Lack of creative content hampering animation growth: Official

The country has to be satisfied doing only lower-rung work of offering services, without creating original content, he said.

Mumbai: Lack of original content is restricting the growth of animation, visual effects, gaming and comics (AVGC) sector in the country, industry veteran A K Madhavan said on Thursday.

The country has to be satisfied doing only lower-rung work of offering services, without creating original content, he said.

"We still don't know how to tell stories and that is the biggest problem being faced by the industry," he said, adding we need to come up with original scripts for animation films.

"India predominantly has been in hire mode or in services job when it comes to the AVGC sector. It's only in the last couple of years that India is trying to create intellectual properties on the space," Madhavan, who has launched his own animation and visual effects company Assemblage, told PTI on the sidelines of Ficci-Frames here.

Even though a KPMG report has valued the animation, VFX and post-production industry in India at Rs 44.9 billion in 2014 from Rs 39.7 billion a year ago, Madhavan said adding it is very small compared to the developed countries.

He said one of the main reasons for this is that people associate animation with children and not the family.

Madhavan, who quit as Chief Executive of Crest Animation Studios to start up on his own, said there is a potential for growth for the sector. KPMG has projected that the CAGR of animation and VFX industries will grow by 16 per cent during next five years.

"Unlike feature films, animation characters have got long self-life and the sector doesn't have any language barrier as you can dub the same animation film in a number of languages. Also, it doesn't have any geographical barrier. The AVGC industry's revenue comes from merchandise too."

Given the potential the sector offers, both infrastructure and skill development works are taking place in a big way simultaneously and several players are involved in it. One such entity is Kerala Industrial Infrastructure Development Corp (KINFRA), which is into various activities, including film and video services.

KINFRA, which started with development of film processing laboratories in Thiruvananthapuram in 1995, has replaced its film processing labs with animation institutions.

"Currently, there are two animation institutions at KINFRA and we are planning to add two more within a year or two," said KINFRA Managing Director G C Gopalapillai.

Whistling Woods International Institute, a city-based film, communication and media arts institute, has added animation to its curriculum, said its President Meghna Ghai Puri said.

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