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Pakistani mega hit film ‘'Waar'’ | Reviews & Discussions.

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WAAR: Breaking All Records, WAAR crossed 71 Million/7.1 Crores in just 5 Days!

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We are a nation who can surprise....thumbs up for the revival :)
 
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I have read on FB that in 7 days it has made around 9 crore rs net.
 
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Not all but most Indian members on PDF and on internet do have a class. Unfortunately that class is all low.

Given the upside down perspective of most Pakistani members about the world, Thanks :D
 
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Not all but most Indian members on PDF and on internet do have a class. Unfortunately that class is all low.

India and Indians are synonymous with garbage after all. Their low character has earned them the reputation of garbage lying around on the internet. e.g This site. There is more Indian garbage on this site than the moderators to clean it up...


I said on internet.

No not just that. In all aspects of life

Anyways. coming back to the topic, which this Indian trash is trying to derail...
 
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There should have been an ISI guy romancing a RAW femme fatale also. Learn from Bollywood. There has to be a love interest, and better if your man gets the enemy's woman. Nothing massages the male nationalistic ego better.
veer zara kje yad aa gytew haghaha................
 
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Waar brings this
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for Indians :D

Whoa....you guys are insecure....you make one movie and think whole India is green with envy.I willl say this, if you
guys are so confident about your film industry, then ban all the Bollywood films in your country...next thing we know...you will be begging for them.
 
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Is Waar a hit?

The long-awaited action film ‘Waar’, released over Eid, has become the talk of the cinematic world in Pakistan, for both positive and negative reasons. The film has deeply polarised viewers over its artistic merits and ideological positions. There is no doubt, however, that massive numbers of people have flocked into cinemas to see for themselves what the fuss is about.


The astounding first few days’ box office of the film Waar – it grossed over 7.1 crores in the first five days alone, breaking all previous records thanks to an aggressive push from its distributors and an unusually long spell of holidays – has led to a number of people declaring the film a ‘super hit’ or ‘blockbuster’. Unfortunately, most people who talk in terms of hits and flops have little actual understanding of the terms and use them rather loosely as a reflection of intangible ‘media buzz’ rather than in economic terms.

In most of the world, where films are an established and regular business, terms such as ‘hit’ or ‘flop’ are intricately tied in with the cost of the film. So for example, a very low budget film such asZinda Bhaag, were it to earn 4 crores might put it into the category of a hit, whereas a very high budget film such asBesharam grossing even 60 crores in India (as it has) still classifies it as a flop.

The simplest explanation of the oft-used box-offices phrases is provided by the trade section of the Indian film web-site koimoi.com which details them as follows:

  • A ‘Flop’ is a film that does not recover even 50 per cent of its cost.
  • A ‘Losing’ film is one that does not recover its cost but loses less than 50 per cent of the investment.
  • An ‘Average’ film (box office-wise) is one that barely covers its investment.
  • A ‘Plus’ film is one that recovers its investment and some profit on top of it.
  • A ‘Hit’ film is one that doubles the investment of its producers.
  • A ‘Super-Hit’ (or ‘Blockbuster’) film is one that earns at least 250 per cent of its initial investment for its producer.
Before one makes an assessment of the status of a film based on its box office earnings, one needs to know two additional things. The first is obviously the cost of production. Most producers will inevitably exaggerate the costs and it is often the single-most difficult figure to obtain accurately. However, experienced filmmakers can often make fairly reasonable assessments (after seeing a film) of the range of what the film should have cost if there were no absurd wastages. The second thing that one needs to know is that in Pakistan, producers only receive about 30-35 per cent of the total box office gross of a film. The rest goes to the cinema owners (the exhibitors), the distributors and in publicity costs.

Now let’s take a look at the economics of Waar. According to the initial claims of the producers, the production cost of the film was 20 crore rupees (US$2 million). This would mean that the film would need to gross between 57 and 66 crores rupees at the box office for the producers just to break even (an ‘average’ film in box office terms). For Waar to be considered a ‘Hit’ it would need to gross between 114 crore and 133 crore rupees. For it to be a ‘Super-Hit’ or ‘Blockbuster’ it would need to earn at least 150 crores.


Given the small cinema circuit Pakistan has been reduced to because of the breaking down of theatres over the last decades, the highest grossing film in recent times in Pakistan was Shoaib Mansoor’s Bol (2011). That grossed about 12 crores only. The highest grossing film in Pakistan’s history was Syed Noor’s Punjabi film Choorriyaan (1998) which has grossed about 20 crore rupees over its lifetime. Given this history and the fact that currently only about 30-odd cinemas in Pakistan actually return a profit, it is next to impossible for Waar to even recover its supposed investment, to say nothing of being a box-office hit.

But what if the film cost less? And what about earnings from international markets?

Let’s assume for a minute that the producers of Waar have been wildly exaggerating the cost of their film (actually a fairly standard practice in film industries in Pakistan and India). And let’s also subtract the cost of the military man-hours, chopper fuel, logistics, equipment, maintenance, munitions, etc. that the Pakistan army provided the film free of cost, which are likely unaccounted for and will be paid out of tax-payers’ pockets. What if the film actually cost only 6 crores?

It’s important to understand that a 6 crore film would still be the most expensive film ever produced in Pakistan. But the film would still need to gross between 17 and 20 crores just to break even. This is still a tough ask but at least opens up a possibility for the film to recover its basic investment on actors, professional crew, equipment rentals, food and lodging, post-production, music, special effects, processing and prints, especially if it manages a good run in places such as UAE and the UK (both of which have substantial Pakistani populations). It is unlikely to find a release in the lucrative Indian market because of its anti-India story line and in pure economic terms it would still not recover the ‘real’ expenditure on the film. In the most optimistic scenario, Waar can only be an ‘Average’ to ‘Plus’ film at the box office.
 
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Whoa....you guys are insecure....you make one movie and think whole India is green with envy.I willl say this, if you
guys are so confident about your film industry, then ban all the Bollywood films in your country...next thing we know...you will be begging for them.


India made thousands of propaganda movies but Pakistani didn't got bothered single time ... But Pakistan has made one movie and you are started crying immediately ...............
 
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can anyone pls give me link to watch this movie online?
 
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