In 2004, choreographer Farah Khan, a good friend of Khan, decided to direct a film with him. He then took over the production company Dreamz Unlimited which he created with Juhi Chawla and director Gautam Narang and transformed it into Red Chillies Entertainment with his wife Gauri khan, who became producer of the first production Main Hoon Na in which Khan starred as well. The movie did well at the box office, becoming the second highest grossing film of the year. Khan also starred in the company's 2nd release, the 2005 movie Paheli, belonging to the genre of Indian Parallel Cinema, the film was critically acclaimed and was selected as India's official entry to the 79th Academy Awards in the Best Foreign Language Film category, but was a commercial failure.
The third film produced by the company was Farah Khan's mega-budget Om Shanti Om, which was released in November 2007. The film was set in the 1970s and 2000s and paid tribute to, and pokes fun at the, Indian film industry of both these eras. Upon release, it broke many box office records, grossing over 1.48 billion and thus became the highest-grossing Hindi film of all-time at the time of its release.[5] The 2009 film Billu starring Irrfan Khan and Lara Dutt was the company's next release, the film opened to good reviews, but was a box office failure. The latest film produced by the production company is Roshan Abbas's Always Kabhi Kabhi, the film did poorly.
The company continued working on other projects until finally deciding on Ra.One (2011) starring Khan himself, Kareena Kapoor and Arjun Rampal. The pre-production work began in 2007 after the release of Om Shanti Om. The film's crew consisted of more than 5,000 members from India, Italy and the US, and was pieced together by more than 1,000 people, working in shifts, in around 15 studios across the world.[6] It saw the inclusion of several visual effects techniques being incorporated in the production which were carried out by Red Chillies VFX. With an estimated budget of 1.25 billion, Ra.One was the second-most expensive film ever produced in Indian cinema, and the most expensive Bollywood film.[7] The film witnessed a level of publicity campaigning previously unseen in India films, with marketing taking place over a period of nine months and involving major brand tie-ups of a 52 crore (US$9.88 million) which set the record for the largest marketing budget in
India:
The film released across 3,100 screens in India and 904 prints overseas in both 2D and 3D, making it the largest Indian cinematic release in the world. Upon release, while the Indian critics gave mixed reviews, the overseas film critics received it warmly. The film has been widely praised for its visual effects and action, though criticism has been generated regarding its script and direction. Subsequently, the success of the effects and the 3D version of the film prompted multiple other Bollywood filmmakers to consider technology as a part of film-making, especially in view of the success of Ra.One and the inordinately higher returns generated from 3D ticket sales.The film went on to break multiple box-office records and according to its distributors, is the second highest-grossing Bollywood film worldwide earning over 2.4 billion. Their next production will be Karan Johar's next directorial venture, Student Of The Year, which will be co-produced by Johar's production company.
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