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FICCI EY report 2023 shares Indian VFX segment grew 30 per cent to reach INR 50 billion

The content creators are upping their storytelling with marvellous VFX advancements. The recent FICCI EY report confirms the exponential growth of India’s M&E space with VFX and post production facilities moving up the value chain. The report states that the VFX segment grew 30 per cent to reach INR 50 billion.

The key factors that contributed to the growth are:

A) VFX-heavy content witnessed high demand globally:

  1. VFX budget for a film with a US $100 million production budget or more rose to 30 to 35 per cent from 25 to 30 per cent previously
  2. VFX share of mid to low-budget films has also increased by 5 to 10 per cent

B) Domestic film market also increased VFX spends:

  1. Brahmastra Part One: Shiva had over 4,500 VFX shots, potentially making it the Indian film with the most VFX shots till date
  2. SS Raja Mouli’s RRR had a total of 2,800 VFX shots. 70 to 80 per cent of the shots were done using CGI

C) Top global VFX players expanded into India to leverage the cost arbitrage that India continues to offer:

  1. Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) opened its new office in Mumbai. ILM plans to acquire and retain over 500 skilled talents in India over the next three years
  2. UK-based Cinesite group acquired a majority stake in Assemblage Entertainment, headquartered in Mumbai
  3. Detroit-headquartered US tech firm, Pi Square Technologies, opened its global animation and VFX studio in Hyderabad
  4. Ghost VFX, Streamland media’s visual effects division, has announced it will open a new 32,000-square-foot studio in Pune, Maharashtra, India, in early 2023 to meet the growing needs of filmmakers worldwide
  5. FOLKS, a Fuse Group visual effects company, has launched its 35000+ square foot facility in Mumbai, India. The facility will staff more than 250 employees

D) Studios embraced technologies like virtual production, AI and ML to streamline workflows and allow quicker iterations:

  1. K. Sera Sera and Vikram Bhatt have opened India’s first virtual production studio on the Dahisar Highway, Mumbai, spread over 50,000 sq. ft.
  2. The Chennai-based film technology company Qube Cinema has teamed up with actor Akkineni Nagarjuna’s Annapurna Studios and launched a full service virtual production stage in Hyderabad

The Report also highlights  availability of skilled talent as the key challenge for VFX industry:

Most of the industry leaders raised concerned about the inability to find technically skilled employees to meet the opportunities provided by the high global and domestic demand for content.

The industry leaders focused on finding skilled employees to meet the opportunities provided by the high global and domestic demand for content. Some of them implemented training programs to acquire, retain and up-skill talent:

  1. Phantom VFX took several initiatives like visiting university campuses and grooming talent by taking on board people with good skills in art or technology for three-month-long paid training programs
  2. With a team of 75 people, the studio Hoop VFX started a training program which gave on-the-job training to college graduates and provided them with an opportunity to build a career in the VFX segment 
  3. In 2022, Framestore’s renowned global accelerator program, Launchpad Pro, was launched. This platform is aimed at bringing in more VFX aspirants into the industry

Also, the post-production grew 35 per cent  in 2022 to reach INR 19 billion. The major highlights are:

Future Trends:

1) Demand for tentpole movies and VFX-heavy episodic content will continue to drive growth

2) There is a need to build the talent pool, urgently, as recommended by the AVGC taskforce-  The AVGC task force emphasises developing the three Ts (Talent, Technology and Tools) to achieve India’s vision of achieving 5 per cent of the global market by 2025.

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