QuickE: Zafar on ‘Tiger Zinda Hai’; Siddharth
Roy Kapur on GST
1. ‘Tiger Zinda Hai’ Is a Tribute to PM Modi: Ali Abbas
Zafar
The
film which has swiftly marched into the 200 cr club is a tribute to Prime
Minister Narendra Modi. Tiger
Zinda Haidirector, Ali Abbas Zafar, has confirmed that the film is
based on a real incident that occurred in 2014, when the Modi government had
just come to power. 46 Indian nurses who were held captive by ISIS in Iraq were
rescued with a clandestine rescue operation with the aid of pure negotiation.
Narendra Modi had reportedly ensured the achievement of this
tricky mission where no lives were lost. Ali sourced his inspiration from this
secretive triumph of diplomacy.
“If you have noticed, during the rescue mission in Tiger Zinda
Hai, Paresh Rawal asks Tiger (Salman Khan) if ‘PM sahab’ is aware of the
mission. The original dialogue in the film was ‘Modi Ji Ko Pata Hai?’ as a
tribute to him and the mission,” said director, Ali Abbas Zafar.
2.
Twinkle Makes Every Ride Full of Adventure & Amusement: Akshay
Akshay
and Twinkle are currently on a family holiday. He shared a photograph of the
two traveling in a convertible.
Akshay and Twinkle got married in 2001. The couple share two
children - son Aarav and daughter Nitara.
Twinkle shares her birthday with her late father, superstar
Rajesh Khanna. Taking a moment to remember him, she posted an old black and
white photograph of her with her father.
3. GST Discouraging Cinema-Going Habit:
Filmmaker Siddharth Roy Kapur
The
Goods and Services Tax (GST), implemented by the central government from
mid-2017, has proved to be a strain on the overall economics of film-making and
is also discouraging the public's cinema-going habit, says Film and Television
Producers Guild of India President Siddharth Roy Kapur.
The year 2017 threw up surprises at the Bollywood box office -
with a dubbed film like Baahubali
2: The Conclusioncreating a storm by minting Rs 500 crore-plus --
and shockers too, with Shah Rukh Khan and Salman Khan's Jab Harry Met Sejal and Tubelight,
respectively, falling flat.
How did demonetisation, announced on November 8, 2016, and GST
impact Bollywood's business in 2017?
“It’s still early to say as far as GST goes, but it definitely
is a strain on the overall economics of film-making because of the fact that
there isn’t a complete pass-through for the set-off, due to differential tax
rates at various stages of the value chain.”
“Secondly, because of the tax of 28 per cent on cinema tickets
above Rs 100, which comprises the bulk of the cinema tickets sold in the
country, the cinema-going habit is being discouraged. This really does put a
massive strain on the economics of film-making.” Kapur told IANS in an email
interview.
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