
In India, filmmakers have long pushed for an eight-week gap between a film’s theatrical release and its OTT debut. This rule matters most for big pan-India films featuring top stars. Multiplexes like PVR, INOX, and Cinepolis support the policy and sign formal agreements to ensure it’s followed.
The idea is simple — no Hindi film should appear online before fifty days. It protects box office revenue and gives audiences a complete big-screen experience. The Malayalam industry is also adopting this model. For instance, Lokah Chapter 1 took its time before releasing digitally.
But not all follow the rule. In Telugu and Tamil cinema, many producers accept OTT offers just 28 days after release. The quick payout often wins over long-term theater profits.
Now, NTR’s Dragon, directed by Prashanth Neel, has changed the game. The makers have locked a deal with Netflix to stream the film only after eight weeks — for both Hindi and Telugu versions. This ensures a strong theatrical run, especially if the film gets positive word-of-mouth. Pushpa 2 and Kalki 2898 AD followed the same model and saw major box office success.
Smaller films don’t always need such long gaps. Good content travels fast. Little Hearts, for instance, earned over thirty crores in theaters and streamed on ETV Win within a month.
For massive projects like Dragon and other upcoming pan-India titles, keeping a six- to eight-week window before OTT release is smart business. It builds excitement, drives people to theaters, and keeps the exhibition circuit alive. Ultimately, it reminds audiences why watching a film on the big screen still matters.
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