This Article is From Oct 17, 2011

Agneepath satellite rights sell for 41 crore

Agneepath satellite rights sell for 41 crore

Highlights

  • The satellite viewing rights for Hrithik Roshan’s Agneepath have reportedly been purchased by Zee Network for a whopping 41 crore. This beats the 38-40 crore Sony Entertainment reportedly paid for the Aamir Khan-Kareena Kapoor starrer tentatively titled Dhuaan.
  • It also overtakes what Star Network paid for this year's big Diwali release, RA.One, trade sources said.
  • Jayantilal Gada, CMD, Pen India Pvt Ltd, the agency that aids the purchase of films for Zee Cinema, justifies the hefty price tag, saying that channels study the production banner's track record on the small screen before pitching to buy the satellite rights.
  • "We chose to buy Agneepath over several other biggies because Karan's (producer Karan Johar of Dharma Productions) movies have always delivered great numbers. And the promo of this film showed promise," he said.
  • Without commenting on the figures, trade analyst Amod Mehra says, "There are only a handful of leading satellite channels in the market. Likewise, there are only four or five really bankable stars, and not more than 10 big films a year. Zee has shelled out the money for Agneepath to break the pattern of Karan's films going to either Star or Sony, and to strengthen their market position."
  • According to the trade circuit, the TV satellite rights market has grown more than 10 times in the last decade alone.
  • "Big flicks bring channels high TRPs and bumper ad revenue. And no channel keeps a film to itself. Syndication is a common practice, and it also helps recover costs, that otherwise wouldn't make economical sense," Amod said, recalling that the 2007 hit, 'Jab We Met', was the first film in recent times to be syndicated to different channels.
Mumbai: The satellite viewing rights for Hrithik Roshan's Agneepath have reportedly been purchased by Zee Network for a whopping 41 crore.This beats the 38-40 crore Sony Entertainment reportedly paid for the Aamir Khan-Kareena Kapoor starrer tentatively titled Dhuaan.

It also overtakes what Star Network paid for this year's big Diwali release, RA.One, trade sources said.

Jayantilal Gada, CMD, Pen India Pvt Ltd, the agency that aids the purchase of films for Zee Cinema, justifies the hefty price tag, saying that channels study the production banner's track record on the small screen before pitching to buy the satellite rights.

"We chose to buy Agneepath over several other biggies because Karan's (producer Karan Johar of Dharma Productions) movies have always delivered great numbers. And the promo of this film showed promise," he said.

Without commenting on the figures, trade analyst Amod Mehra says, "There are only a handful of leading satellite channels in the market. Likewise, there are only four or five really bankable stars, and not more than 10 big films a year. Zee has shelled out the money for Agneepath to break the pattern of Karan's films going to either Star or Sony, and to strengthen their market position."

According to the trade circuit, the TV satellite rights market has grown more than 10 times in the last decade alone.

"Big flicks bring channels high TRPs and bumper ad revenue. And no channel keeps a film to itself. Syndication is a common practice, and it also helps recover costs, that otherwise wouldn't make economical sense," Amod said, recalling that the 2007 hit, 'Jab We Met', was the first film in recent times to be syndicated to different channels.
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