Vadodara's Natraj cinema, one of the oldest and largest single-screen movie theatres in India, has shut down.
The rising cost of operation, competition from multiplexes, high municipal taxes and, more pertinently, low business resulted in one of the best known cinema halls of Vadodara shutting down.
Dharma Productions' Dhadak was the last film to be screened at the cinema hall.
“The market situation is bad," said Natraj owner Janak Patel. "We closed because of low [ticket sales], higher [operational] costs, and taxes. The property tax is very high. Salaries, taxes keep increasing. It was no longer feasible to run the cinema.”
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Patel said collections have not been good, even with big-budget films. “We thought Sanju would do well, but it didn’t," he said. "The Eid release [Salman Khan's Race 3], too, did not make much money. How can I run the theatre if the collections for even such films are just 20-30%?"
To make matters worse, he said multiplexes in the city now offer low rates for morning shows. "We charge Rs40 for the stalls and Rs60 for the balcony," he said. "We can’t reduce the rates further. They have more shows, we don’t. We would rather close down than accumulate losses.”
Single-screens theatres have generally thrived on masala entertainers, but Patel said not too many such films are made anymore. “[Film production] companies have started to make movies for multiplex audiences," he said. "For a masala film, how many such heroes do we have? Four or five at best. And they do one or two films in a year. So you will have decent business for 10 or 15 weeks, but what about the remaining 35? What do we do then? It is just not viable to run the business anymore.”
According to trade analyst Atul Mohan, one of the pressing issues the cinema was facing was the increase in municipal taxes.
“The municipal tax, which was Rs1.50 lakh per annum, had gone up to Rs12 lakh per annum by last year," Mohan mentioned on Twitter. "Their monthly income was Rs2.40 lakh as against expenditure of Rs3 lakh.”
Dara Singh and Prithviraj Kapoor had graced the theatre’s inauguration, while Hema Malini had watched Kamal Amrohi’s Pakeezah (1972) here.