<p>It’s been a smooth and consistent journey for over 25 years. Aamir Khan began as a leading man in 1988 (after a stint as a child actor), Salman Khan<br />(after a second lead in the same year) in 1989, and Shah Rukh Khan in 1992 (after a successful stint on television). But now, is the era of the Khans, all of whom were born in 1965 (What a coincidence!), over?</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Glories of the past</strong></p>.<p>In the millennium, Aamir Khan starred in the first 100-crore grossing film, <em><span class="italic">Ghajini</span></em> (2008) and the first 200-crore film, <em><span class="italic">3 Idiots</span></em> (2009). He also has the enviably consistent feat of starring in the first 250 crore film <em>(<span class="italic">Dhoom 3</span></em>/2013), the first film to cross 300 crore (<em><span class="italic">PK</span></em>/2014) and the first 350-plus crore movie, his own production <em><span class="italic">Dangal</span></em> (2016).<br />Salman Khan, whose track-record at the box-office had been the least consistent among the three due to a flurry of reasons, led by his emotional nature, suddenly had a great resurgence from 2010 with <em><span class="italic">Dabangg</span></em>. Since then, every single film of his — super-hit, hit, success or even flop — has earned a minimum 100 crore net at the Indian box-office. Today, three of the seven films in the 300 crore club star the actor. And <em><span class="italic">Hum Aapke Hain Koun</span></em>... (1994) remains the topper of that decade, even ahead of<span class="italic"> <em>Dilwale Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge</em></span>. Salman has also given the biggest hits of 1989 (<em><span class="italic">Maine Pyar Kiya</span></em>), 1991 (<em><span class="italic">Saajan</span></em>), 1998 (a striking long cameo in<em> <span class="italic">Kuch Kuch Hota Hai</span></em>), 1999 (<span class="italic">Biwi No 1</span>), 2005 <em>(<span class="italic">No Entry</span></em>) and after his escalation to mega-star in 2010 (<em><span class="italic">Dabangg</span></em>), 2011 (<em><span class="italic">Bodyguard</span></em>), 2012 <em>(<span class="italic">Ek Tha Tiger</span></em>), 2015 (<em><span class="italic">Bajrangi Bhaijaan</span></em>) and 2017 (<em><span class="italic">Tiger Zinda Hai</span></em>). This is a record not even matched by Amitabh Bachchan!</p>.<p>Shah Rukh Khan was considered the king of the box office and was termed the King Khan for his global clout. Apart from<em> <span class="italic">Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge</span></em> and other blockbuster films like <em><span class="italic">Karan Arjun</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Kuch Kuch Hota Hai</span></em> (both with Salman),<em> <span class="italic">Dil To Pagal Hai</span>, <span class="italic">Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham</span></em>…, <em><span class="italic">Chak De!</span> <span class="italic">India</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Om Shanti Om</span></em> (his home production), he had so many films that did average to poor business in India but scored high abroad (like <em><span class="italic">Kal Ho Naa Ho, Main Hoon Na, Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna, Veer-Zaara</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">My Name Is Khan</span></em>). Domestically, his last hit was as far back as in<em> <span class="italic">Chennai Express</span></em> (2013). But overseas, SRK still leads over the other Khans, Akshay Kumar and Amitabh Bachchan.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Ominous signs in 2018</strong></p>.<p>The perceived threat to the Khans is mainly, if not entirely, due to the fact that, in 2018, their films <em><span class="italic">Thugs Of Hindostan, Race 3</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Zero</span></em> have been massive croppers. And the anger of the audience is not directed just at these terribly-conceived films made by big-name filmmakers, but more at the Khans for agreeing to star in these disastrous movies, confident that their stardom will see these disasters through.</p>.<p>By a nasty (for them) coincidence, the year also happened to be a qualitative and commercial bonanza for Hindi cinema, with content-driven movies succeeding to varying extents from a female-oriented <em><span class="italic">Raazi</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Hichki</span></em> to a superstar driven <em><span class="italic">Raid</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Pad-Man</span></em> to a dubbed <span class="italic">2.0</span> to unique story-driven films like <em><span class="italic">AndhaDhun</span></em>, <em><span class="italic">102 Not Out</span></em> (featuring two veteran heroes), <em><span class="italic">Stree</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Badhai Ho</span></em>.</p>.<p>Of course, the mainstream blockbusters also made it big, but those were the exceptional entertainers made by master entertainers Sanjay Leela Bhansali (<em><span class="italic">Padmaavat</span></em>), Rajkumar Hirani (<em><span class="italic">Sanju</span></em>) and Rohit Shetty (<em><span class="italic">Simmba</span></em>). And the first two proved beyond doubt that the 300 crore club was not the exclusive property of the star but about a lethal audience connect. These three films also conclusively sent the message that the director mattered more than even the topmost star, an axiom also proved from the eras of the past superstars. The audience, normally concerned only with movies that are value-for-money irrespective of scale, stars and genre, thus took to all these movies like the proverbial fish to water.</p>.<p>Trade analyst Vinod Mirani says, “Today, audiences prefer stories to stars, and younger stars to older ones, if a choice has to be made. The older stars know that they have limited time left before they will have to shift to character roles.” Two points here: Salman Khan is still going strong, with plum assignments like <span class="italic"><em>Bhara</em>t, <em>Dabangg 3</em></span> and<em> <span class="italic">Inshallah</span></em> besides a couple more in planning stages.</p>.<p>And Aamir Khan, having quit the music baron Gulshan Kumar biopic <em><span class="italic">Mogul</span></em> and abandoned his version of <span class="italic"><em>Mahabharat</em></span>, is now doing the official remake of the<br />Hollywood hit<em> <span class="italic">Forrest Gump</span></em>. The other two superstars, Akshay Kumar, 51, and Ajay Devgn, 50, have been playing their cards smartly over the last few years. Also in the game for 25-plus years, they are balancing comedies (now proved to be their special forte) with substantial subjects, often biopics with social angles. Once in a while, they<br />also green-light action dramas. Their journey has been made easier with a far-better average of successes as they also do more than one film at a time.</p>.<p>“Doing multiple films always kept the older stars safe!” points out trade analyst Amod Mehra. “One film, at least, must click!” The only superstars who, as of now, seem rudderless are Shah Rukh Khan (and Hrithik Roshan, far younger to the 50-plus club). <span class="italic">Zero</span> has demoralised Shah Rukh to the extent that he has quit the Rakesh Sharma biopic and is said to be toying with the idea of a Madhur Bhandarkar (whose last tepid success was in 2008!) film. So will two minuses make a plus? Hrithik, also obsessed with “more global” cinema like Shah Rukh, has completed <span class="italic">Super 30</span>, but is no box office darling as of now.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Age vs youth</strong></p>.<p>Aamir, in his <em><span class="italic">Forrest Gump</span></em> remake, Salman in <em><span class="italic">Bharat</span></em> (where he ages up to 70) and <em><span class="italic">Inshallah</span></em> (as a 40-plus businessman in love with a young Alia Bhatt), Ajay<br />Devgn as a 50-plus divorcee romancing a girl as young as his daughter, and Akshay Kumar (after his old stint in <em><span class="italic">2.0</span></em>) playing an older man in <span class="italic"><em>Hera Pheri 3</em> </span>— are all these safety outlets for remaining relevant for longer?</p>.<p>Vinod agrees, but Amod says, “Today, there are no stereotypes, so a star who is lucky to get a meaty but older character will grab the opportunity.” He adds that the era of superstardom is over. In short, what can be the greatest “asset” to the three Khans now is the fact that there is no one to take their place. A Ranveer Singh may be more versatile and mass-oriented and have the making of a star, a Varun Dhawan may be big on fans, but their charisma cannot match that of the Khans, at least so far, in the short span of their work. Ranbir Kapoor has always been considered a great actor rather than a star, while Tiger Shroff, Ayushmann Khurrana (who had two big hits in 2018), Rajkummar Rao and Vicky Kaushal (the hero of 2019’s highest grosser,<em> <span class="italic">URI: The</span> <span class="italic">Surgical Strikes</span></em>), are obviously not even comparable.</p>.<p>And this element alone is the reason why, even if by default, the Khans still cannot be written off, and one hit each can turn their tide. All that has changed, perhaps, is that the filmgoers will not tolerate mediocrity from them, because big stars are now optional, not mandatory, for them to endorse a movie. And that is the biggest truth.</p>
<p>It’s been a smooth and consistent journey for over 25 years. Aamir Khan began as a leading man in 1988 (after a stint as a child actor), Salman Khan<br />(after a second lead in the same year) in 1989, and Shah Rukh Khan in 1992 (after a successful stint on television). But now, is the era of the Khans, all of whom were born in 1965 (What a coincidence!), over?</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Glories of the past</strong></p>.<p>In the millennium, Aamir Khan starred in the first 100-crore grossing film, <em><span class="italic">Ghajini</span></em> (2008) and the first 200-crore film, <em><span class="italic">3 Idiots</span></em> (2009). He also has the enviably consistent feat of starring in the first 250 crore film <em>(<span class="italic">Dhoom 3</span></em>/2013), the first film to cross 300 crore (<em><span class="italic">PK</span></em>/2014) and the first 350-plus crore movie, his own production <em><span class="italic">Dangal</span></em> (2016).<br />Salman Khan, whose track-record at the box-office had been the least consistent among the three due to a flurry of reasons, led by his emotional nature, suddenly had a great resurgence from 2010 with <em><span class="italic">Dabangg</span></em>. Since then, every single film of his — super-hit, hit, success or even flop — has earned a minimum 100 crore net at the Indian box-office. Today, three of the seven films in the 300 crore club star the actor. And <em><span class="italic">Hum Aapke Hain Koun</span></em>... (1994) remains the topper of that decade, even ahead of<span class="italic"> <em>Dilwale Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge</em></span>. Salman has also given the biggest hits of 1989 (<em><span class="italic">Maine Pyar Kiya</span></em>), 1991 (<em><span class="italic">Saajan</span></em>), 1998 (a striking long cameo in<em> <span class="italic">Kuch Kuch Hota Hai</span></em>), 1999 (<span class="italic">Biwi No 1</span>), 2005 <em>(<span class="italic">No Entry</span></em>) and after his escalation to mega-star in 2010 (<em><span class="italic">Dabangg</span></em>), 2011 (<em><span class="italic">Bodyguard</span></em>), 2012 <em>(<span class="italic">Ek Tha Tiger</span></em>), 2015 (<em><span class="italic">Bajrangi Bhaijaan</span></em>) and 2017 (<em><span class="italic">Tiger Zinda Hai</span></em>). This is a record not even matched by Amitabh Bachchan!</p>.<p>Shah Rukh Khan was considered the king of the box office and was termed the King Khan for his global clout. Apart from<em> <span class="italic">Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge</span></em> and other blockbuster films like <em><span class="italic">Karan Arjun</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Kuch Kuch Hota Hai</span></em> (both with Salman),<em> <span class="italic">Dil To Pagal Hai</span>, <span class="italic">Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham</span></em>…, <em><span class="italic">Chak De!</span> <span class="italic">India</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Om Shanti Om</span></em> (his home production), he had so many films that did average to poor business in India but scored high abroad (like <em><span class="italic">Kal Ho Naa Ho, Main Hoon Na, Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna, Veer-Zaara</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">My Name Is Khan</span></em>). Domestically, his last hit was as far back as in<em> <span class="italic">Chennai Express</span></em> (2013). But overseas, SRK still leads over the other Khans, Akshay Kumar and Amitabh Bachchan.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Ominous signs in 2018</strong></p>.<p>The perceived threat to the Khans is mainly, if not entirely, due to the fact that, in 2018, their films <em><span class="italic">Thugs Of Hindostan, Race 3</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Zero</span></em> have been massive croppers. And the anger of the audience is not directed just at these terribly-conceived films made by big-name filmmakers, but more at the Khans for agreeing to star in these disastrous movies, confident that their stardom will see these disasters through.</p>.<p>By a nasty (for them) coincidence, the year also happened to be a qualitative and commercial bonanza for Hindi cinema, with content-driven movies succeeding to varying extents from a female-oriented <em><span class="italic">Raazi</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Hichki</span></em> to a superstar driven <em><span class="italic">Raid</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Pad-Man</span></em> to a dubbed <span class="italic">2.0</span> to unique story-driven films like <em><span class="italic">AndhaDhun</span></em>, <em><span class="italic">102 Not Out</span></em> (featuring two veteran heroes), <em><span class="italic">Stree</span></em> and <em><span class="italic">Badhai Ho</span></em>.</p>.<p>Of course, the mainstream blockbusters also made it big, but those were the exceptional entertainers made by master entertainers Sanjay Leela Bhansali (<em><span class="italic">Padmaavat</span></em>), Rajkumar Hirani (<em><span class="italic">Sanju</span></em>) and Rohit Shetty (<em><span class="italic">Simmba</span></em>). And the first two proved beyond doubt that the 300 crore club was not the exclusive property of the star but about a lethal audience connect. These three films also conclusively sent the message that the director mattered more than even the topmost star, an axiom also proved from the eras of the past superstars. The audience, normally concerned only with movies that are value-for-money irrespective of scale, stars and genre, thus took to all these movies like the proverbial fish to water.</p>.<p>Trade analyst Vinod Mirani says, “Today, audiences prefer stories to stars, and younger stars to older ones, if a choice has to be made. The older stars know that they have limited time left before they will have to shift to character roles.” Two points here: Salman Khan is still going strong, with plum assignments like <span class="italic"><em>Bhara</em>t, <em>Dabangg 3</em></span> and<em> <span class="italic">Inshallah</span></em> besides a couple more in planning stages.</p>.<p>And Aamir Khan, having quit the music baron Gulshan Kumar biopic <em><span class="italic">Mogul</span></em> and abandoned his version of <span class="italic"><em>Mahabharat</em></span>, is now doing the official remake of the<br />Hollywood hit<em> <span class="italic">Forrest Gump</span></em>. The other two superstars, Akshay Kumar, 51, and Ajay Devgn, 50, have been playing their cards smartly over the last few years. Also in the game for 25-plus years, they are balancing comedies (now proved to be their special forte) with substantial subjects, often biopics with social angles. Once in a while, they<br />also green-light action dramas. Their journey has been made easier with a far-better average of successes as they also do more than one film at a time.</p>.<p>“Doing multiple films always kept the older stars safe!” points out trade analyst Amod Mehra. “One film, at least, must click!” The only superstars who, as of now, seem rudderless are Shah Rukh Khan (and Hrithik Roshan, far younger to the 50-plus club). <span class="italic">Zero</span> has demoralised Shah Rukh to the extent that he has quit the Rakesh Sharma biopic and is said to be toying with the idea of a Madhur Bhandarkar (whose last tepid success was in 2008!) film. So will two minuses make a plus? Hrithik, also obsessed with “more global” cinema like Shah Rukh, has completed <span class="italic">Super 30</span>, but is no box office darling as of now.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Age vs youth</strong></p>.<p>Aamir, in his <em><span class="italic">Forrest Gump</span></em> remake, Salman in <em><span class="italic">Bharat</span></em> (where he ages up to 70) and <em><span class="italic">Inshallah</span></em> (as a 40-plus businessman in love with a young Alia Bhatt), Ajay<br />Devgn as a 50-plus divorcee romancing a girl as young as his daughter, and Akshay Kumar (after his old stint in <em><span class="italic">2.0</span></em>) playing an older man in <span class="italic"><em>Hera Pheri 3</em> </span>— are all these safety outlets for remaining relevant for longer?</p>.<p>Vinod agrees, but Amod says, “Today, there are no stereotypes, so a star who is lucky to get a meaty but older character will grab the opportunity.” He adds that the era of superstardom is over. In short, what can be the greatest “asset” to the three Khans now is the fact that there is no one to take their place. A Ranveer Singh may be more versatile and mass-oriented and have the making of a star, a Varun Dhawan may be big on fans, but their charisma cannot match that of the Khans, at least so far, in the short span of their work. Ranbir Kapoor has always been considered a great actor rather than a star, while Tiger Shroff, Ayushmann Khurrana (who had two big hits in 2018), Rajkummar Rao and Vicky Kaushal (the hero of 2019’s highest grosser,<em> <span class="italic">URI: The</span> <span class="italic">Surgical Strikes</span></em>), are obviously not even comparable.</p>.<p>And this element alone is the reason why, even if by default, the Khans still cannot be written off, and one hit each can turn their tide. All that has changed, perhaps, is that the filmgoers will not tolerate mediocrity from them, because big stars are now optional, not mandatory, for them to endorse a movie. And that is the biggest truth.</p>