Saif Ali Khan and Viacom 18 Will Be Worst Hit By ‘Rangoon’ 

‘Rangoon’ missed the mark at the box-office, we hope Vishal Bhardwaj bounces right back.

Suresh Mathew
Bollywood
Published:
Saif Ali Khan and Kangana Ranaut on <i>Rangoon</i>‘s poster.
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Saif Ali Khan and Kangana Ranaut on Rangoon‘s poster.
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When a film featuring Shahid Kapoor, Saif Ali Khan and Kangana Ranaut, directed by Vishal Bhardwaj, opens to just Rs 6 crore on a Friday, it’s not a good sign. It’s worse when the film comes at a reported cost of Rs 80 crore.

Rangoon didn’t have an ambitious pre-release marketing campaign, the trailers didn’t exactly make everyone sit up and neither did the songs get popular enough to create a buzz for the film. It was to all boil down to how a majority of the audience reacted to the film on day one, the reviews and the word-of-mouth that Rangoon would generate. Unfortunately, the reactions were largely negative and that just didn’t help the film gather steam at the box-office.

Saif and Kangana in Rangoon. 

Monday reportedly brought in just about Rs 1.97 crore for Rangoon, bringing its 4 day collections to Rs 20 crore. According to sources, the loss for the producer of Rangoon could be in the margins of Rs 40 crore, even after overseas collections, satellite and digital sales.

Viacom 18 will bear the brunt of Rangoon’s commercial fate.

While there are 3 names credited as producers on Rangoon, namely - Viacom 18, Sajid Nadiadwala and Vishal Bhardwaj, the monetary brunt of the film’s failure will be borne solely by the studio, Viacom 18.

Vishal figures as the producer for his creative contribution and for being guy executing the project, Nadiadwala comes in as the producer for having initially signed on Bhardwaj for the film and got the team together. Nadiadwala would have then sold the film to Viacom, who figure as producers since they are the financiers, marketers and distributors of the film. So, while Nadiadwala has made his profit by selling the film to Viacom, the studio will have to take the hit of Rangoon’s box-office performance.

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Saif Ali Khan deserves a hit.

Among the cast - Saif Ali Khan, who hasn’t had a bonafide hit since Race 2 (2013) will have to wait a little longer before he gets to register another success against his name.

The actor’s market value has been dipping after having several misses at the box-office - Go Goa Gone, Bullet Raja, Humshakals, Happy Ending and Phantom. Last heard, producers were vary of investing even Rs 20 crore in a project with Saif in the lead. Rangoon’s unimpressive run won’t help Saif, which is a pity because the actor has been turning around some remarkable performances. Hopefully, Raja Krishna Menon’s remake of Chef with Saif amongst other ingredients will be able to rustle up that juicy hit that the actor has been hungering for.

Shahid and Kangana get down and dirty.

While many agreed on the absence of any chemistry between Julia and Nawab Malik in Rangoon, most critics and the audience were all praise for Kangana and Shahid’s individual performance in the film. Luckily, both Kangana and Shahid are still resting on the laurels of Tanu Weds Manu 2 and Udta Punjab respectively. Kangana will be next seen in Hansal Mehta’s Simran - inspired by the desi ‘bombshell bandit’ who robbed banks in the US, and that sounds like something right up the actress’ alley. Meanwhile, Shahid has Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Padmavati to keep him busy. Rangoon’s fate may not affect Kangana and Shahid as much as it would Saif.

However, it’s been made clear that even a combination of Saif, Shahid and Kangana can fail to draw a decent opening for a film unless there is good content which creates an immediate positive word-of-mouth for the film.

Coming to Vishal Bhardwaj, the filmmaker found the ideal mix of critical acclaim and box-office success with his previous film Haider. His latest, was of course much more ambitiously mounted and hence it needed massive footfalls in theatres to take it to profitability. Bhardwaj’s mastery over his craft is unquestionable but his ability to deliver a film that will find resonance with the masses isn’t. I’m guessing his next will be a smaller film, perhaps in the Maqbool zone with the Bard for company which will keep both his producers and fans happy.

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

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