Bell Bottom could not earn even three crores on the first day, the next Friday was less than 10 million.

'Bell Bottom' could not earn even three crores on the first day, it was below one crore on the next Friday. Amitabh Bachchan's 'Chehre' has failed miserably at the box office. Seeing the business of these films, other producers have also got into thinking. Cinemas are completely closed in Maharashtra, which contributes thirty percent of the business. So till the time theaters do not open in Maharashtra, the hesitation of the makers of films of popular stars will remain.
Akshay Kumar's 'Bell Bottom' started doing business of 25-30 crores only. In this business, even Akshay Kumar's fee will not come out. What will the six producers of the film earn in this? Amitabh Bachchan's 'Chehre' could not even do a business of four crores in four days. Tell me is this a clapping situation? More spices are being spent on spices than chicken, but applause is going on. That being said, it is a good initiative.
Other big producers will also come forward to release the films. How many producers came forward? is in front of everyone. Single screen cinema halls are closing one after the other. Governments are not understanding their problems. Theaters all over the country have to pay property tax according to the area, in Maharashtra it is charged according to the number of chairs. If we want to reduce the chairs, then the rules and regulations are so complicated that we start sweating. Films of actors taking 100 crores fees are doing business of twenty five to thirty crores.
The maintenance of the cinema hall has become difficult, what will the business be like. We are counting down our last days. Our merge has become incurable.’ It was the pain of a single screen theater owner in Mumbai who came to the fore after questioning how the business was going. On the other hand, films are still doing a business of 200-250 crores in South India, but behind them is an army of fan clubs of stars. These fan clubs have been getting their favorite stars' movies housefull, in return the stars 'take care' of their 'fan clubs'. There are films worth five hundred crores being made.
No one could have imagined that the cost of a regional film could be 500 crores. This exhibitor, cinema owner, has been in the business of cinema for years. He has been a witness to the crowd breaking on the first day on films. He says, 'When 'Mughal Azam' was released in the 1960s, the ticket for the dress circle was two rupees. When 'Pakeezah' was released in the 70s, its price went up to three rupees. In 1981, the tickets for the upper stall of 'Kranti' had reached six rupees. Cinema was still a cheap medium of entertainment.
Then in the 90s, the old-fashioned people broke down the old cinema halls into multiplexes with a capacity of two-and-a-half hundred people and tied things to buy food behind their tails. After this, the price of tickets went up to Rs 90 in the morning show at 9 o'clock and five hundred in the night show at 9 o'clock. Today the situation is that films worth five hundred crores are being made whose tickets are five hundred rupees. How many people will be able to buy such expensive tickets. So this is how the business of cinema is going on, which has now become a hoax.
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