Industry Stalwarts React to Viral Analysis on Kannada Cinema’s Crisis
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🎥 A Wake‑Up Call for Sandalwood
Bengaluru, July 14, 2025 – A recent viral video by journalist and business analyst Mahesha Haniyur on the alarming state of the Kannada film industry has triggered powerful reactions from leading filmmakers, producers, and technicians.
In the video, Mahesha highlighted that over the last seven months, Kannada cinema has seen an investment of nearly ₹250–300 crore with little to no return, sparking widespread debate on sustainability and structural issues in Sandalwood.
📢 Industry Voices Speak Out
Soon after the video went viral, several prominent figures reached out to Mahesha, applauding his effort to create awareness for producers and new entrants in the industry.
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Director Shashank, known for his heartfelt films, released a video acknowledging Mahesha’s data‑driven approach:
“You not only highlighted problems but also offered solutions. These are thoughts every director and producer carries in their mind. Your analysis was clear and constructive.”
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Producer Ramesh Reddy, involved in major upcoming projects featuring stars like Shiva Rajkumar, Upendra, and Raj B. Shetty, praised the initiative:
“You’ve spoken truths that many hesitate to say. We need collective discussions and actionable solutions before more producers lose faith.”
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Producer Manjunatha Gowda, who recently released Unlock Raghava, shared his struggles despite deep personal involvement and financial investment:
“We spent crores, but the returns never came. After such experiences, many feel disheartened to step back into production.”
⚠️ The Core Issues Raised
The responses collectively echo the points from Mahesha’s viral analysis:
✅ Lack of Unified Safety Nets – Unlike Tamil or Telugu industries, Kannada producers face challenges in securing OTT deals, theater slots, and support systems.
✅ Market Shrinkage – Audiences flock to other-language films while Kannada releases struggle for viewership.
✅ Need for Structural Reform – From film chambers to government policies, better coordination and protections are urgently needed.
🔗 A Call for Unity
Shashank emphasized the need for industry-wide collaboration:
“An industry survives when everyone works constructively. We need to treat Kannada cinema as a collective responsibility.”
Manjunatha Gowda echoed this, calling on elected chamber members and senior artists to step in and implement safety nets for producers, so passionate creators don’t abandon cinema altogether.
🌟 What’s Next
Mahesha has promised a follow‑up analysis on why other-language films outperform in Karnataka’s own theaters, and how Kannada distributors compete fiercely for Telugu and Tamil big-budget releases while local films are sidelined.
Stay tuned to Times Mahesha for the upcoming deep dive, including insights on a major film releasing on July 24, 2025, and how cross-industry competition shapes the Kannada market.
📍 Bangalore | July 14, 2025

