Ticket sales broke records and workers have
been given days off as hype around the movie Kabali engulfs the nation
By Hannah Ellis-Petersen
Fans of Rajinikanth beat
drums and dance outside a cinema to celebrate the screening of Kabali in
Hyderabad, India.
Photograph: Mahesh Kumar A./AP
|
It is the kind of reception Hollywood actors
and moguls can only dream of. Workers given days off, jumbo jets repainted and
prayer ceremonies held – all in honour of a film.
The release of Kabali, the latest film
featuring Indian superstar actor Rajinikanth, has prompted a cinema-going
frenzy across India, with the film racking up £20m in film rights sales before
it is even released.
Estimates from the first day on Friday said
the film brought in a record-breaking 65 crore rupees (£7.3m) from ticket sales
around the world.
Such is the hype around the film, which is
being shown on 12,000 screens across India, that several businesses in the
south of the country gave their employees the day off on Friday so they could
watch it.
One company in Chennai said it was easier to
allow employees the time off to avoid piled up leave requests to the HR
department, while another in Bangalore said it wanted to pre-empt the “sick
leaves, mobile switch-offs and mass bunks” by workers desperate to see Kabali.
Undoubtedly the most hotly awaited film
release of the year, Kabali is described as a gangster revenge movie. Its
allure is mainly down to the phenomenon of Rajinikanth, who is one of India’s
highest paid actors and inspires fanatical devotion among his fans. When the
65-year-old fell ill two years ago, more than 1,000 people shaved their heads
in a ceremony praying for his recovery and there are an estimated 50,000
Rajinikanth fan clubs.
Fans take a selfie in front of a Kabali poster in Mumbai. Photograph: Rajanish Kakade/AP |
The hysteria that has greeted the buildup to
Kabali’s release was also evident in a plane decorated with Rajinikanth’s face
and flown from Bangalore to Chennai, serving Rajinikanth’s favourite food on
board, to bring 100 fans to a “first day first show” screening for the cost of
Rs 7,860 (£79).
Across southern India, fans have also found
less overblown ways to express their excitement. Crowds waited at cinemas
overnight on Thursday to get into the first screenings and one self-confessed
superfan said he intended to watch 10 screenings back to back on Friday and
Saturday.
Rickshaws, buses and cars painted with Kabali
imagery have become a common sight on the roads and one car salesman in Tamil
Nadu has been offering cars emblazoned with graphics from the film, which are
reportedly selling out at speed.