Varun Dhawan and Arjun Kapoor have been offered movies by big banners. Image courtesy Mid-Day.com
Mumbai:
While several industry bigwigs feel that there is a drastic paucity in the number of fresh faces entering the industry, the real picture could be quite different.
While the likes of Varun Dhawan, Arjun Kapoor, Siddarth Malhotra, Ayushmann Khurrana, Vidyut Jamwal, Ranveer Singh, Sushant Singh Rajput, Aditya Roy Kapur, Alia Bhatt, Parineeti Chopra and the others have been bagging multiple offers with big banners, lesser-known filmmakers or small budget films are finding it tough to rope in known actors/actresses.
With in-house talent management companies and mentors doubling up to handle the accounts of the young brigade, they have become almost inaccessible to smaller directors and producers.
A source from the industry says, "It is a never-ending tale for filmmakers. Stars seem to be more interested in knowing who the producers will be and vice-versa. All the new actors who have become overnight stars now even refuse to meet filmmakers until and unless they have powerful backing."
Let's go camping
Newer actors like Ayushmann and Sushant Singh Rajput have been picked by Aditya Chopra and many other big banners that also manage these stars. Naturally, they are more available to their mentor groups rather than working outside the camps. The source adds, "Even newbies like Varun, Siddharth and Arjun Kapoor are only working on co-productions by Karan Johar or Ekta Kapoor or Anurag Kashyap. In this scenario, no one can even approach them."
Up up and away
Piggybacking on the clout of these big banners, the young bandwagon also seems to have hiked their acting fees overnight. And those sky-rocketing don't seem to fit into the scheme of things for smaller filmmakers. Says an industry insider, "The moment Aashiqui 2 became a hit, Aditya Roy Kapur was signed on by Yash Raj Films, thus shutting the doors on individual directors. The small filmmakers who want to go to the next level struggle to make films as even actors like Nawazuddin Siddiqui or Rajkumar Yadav are demanding a huge price."
Passing the buckHowever in defence of the newcomers, another source points out that these astronomical figures are thrown at the small-time filmmakers not by the actors themselves, but by their agencies. A filmmaker, who recently worked on a critically acclaimed film, says on conditions of anonymity, "I wanted to make a bigger film next but could not get access to the stars. The price quoted was much beyond the price I estimated. It's the talent management agencies that are taking the final decisions."
While the likes of Varun Dhawan, Arjun Kapoor, Siddarth Malhotra, Ayushmann Khurrana, Vidyut Jamwal, Ranveer Singh, Sushant Singh Rajput, Aditya Roy Kapur, Alia Bhatt, Parineeti Chopra and the others have been bagging multiple offers with big banners, lesser-known filmmakers or small budget films are finding it tough to rope in known actors/actresses.
With in-house talent management companies and mentors doubling up to handle the accounts of the young brigade, they have become almost inaccessible to smaller directors and producers.
A source from the industry says, "It is a never-ending tale for filmmakers. Stars seem to be more interested in knowing who the producers will be and vice-versa. All the new actors who have become overnight stars now even refuse to meet filmmakers until and unless they have powerful backing."
Let's go camping
Newer actors like Ayushmann and Sushant Singh Rajput have been picked by Aditya Chopra and many other big banners that also manage these stars. Naturally, they are more available to their mentor groups rather than working outside the camps. The source adds, "Even newbies like Varun, Siddharth and Arjun Kapoor are only working on co-productions by Karan Johar or Ekta Kapoor or Anurag Kashyap. In this scenario, no one can even approach them."
Up up and away
Piggybacking on the clout of these big banners, the young bandwagon also seems to have hiked their acting fees overnight. And those sky-rocketing don't seem to fit into the scheme of things for smaller filmmakers. Says an industry insider, "The moment Aashiqui 2 became a hit, Aditya Roy Kapur was signed on by Yash Raj Films, thus shutting the doors on individual directors. The small filmmakers who want to go to the next level struggle to make films as even actors like Nawazuddin Siddiqui or Rajkumar Yadav are demanding a huge price."
Passing the buckHowever in defence of the newcomers, another source points out that these astronomical figures are thrown at the small-time filmmakers not by the actors themselves, but by their agencies. A filmmaker, who recently worked on a critically acclaimed film, says on conditions of anonymity, "I wanted to make a bigger film next but could not get access to the stars. The price quoted was much beyond the price I estimated. It's the talent management agencies that are taking the final decisions."