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Bollywood Hungama gave the film 3/5 and wrote "On the whole, Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire boasts of whistle-worthy moments that will be loved by the masses. However, the excessive violence, a needlessly complicated second half and a limited showcasing due to Dunki will affect its box office prospects to an extent."
[7] [8] [9] In 2023, the Hindi film industry accounted for 44% of box office revenue, followed by the Telugu industry at 19% and the Tamil industry at 16%. The Kannada (5%), Malayalam (3%), Bengali , Marathi , Odia , Punjabi , Gujarati and Bhojpuri industries contributed to the remainder, while the foreign film industry made up 9% of the total ...
Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire: 22 December 2023: Telugu Hombale Films ₹ 143.84 crore 3 Saaho: 30 August 2019: Telugu T-Series Films & UV Creations ₹ 142.95 crore 1 Baahubali: The Beginning: 10 July 2015: Telugu Arka Media Works ₹ 118.70 crore 5 Pushpa: The Rise: 17 December 2021: Telugu Mythri Movie Makers Muttamsetty Media ₹ 118.26 crore
On one hand, this bizarre, inside-out structure renders the movie’s first act a mere setup for the movie’s sequel (“Salaar: Part 2 – Shouryaanga Parvam,” currently in development).
“Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom” led the worldwide box office with a $108 million debut weekend, according to numbers released by Comscore. Warner Bros. and DC Studio’s “Aquaman 2” also ...
Worldwide gross Language Year Ref. 1 RRR ₹223 crore Telugu 2022 [121] 2 Baahubali 2: The Conclusion [α] ₹217 crore Telugu 2017 [122] 3 KGF: Chapter 2 ₹165.37 crore Kannada 2022 [123] 4 Kalki 2898 AD ₹161.50–180 crore Telugu 2024 [ag] 5 Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire ₹145 crore Telugu 2023 [126] 6 Leo ₹144 crore Tamil 2023 [127] 7 ...
The 2017 film Raajakumara was the first Kannada movie to gross ₹75 crore mark. [2] KGF: Chapter 1 (2018) was the first Kannada film to gross ₹100, ₹150, ₹200 and ₹250 crores. [3] [4] Its sequel KGF: Chapter 2 (2022) was the first Kannada film to gross ₹500, ₹750, ₹1000 and ₹1250 crores respectively.
Up until the 1980s, the largest overseas market for Indian films was the Soviet Union. After Dharti Ke Lal, [3] the first Indian film to become a blockbuster at the Soviet box office was Awaara (1951), directed by Raj Kapoor and written by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas, released in the Soviet Union in 1954. [11]