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Suspense crime, Digital Desk : The vivid conversation Bollywood actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui had during an interview for his film Costao on Youtube with Puja Talwar where he shared his views on the industry’s overuse of sequels and unimaginative films has reignited debate around Bollywood industry’s ‘creativity’ which seems to be suffering from ‘creativeruptcy’.

Outdated Ideas: “Everything becomes very dull and repetitive after 5 years,” is how Siddiqui summarizes the industry’s struggle to put out a single fresh idea.


Siddiqui strikes out with boundaries:

Excessive Formulas: “2, 3, 4… it’s gotten pathetic,” describes the industry’s spiral into follows sequels.

Acceptance as Norm: Siddiqui goes on to explain how the habit of imitation has become far too accepted within the business sector.

This is Not Plagiarism, Siddiqui Responds

Aging Challenge: Rather, claim is the statement “we’ve stolen songs, we’ve stolen stories,” as an answer which reinforces that this kind of stealing is part of the history the Indian cinema industry functions with.

Modified Ideas: Far too easy to argue Bollywood lifts material from South India and other sources so readily attributing concepts to be originality becomes an issue.

Simply Put, Reverse Audiences Do Not Want Repeats

While the Indian public is gradually shifting towards demanding differentiated content provided by global and regional content available over streaming suddhi platforms, becomes unsupportive. Siddiqui’s critiques blends perfectly with the long desired shift towards fearless innovation in cinema too often dubbed as bad.


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