The Indian film industry faces an unprecedented financial crisis as extravagant demands from top-tier Bollywood celebrities escalate production costs beyond sustainable levels. Industry veterans report that excessive star entourages, luxury accommodations, and exorbitant personal fees are fundamentally undermining production economics.
According to producer Ramesh Taurani of the successful Race franchise, the core issue isn’t production quality but rather the disproportionate allocation of resources to star compensation. Leading actors now command fees reaching $22 million per film while arriving on set with entourages of 10-15 personal staff—all billed to production budgets. These demands include multiple private trailers costing up to $18,000 each, first-class travel arrangements, five-star accommodations, and reduced working hours.
Veteran producer Mukesh Bhatt describes these requirements as ‘obnoxious,’ noting that ‘expansive support teams, premium travel and luxury accommodations often inflate budgets without proportionate creative impact.’ The problem has intensified post-pandemic, when streaming platforms initially offered inflated acquisition prices that temporarily masked the industry’s structural issues.
Trade analyst Raj Bansal observes that what began as single shared vanity trailers has evolved into competitive status-seeking among stars. The 2024 science fiction film ‘Bade Miyan Chote Miyan’ exemplified this crisis, with its $42 million budget—heavily weighted toward star compensation—resulting in financial disaster despite featuring A-list actors Akshay Kumar and Tiger Shroff.
Actor-filmmaker Aamir Khan publicly criticized this culture in a September interview, questioning stars’ self-respect when demanding such arrangements. However, some exceptions exist: Kartik Aaryan waived his fee for the underperforming ‘Shehzada,’ while industry veterans like Shah Rukh Khan and Akshay Kumar personally cover their entourage costs.
Producers increasingly advocate for partnership-style compensation models where financial risk and reward are shared collectively. As veteran producer Viveck Vaswani notes, ‘If you think your star is stronger than your script, you are wrong.’ The industry now faces a critical choice: prioritize storytelling economics or continue succumbing to unsustainable star-driven financial models.
