r/KannadaCinemaClub

Kfi vs other industries

Looking at the recent performances of other industry movies like karuppu,athiradi and now drishyam 3 just makes me sad about our industry.

And next month tfi will have peddi as well.

All these industries r making good movies which the audience enjoy and which generate good revenue but our industry just seems lost.

There seems to be no unity among the industry , no one to take an initiative to say what is going wrong.

We Barely have 2-3 hits this year , highest grosser of the year is mere 30cr ,

Other language actors r increasing their market in our state , but our actors r losing their market in our state, forget increasing the market outside.

I don’t even know if this will be a long lasting problem n our industry will only be banked around the big 3-4 actors or if the newbies come out n make some good movies n pull our audience back to theatres and we get back to enjoying our movies like before

reddit.com
u/historyinthemaking99 — 8 hours ago

Saw this on another sub

I mainly started this sub for the love of kannada movies and the positives of it. Especially hated the gang wars against certain stars and bias take on certain others.

Yes the industry is doing bad from past few years. Yes, the industry people are making shitty movies. Yes, it sucks to be a Kannada movie lover now cause we have extremely limited options but what's the point of trying to create an engagement for the sake of it?

This sub is for Kannada movies, artists and everything Sandalwood. Same goes for other subs too. Its not like Tamil sub or Molly sub or Telugu sub will allow kannada movie engagement if they Industry was also going through something similar

The point is that 76 ppl are for it and only 64 are against it is troublesome. I understand the frustration. Idk if it will be implemented or not but never here.

The point is again that this is for Kannada Cinema. Plain and simple and we will bounce back ! I'm sure if it.

We are still rich in talent and still relevant. Let's stay strong together

PS : I know swalpa melodrama ede but had to put it out.

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 10 hours ago

T.S Nagabharana Sir cooked with Nagamandala. What a masterpiece of a Kannada Movie!

A folk fantasy style movie in Kannada Cinema. Its based on the Play Nagamandala which is written by Girish Karnad sir. He also wrote for the movie.

Actor Prakash Raj & Actress Vijaylakshmi were Epic. Music by C Aswath sir is Epic

At what age did you watch this movie ?

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 1 day ago

KRG Studio Released 'A Prelude - Faces of Mango Pachcha' Voiced over by Kiccha Sudeep. Kannada movie

The movie is set in the year 2002 and in Mysuru.

Check it out !

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 1 day ago

If you were to win 15 lakh in price money but had to watch one kannada movie 150 times in just 25 days. Which one would u watch ?

I would watch this 👆 short and sweet gangster drama.

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 2 days ago
▲ 27 r/KannadaCinemaClub+1 crossposts

Why Kannada Cinema Is Struggling: A Filmmaker’s Observation of a Systemic Decline (long post ‼️)

For decades, the Kannada film industry survived, evolved, and thrived. From the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and even well into the early 2000s and 2010s, Kannada cinema had an ecosystem. It had stars, writers, directors, technicians, audiences, theatrical culture, and most importantly, continuity.

Today, however, almost every conversation around the industry sounds the same:

“Kannada film industry is doomed.”
“Audiences are not supporting Kannada films.”
“Theatres are dead.”
“OTT destroyed cinema.”

I disagree with many of these conclusions.

I do not think Kannada cinema is collapsing because audiences suddenly stopped loving cinema. I do not think OTT alone destroyed theatrical culture. I do not think lack of stars is the problem either.

I believe the industry is facing a systemic creative and economic imbalance that has slowly disconnected storytelling from filmmaking itself.

These are my personal observations and analyses from watching the industry closely.

I may be right in some places and wrong in others. But I believe these conversations are necessary.

  1. Story Is King, Not “Content”

First, we need to stop reducing cinema into a corporate word called “content.”

Cinema is not content.

A film begins with:
- story,
- screenplay,
- emotional architecture,
- character,
- rhythm,
- visual storytelling.

Story is king.
Screenplay is king.

And that is exactly where we are failing.

Today, producers are willing to spend:
- crores on stars,
- crores on VFX,
- crores on songs,
- crores on marketing,
- crores on set pieces,

but are unwilling to spend even 1–2% of the total budget on writing.

This is one of the biggest reasons the industry is weakening.

We have normalized mediocre writing for too long.

Somewhere, the dangerous belief entered the system that:
“Anybody can become a writer.”
“Anybody can become a filmmaker.”

No.

Every craft requires discipline, observation, technique, and deep understanding. Writing is not merely putting scenes together. Screenplay writing is architecture. It is rhythm. It is emotional mathematics.

And no technology, including AI, can replace genuinely good writers.

The problem is not that Kannada cinema lacks talent.
The problem is that it is not investing enough in writing talent.

  1. We Are Investing in Faces Instead of Stories

One of the biggest contradictions in the industry today is this:

A producer is willing to risk huge amounts of money on a star face even when the story does not suit that actor, but is hesitant to back a strong story with unconventional casting.

The logic is understandable:
a star guarantees initial footfall.

But what keeps audiences in theatres after Day 1?

Not the face.
The story.

A weak film with a big star may open well.
But only a strong film sustains.

Instead of spending heavily on wrong casting choices purely for market value, industries need to learn how to sell stories through conviction and promotion.

If a filmmaker truly believes in a story, then marketing should create curiosity around the film itself, not just around the hero.

Today, many producers ask:
“Who is the sellable face?”

The more important question should be:
“What is the emotional experience we are selling?”

Cinema survives on storytelling.
Not on poster value alone.

  1. The Kannada Industry Is Not Investing Properly in Mid-Budget Cinema ecosystem

This, in my opinion, is one of the biggest structural crises in Kannada cinema.

Healthy film industries survive on four pillars:
- small films,
- mid-budget films,
- star-driven spectacles,
- experimental cinema.

Today, Kannada cinema is increasingly becoming polarized between:
- ultra-small survival filmmaking,
or
- massive “pan-India” ambition.

The middle layer is collapsing.

And that middle layer is where industries actually build:
- actors,
- writers,
- directors,
- technicians,
- audience trust,
- and sustainable theatrical culture.

Not every film can become another KGF or Kantara.

Industries cannot survive on miracles.

They survive on consistency.

And consistency is built through strong mid-budget filmmaking.

Today, if a filmmaker proposes a well-written 3 crore film with unconventional but suitable casting, the response often becomes:
“Get a bigger star.”

But that same star may charge 1.5 to 2 crores in remuneration alone.

Eventually:
- the budget inflates,
- the story gets compromised,
- the actor may not even suit the role,
- promotions become insufficient,
- and the film loses its identity.

Ironically, the industry ends up risking more money for weaker storytelling.

  1. Pan-India Obsession Without Storytelling Is Unsustainable

The “pan-India” wave changed the psychology of filmmaking.

There is nothing wrong with ambition.
There is nothing wrong with scale.

But scale without storytelling becomes noise.

Today, many films are trying to look “pan-India” before becoming emotionally powerful.

Huge budgets.
Massive elevations.
Larger-than-life action.
Loud background scores.
Visual spectacle.

But where is the screenplay?

Where is the emotional truth?

A film does not become universal because it spends 500 or 600 crores.

It becomes universal because human emotions travel.

Many recent “pan-India” projects failed not because audiences rejected scale, but because audiences rejected hollow storytelling.

Worse, the “pan-India” label has also become a financial tool in many cases:
- inflated budgets,
- artificial valuations,
- pre-sale dependency,
- and business models disconnected from theatrical reality.

  1. Audience Trust Has Been Damaged

This is a painful truth.

Today, even when genuinely good Kannada films release, audiences hesitate.

Why?

Because years of inconsistent filmmaking have weakened trust.

Audiences have repeatedly encountered:
- weak writing,
- repetitive narratives,
- artificial emotions,
- outdated comedy,
- poor polish,
- trailers revealing entire films,
- and films that feel desperate rather than confident.

Today, if someone says:
“This film is good.”

People still wait.

They wait for reviews.
Then OTT.
Then clips online.
Then maybe never.

This is not entirely the audience’s fault.

Trust is earned through consistency.

  1. Marketing Is Not Decoration: It Is the Second Layer of Storytelling

One of the biggest misunderstandings in Kannada cinema is marketing.

Marketing is not a post-production ritual.

Marketing is storytelling.

The first storytelling happens inside the film.
The second storytelling happens through promotion.

A trailer should not merely “inform” audiences that a film exists.
It should create curiosity.
Mystery.
Emotion.
Discussion.

Many films today are promoted mechanically:
- poster,
- teaser,
- trailer,
- interview,
- release.

But audiences today are flooded with entertainment every second.

To pull someone into a theatre, a film must create emotional urgency.

If filmmakers genuinely believe in their stories, they must market those stories with equal conviction.

And one should understand that EVERY story requires UNIQUE marketing.

  1. The Distribution System Is Deeply Broken

Another major issue is the distribution structure itself.

Many filmmakers/ producers quietly know this but rarely speak openly about it.

There is a severe lack of transparency in distribution systems:
- unclear accounting,
- weak marketing support,
- poor release planning,
- inconsistent show allocation,
- and films being abandoned within days.

Some distributors behave less like long-term growth partners and more like short-term traders minimizing exposure.

A film cannot survive if:
- audiences are unaware it released,
- shows disappear in two days,
- and promotion is insufficient.

The industry urgently needs:
- greater transparency,
- healthier distributor relationships,
- or stronger producer-to-exhibitor models.

  1. Directors Are Becoming Too Desperate to Make Films

This may be uncomfortable to say, but it needs to be said.

Many directors today compromise too early.

A filmmaker may deeply know that:
- the wrong actor is being cast,
- the screenplay changes are weakening the film,
- the emotional rhythm is being damaged,
- compromises are hurting the vision,

but still remain silent because they desperately want the film to happen.

Somewhere, “getting the project” became more important than protecting the film.

Films should come out of conviction.
Not compromise.

A director must have the courage to say:
“This script works this way.
Either make it honestly, or don’t make it.”

Because deep down, filmmakers usually know when a film is getting ruined.

  1. OTT Is Not the Villain

I do not believe OTT platforms destroyed Kannada cinema.

OTT is reacting to market behavior.

Today, OTT platforms hesitate to acquire Kannada films because the industry itself weakened theatrical confidence.

Instead of theatrically proving our strength and making OTT platforms come to us, we became dependent on pre-sale economics.

Today, many projects are evaluated backward:
- “What is this actor’s OTT value?”
- “How much satellite recovery is possible?”
- “How much loss can we tolerate?”

Cinema cannot survive only through recovery mathematics.

A healthy industry must first build theatrical trust through storytelling.

Then OTT value naturally follows.

Not the other way around.

  1. Kannada Cinema Does Not Need Miracles. It Needs an Ecosystem.

Right now, Kannada cinema survives largely through occasional spectacles and rare breakthroughs.

But industries cannot depend on one miracle every few years.

They need systems.

They need:
- strong writing culture,
- healthier producer vision,
- transparent distribution,
- sustainable mid-budget cinema,
- meaningful marketing,
- theatrical confidence,
- and long-term audience trust.

Most importantly, the industry must stop treating storytelling as secondary.

Because stars will change.
Trends will change.
Platforms will change.

But cinema will always survive on stories.

And if Kannada cinema truly wants to rebuild itself, the rebuilding must begin from the writing table itself.

u/StandardBuy2288 — 2 days ago

Kannada movie Actor Sir AnanthNag in an interview to DD Chandana

I love that he speaks openly about coming to KFI because it paid well.

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 2 days ago

Dragon

Not upto hype I felt

Basrur again I feel let down,

Not in the range or expectations we keep from him.

Rukku looks cute as usual 🥰🥰

Ntr yup he’ll kill it with his acting no doubt

But I gotta say ,

The body , lean body somewhere isn’t suiting the character I feel

Should see how the screen presence will be

But yeah for the hype felt could have been better

Please drop ur reviews

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u/historyinthemaking99 — 3 days ago

How many movies have you watched of our Legendary Dir Puttanna Kanagal. Sandalwood Kannada Cinema/Films

The kind of subjects he touched during his period as a director is Insane & Unimaginable. Hats off to him.

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 3 days ago

Kannada Film Music Director come singer Vasuki Vaibhav will be Live at Indian Craft Brewery Near Manyata Tech Park

Nammalli yar hogthiraa ??

Its on 23rd May at ICB near Manyata.

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 3 days ago

Sandalwood Kannada Movie Loo Naveena Review by Actor Puneeth Rajkumar wife Ashwini Rajkumar

Has anyone watched this movie ? How is it ? Really good ? Is it doing wonders at the theatre ? So many questions.

She came to watch the movies because of Reviews and thoroughly enjoyed the movie and even says Neveen Sir. Thats humble and also good for Kannada cinema

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 3 days ago

Shiva Shiva Video Song KD-Kannada Movie Starring Dhruva Sarja & Reeshma

Pulling of a song with such a massive crowd is huge thing. It feels big when u watch it on a big screen.

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u/Amazingpokemon46 — 3 days ago

SUPERSTAR UPENDRA ON GOLD CLASS | BLOCKBUSTER EPISODE | RJ MAYUURRA

New podcast with Uppi is out. He talks about politics cinema and so many other things

Give it watch when u can

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u/Amazingpokemon46 — 4 days ago

Casting Call by Actress Aishani Shetty for her debut movie Kaajana

Casting call details in comments.

Good to see actresses turning into Directors

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 5 days ago

Actress Disha Madam celebrating Banjara Kasuti. From Karnataka to Cannes 2026. Slay!

Its 6 months of R&D!

2500 hours of hand embroidery by five women artisans, 80 hours of cutting & stitching

As she aptly puts it on insta

From KARNATAKA to Cannes!

u/Amazingpokemon46 — 5 days ago