Movie Ever
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Even after 3 Idiots became a smash hit in India, breaking all records to become the highest-grossing Indian film
of all-time in worldwide markets with a gross of $62 million (Rs. 395 crore), it would have been folly to think
that China would ever matter to Khan’s career. China at the time was almost an afterthought in the global film
business, only the 15 largest market in the world, with aggregate national box office revenue below that of far
th
smaller countries like South Korea, Canada and Australia. And there was really no way to make money in China’s
home video market because virtually every foreign film went straight to the pirate DVD distribution, with no
opportunity to earn Chinese receipts via theatrical release.
But oddly enough, the pirate market was precisely where Aamir Khan first gained a foothold with Chinese
audiences. The 3 Idiots story, which follows the lives of three fellow college engineering students through the
trials and tribulations of university life and the years thereafter, explored issues and topics that also happened to
be directly relevant in China. The story’s themes of friendship, academic challenge, and nostalgia resonated
beautifully with young Chinese viewers, who saw themselves and their lives reflected in the Indian characters.
Aamir Khan’s character Rancho was particularly appealing to the Chinese for his eccentricity and his bold
approach to challenging authority and living life according to his own rules. 3 Idiots became a cult hit, and is to
this day China’s 12 favorite film of all time as measured by ratings on the film review site Douban.com. Only one
th
By now it was clear that Aamir Khan and his films were not just a passing fad in China. He had become an icon.
And he was making films that spoke to Chinese audiences in a way that no Hollywood film, no foreign film,
indeed almost no local Chinese film, could or would. A highly selective performer and producer, his instincts are
impeccable. He makes films that speak to the day-to-day struggles of a population that is still smack in the
middle of rising from poverty to prosperity, from rural life to urban, from a male-dominated patriarchy to a
society that is grappling with the challenge of accommodating the equal rights of women. Family, education, filial
piety, it turns out that the issues that Khan's films explore for Indian audience are every bit as topical and
relevant for Chinese audiences.
And so it is with Khan's latest film, Dangal. Still in release in China's theaters, the family sports drama has
completely destroyed all conventional notions of how an Indian film can perform in the international market.
With $173 million in China box office collections in just over a month, it has now grossed more there than any
other Indian film has ever made anywhere, including India. I've written before about why the picture has
become such a hit in China, but suffice it to say here that its heartfelt exploration of father-daughter
relationships, parental sacrifice and pursuing one's dreams against seemingly impossible odds have been
critical to its giant embrace by Chinese audiences.
Read More: 5 Key Reasons For Dangal's Massive Success In China
So now, it's safe to say that every movie lover in China knows Aamir Khan's name, and his face, and has likely
seen at least two or three of his movies. Not only has the star opened up the international market for Indian
filmmakers, his success has inspired a burst of development activity aimed at further serving audiences in China
and beyond.
Where Khan goes from here is completely up to him. He has said himself that "When I'm selecting a film I'm not
thinking 'what will the audience like?' because I can never predict what the audience can like. So when I pick a
movie I always go with my heart." And it is bound to factor into his future decision making that Aamir Khan is
very much in the hearts of China's moviegoers.
JUN 19, 2017 @ 03:55 AM 189 The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets
How An Indian Drama Became The World's Highest-Grossing Sports
Movie Of 2017
Rob Cain ,
CONTRIBUTOR
There’s an old maxim in Hollywood that sports movies don’t travel. That international
moviegoers who don’t understand American baseball or football can’t be bothered to show up at
the theater to see them. That non-fans of soccer or ice skating or cricket or cycling simply won’t
care about stories or characters set in those milieus.
No one even mentions the idea that such a movie might be in a non-English language. Forget it!
But that’s exactly what happened. That movie they made, Dangal, has now earned more than
$305 million worldwide, and is still going strong. It's currently a bona fide hit for Disney's, its
fourth highest grosser of the year after Beauty and the Beast, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol.
2, and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales. And for the moment, it’s the year’s
biggest sports movie.
How did this come about?
Like all great sports movies, Dangal, isn’t really about the sport that it depicts. That’s just part of
the whole. Much of the action takes place in the wrestling arena, but what the movie is really
about is its emotional journey. It’s about second chances. Love. Parental sacrifice. Overcoming
impossible odds to win. And the film tells the story in a thrilling, heartwarming, sometimes
humorous fashion. It’s a genuine crowd-pleaser. Like all great sports movies, it has something
important to say about what it means to be human.
Continued from page 1
Written and directed by Nitesh Tiwari, starring Aamir Khan, and produced by Khan’s Aamir Khan Productions
together with Walt Disney Pictures and UTV Motion Pictures, Dangal tells the true story of Mahavir Singh
Phogat, a former amateur wrestler who, having been denied the chance to become an international champion,
trains his daughters in wrestling to fulfill his dream. Through dedication and sacrifice the girls reach their
father's vicarious goals by becoming international wrestling champions themselves.
When Dangal released in India last December, it became a giant hit, one of the biggest in Indian history, with a
domestic gross of 495 crore rupees ($77 million). It was a hit in North America, where its $12.4 million total was
at that time the second highest gross ever earned for an Indian film. And it was a hit in the UAE, in Malaysia, in
Australia and New Zealand.
But all of that was just a prelude to what came next: China.
In early May, five months after it released in India, Dangal came to the Middle Kingdom. China was already a
big territory for Aamir Khan, whose prior films P.K. and 3 Idiots were widely known and well-loved, but
it embraced the wrestling drama like nothing before it. The movie’s quality, its theme of female empowerment,
and above all its cultural resonance with Chinese values made it a box office phenomenon. Dangal has earned a
spectacular $185 million in China and is still going strong in theaters seven weeks after its opening.
Asked for his opinion on his film’s success there, Aamir Khan remarked, "The reason [Dangal] has become so
huge in China is that people connected on an emotional level with the story, the characters and the moments… It
made them realize what their parents went through. Many of them called up their parents and cried. It's a very
emotional reaction. That is what has made the film really work."
The picture has gone on to great success in Taiwan, and will continue rolling out to additional territories
worldwide. Although it might not have seemed a major contender back when it was greenlit by
Disney, Dangal has become a bona fide world champion.
India: 80.50 m
Overseas: $223.68 m
Worldwide: $304.18 m
Dangal has also become the 16th highest grosser of all time in China where it has grossed $187 million so far. The film has beaten Hollywood
biggie like Captain America Civil War and is behind Avatar which is enjoying the 15th spot. It is also 8th highest grosser among non-Chinese films.
Day Collection (m) INR (cr)