Bollywood stays away as Indian cinemas reopen after eight months

Empty chairs are seen during a movie time at City Gold cinema after its reopening, amidst the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Ahmedabad, India, October 15, 2020. REUTERS/Amit Dave

Empty chairs are seen during a movie time at City Gold cinema after its reopening, amidst the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Ahmedabad, India, October 15, 2020. REUTERS/Amit Dave

MUMBAI, October 15  (Reuters): Movie theatres in some parts of India will open for the first time in eight months on Thursday, but with no major Bollywood releases likely any time soon, beleaguered cinema owners worry if audiences will be lured back to the big screen.

All of India's near-10,000 movie screens have remained shut since the country imposed a strict lockdown in March this year, at the beginning of the novel coronavirus outbreak.

As Prime Minister Narendra Modi pushes for a gradual reopening, some states have allowed theatres to reopen, though at 50 per cent capacity and with strict virus-curbs in place.

Yet Bollywood has stayed away despite the upcoming festival season, when ticket sales usually peak and audiences flock to theatres.

"It's a chicken and egg situation," said Shibasish Sarkar, CEO of Reliance Entertainment, which has two big-ticket movies waiting to be released.

"We won't know if audiences will come unless we release a film, but the big question is if those audiences are enough," he said.

For now, theatres are screening older films, including a biopic of Modi, which first released after his resounding election victory last year.

Instead of waiting for theatres to open, several Bollywood production houses have instead sold movies to streaming platforms like Netflix, Disney and Amazon's Prime Video, which have premiered several titles in the last few months.

"We are trying to test the waters, see if audiences will come back. Once they do, hopefully we will see new movies releasing," Akshaye Rathi, a theatre owner who owns properties in the central states of Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, told Reuters.

For India's coronavirus-battered theatre industry, deprived of Bollywood blockbusters, analysts say more bleak months await.

"Many single-screen theatres will probably never open, and we won't know the full impact until theatres actually do open," Shailesh Kapoor of Ormax, an agency that tracks Bollywood releases, said.