In recent years, one trend has become impossible to ignore across global entertainment industries, especially in Bollywood and streaming platforms — the overwhelming rise of biopics.
From athletes and entrepreneurs to gangsters, politicians, scientists, social activists, and celebrities, real lives are increasingly dominating screens. Every few months, audiences witness another “inspired by true events” story marketed as emotionally powerful, motivational, or socially important. Filmmakers seem more interested in recreating reality than imagining new fictional worlds.
This raises an important question:
Are biopics enriching cinema — or quietly replacing original storytelling?
At first glance, the popularity of biopics makes complete sense. Real stories naturally carry emotional weight because audiences already know these people existed. There is an immediate sense of curiosity attached to watching the struggles, achievements, controversies, or hidden lives of famous personalities. A film based on reality often feels more meaningful because viewers connect it to history, culture, or public memory.
In many ways, biopics offer filmmakers something extremely valuable in today’s competitive entertainment market: built-in audience interest.
When a film is made on a celebrated sports icon, political leader, business figure, or controversial public personality, the marketing becomes easier. Audiences arrive with existing emotional investment. They already know parts of the story, recognize the central figure, and feel curiosity about what happened behind the headlines.
This is one reason why films like MS Dhoni: The Untold Story, Oppenheimer, and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag attracted massive attention. These films combined real-life inspiration with cinematic storytelling, creating emotional experiences that felt both personal and historical.
However, the growing dominance of biopics also reflects something deeper about the entertainment industry itself — a growing fear of creative risk.
Original storytelling requires uncertainty. New ideas, fictional characters, unconventional narratives, and experimental concepts do not come with guaranteed audience acceptance. In contrast, biopics feel safer commercially because the subject already carries public recognition. In an industry increasingly driven by box office pressure, algorithms, streaming competition, and social media trends, familiar stories often appear less risky than original ones.
As a result, cinema slowly begins depending more on recognizable identities than fresh imagination.
This dependence becomes problematic when filmmakers start prioritizing marketability over storytelling quality. Not every life story automatically deserves a film adaptation, yet modern entertainment frequently treats public visibility as cinematic value. Sometimes biopics feel less like meaningful artistic explorations and more like carefully packaged image-building exercises.
This is especially visible in certain political and celebrity-centered films where storytelling becomes selective. Real individuals are often simplified into heroes or villains, while uncomfortable complexities are ignored. History itself can become dramatized, softened, or reshaped for commercial appeal.
The issue is not that biopics exist. Some of cinema’s greatest films have emerged from real lives. The issue arises when industries become overly dependent on them because originality feels commercially uncertain.
Another major concern is how biopics affect fictional storytelling.
Cinema has historically been one of humanity’s most powerful spaces for imagination. Original stories allow writers and filmmakers to create new worlds, challenge perspectives, and explore emotions beyond factual limitations. Fiction often reveals deeper truths about society precisely because it is not restricted by reality.
Films like 3 Idiots, The Truman Show, or Taare Zameen Par resonated deeply not because they were biographical, but because they used fictional storytelling to reflect universal human experiences.
Original storytelling creates cultural imagination. It introduces audiences to characters, ideas, conflicts, and emotions they have never encountered before. When industries excessively prioritize biographical content, there is a risk that cinema becomes more reactive than creative — constantly looking backward at existing lives instead of imagining new narratives.
Streaming culture has further intensified this trend.
Platforms today compete aggressively for audience attention, and “true story” content performs exceptionally well because it immediately generates intrigue. Crime documentaries, celebrity biopics, political dramas, and real-life scandals dominate recommendations because audiences are naturally drawn toward authenticity and realism. The phrase “based on true events” itself has become a marketing tool powerful enough to attract viewers instantly.
But perhaps the deeper reason audiences connect with biopics is psychological.
In an uncertain world, real stories feel grounding. Audiences seek inspiration from individuals who overcame struggle, failure, discrimination, or impossibility. Biopics provide emotional reassurance that extraordinary achievements can emerge from ordinary lives. They satisfy curiosity while also offering motivation.
At the same time, there is irony in how modern entertainment treats “reality.” Many biopics are heavily dramatized, selectively edited, and emotionally manipulated for cinematic effect. Dialogue is fictionalized. Timelines are altered. Personalities are simplified. In trying to make reality cinematic, films sometimes blur the line between truth and performance.
This creates an unusual contradiction: audiences watch biopics searching for authenticity, while cinema reshapes reality into entertainment.
Still, the rise of biopics does not necessarily mean original storytelling is disappearing completely. Rather, cinema appears to be entering a phase where audiences crave emotional realism more than exaggerated fantasy. Even fictional stories today are often written with grounded emotions, social realism, and psychologically layered characters.
Perhaps the real challenge for modern filmmakers is balance.
Biopics can preserve history, celebrate overlooked voices, and inspire audiences when crafted thoughtfully. But cinema also needs imagination, experimentation, and original storytelling to remain artistically alive. Industries that rely too heavily on familiar real-life narratives risk becoming creatively repetitive.
Because while real stories remind society of what has happened, original storytelling dares to imagine what could happen.
And without imagination, cinema may remain commercially successful — but emotionally and creatively limited.

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