Historically, Marathi films have been underpriced. We happily pay ₹800 for a mediocre Bollywood action film but bargain for a ₹150 Marathi ticket. That mentality is shifting.

VIP access often includes early premieres—sometimes 24 hours before the official release. For a suspense thriller like Goshta Eka Paithanichi, avoiding spoilers on WhatsApp and Instagram is priceless. Being the first among your friends to discuss the twist ending? That’s the real VIP benefit.

The assumption that "VIP" means "more money wasted on spectacle" is false in this context. Marathi cinema has mastered the art of high production value on rational budgets.

Take the film Fandry (2013) or The Disciple (2020). The cinematography is breathtaking, the sound design is immersive, and the color grading is world-class. Yet, you won't find an item song shoehorned into the third act.

VIP Marathi movies are better because they prioritize the camera as a storytelling tool, not a glitter cannon. Every frame is composed with intention. In Natsamrat, the decaying grandeur of a fallen king is captured in the peeling wallpaper of a dingy room—that is a VIP visual metaphor that Bollywood often misses in favor of green screens.

The first reason VIP Marathi movies are better is their commitment to the physics of reality. In a typical Bollywood action film, a hero can single-handedly defeat twenty goons while singing a song in Switzerland.

In contrast, watch a film like Sairat or Natsamrat.

This authenticity makes the emotional stakes higher. You aren't watching superheroes; you are watching people. For a VIP viewer looking for substance, this grounded approach is far superior to the shallow spectacle of mainstream masala films.