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In the glittering shadow of mainstream Bollywood’s song-and-dance spectacles lies a gritty, neon-lit underworld of "midnight entertainment": the Indian B-grade movie. Far from the high-budget romances of the Swiss Alps, this parallel industry flourished in single-screen "fleapit" theaters, catering to a late-night audience hungry for explicit horror, violence, and "sexploitation" themes . The Genesis of Midnight Cinema
A heavy reliance on horror, action, and soft-core eroticism . The roots of B-grade cinema trace back to
The roots of B-grade cinema trace back to the late 1920s in Hollywood, where studios produced low-budget "double features" to survive the silent-to-talkie transition. In India, the phenomenon solidified in the 1980s. While the upper classes began retreating to their living rooms following the arrival of VCR technology and color television , public theaters became a sanctuary for the working class. Several directors became legends of this subculture
Several directors became legends of this subculture. The Ramsay Brothers defined B-grade horror from the mid-80s to the late 90s with hits like Veerana and Purana Mandir . Later, Kanti Shah emerged as a dominant force, creating cult classics such as Gunda (1998)—a film so bizarre it eventually transitioned from "trash" to a digital-age cult favorite. A Platform for the Taboo
Filmmakers like the Shah brothers were known to pay daily in cash, avoiding the massive debts common in A-list Bollywood. Cult Icons and the "Bad-Shahs" of Pulp
Interestingly, even A-list stars were not immune to this world. Mithun Chakraborty , once a mainstream hero, starred in a string of B-grade films like Chandaal and Shere Hindustan during the 90s, often produced at his hotel franchise in Ooty. A Platform for the Taboo